SEO Web Content: Good Writing, Good Business
by Joel Walsh
Published on this site: August 19th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month
There's a deadly myth about search engine optimization and
writing for the web: that good SEO and good writing don't
go together.
As a website copywriter, I hear this myth repeated back to
me all the time by new clients and prospects. "Don't
bother search-engine-optimizing the content," they say.
"Just make sure it is well written and the keywords will
flow naturally into the content." Or, they repeat the
words of so many self-styled gurus: "don't write for
the search engines, write for the people who will be reading
what you write."
If you're one of the people who believe there's a conflict
of interest between search engines and humans, you're operating
under two misconceptions:
- Misconception 1: you know more about what people
want to read on the web than the search engines do.
- Misconception 2: you or your writer will just
naturally write the content that people or search engines
want, without consciously trying to meet their demands.
Why Search Engines Know More about Your Website Visitors
than You
"I want a well-written web page, not a list of keywords."
It frightens me a bit when I hear this, since it demonstrates
a complete lack of understanding of what search engines do.
A search engine is not simply a massive find function, like
the one in the "Edit" menu of Microsoft applications.
It does not just pull up any page that has the keyword in
it X number of times. If it did, all pages that show up on
search engine results would simply contain a list of the keywords.
Ultimately, writing for the search engines means writing for
web surfers. Think about it: services like Google thrive on
giving people the pages they want to read. If they consistently
failed to give people what they wanted, people would stop
using them.
What Your Website's Visitors Want to Read
Most of the time, people don't want to read on the web. Reading
on a screen hurts the eyes. It doesn't help that a lot of
web pages make it harder with text that's too small, backgrounds
that are colored rather than white, and lots of extraneous
graphics.
Besides, when it comes to reading matter, there is an overabundance
of choice on the web, more than any library on earth. Of that,
an unfortunate amount isn't worth reading. Time must be rationed.
In fact, people treat a web page much as a search engine does:
they scan it. In particular, they scan it for the keywords
they entered into the search engine. If they arrived via a
link from another website, they are still looking for words
and phrases related to their interest - which are generally
the same as the keywords people enter into search engines.
In short, Nobel-prize-winning literature makes bad web content.
You have to write specifically for the web. That's why the
web hasn't fueled much of a resurgence in the short story
or other literary writing, dashing many hopes. Ebook versions
of paper books have also disappointed expectations.
Newspapers are the only paper publications that have made
a smooth online transition, precisely because they are written
in short, to-the-point paragraphs that are easy to scan.
Still Think Good SEO Web Content Makes for Bad Reading?
You've just read almost to the end of a piece of search-engine-optimized
web content. This article was optimized for the keywords,
"SEO," "search engine," "search engines,"
"keyword," "keywords," "search engine
optimization," and "writing."
The keywords were present in headings and throughout the content.
The content itself is easy to scan: paragraphs of one-three
sentences, broken up by sub-headings every four paragraphs
or so.
Naturally, those keywords are too broad for this page to have
a chance of ranking high in search engines for them. But this
page will get some of the atypical search keywords that account
for as many as half of all searches. So, if someone types
in a phrase like, "keyword writing search engine optimized
content," this page would have a pretty good chance of
showing up.
To be sure, this article is on the long side for a web page.
Most people won't even scan more than 600 words of text; 250-500
is ideal.
But this article is destined primarily to be shown in an email
newsletter, where attention spans are longer since people
are more confident the source of the content can be trusted
to repay their investment of time. Besides, as a well-structured
page, it can be split into two or three pages according to
the subheadings.
In short, there's much more to writing well for the web than
just writing well. If you've had enough sense to have your
web content written professionally, have enough sense to take
the advice of most website copywriters: search-engine-optimization
for keywords and good web writing are the same thing.

Joel Walsh is a regular contributor collection-agency-information.com
Read all his articles on small business debt collection:
http://collection-agency-information.com
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http://collection-agency-information.com]

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