Showing posts with label phoenix copywriting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phoenix copywriting. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2008

5 Common Mistakes That Bury Your Website in the Search Engines

(Click here to listen to an audio recording of this article.)

How can I increase my website’s search engine rankings so I get more traffic?

If you have a website, there’s a good chance you’ve asked this question (or a variation of it) many times.

You may have even searched online for a solution. After all, there’s no lack of companies claiming they can place your website atop the search engines.

If fact, you don’t have to look any further than your e-mail inbox to see these promises. Search engine ranking is a common spam topic.

When providing advice on improving search engine ranking, I focus on five components that revolve around your content. But before I tell you how to use them, let’s eliminate one myth before going any further.

Spending tons of money on your website has little -- if any -- effect on your search engine ranking. Any attempt to buy your way to the top of the search engines will only leave you frustrated ... and holding an empty wallet.

If you truly want your website in the top positions on search engines, prepare to put in some effort. What I’m about to tell you is not a "lazy man’s way" to search engine success.

Instead, you’ll find solutions to the 5 biggest mistakes I see on websites as they relate to search engine rankings.

Website Mistake #1: Your content is outdated.

Search engines such as Google crave fresh content. So treat your text as if it was your wardrobe -- and keep it updated. Better yet, commit to regularly adding new content to your website.

Your written words are the most important aspect of your website. When you provide current content that matches your prospects’ needs, you encourage repeat visitors and give yourself more opportunities to be found in the search engines.

When writing your new content, keep in mind the following two questions posed by legendary copywriter Robert Collier:

What is the bait that will tempt your reader?

How can you tie up the thing you have to offer with that bait?

Website Mistake #2: You have a low number of incoming links.

The number of other websites linking to your website is an important factor in your search engine ranking. As you build incoming links, your credibility with the search engines grows.

One way I like to boost incoming links is by distributing articles to directories such as EzineArticles, Articlesbase, GoArticles and iSnare.

When you use these free services, you give online publishers the opportunity to post your articles on their sites, blogs or newsletters. So, in addition to increasing your incoming links, your work is introduced to a new audience of prospects.

You can also build links back to your website by writing comments on blogs and forums related to your industry.

Website Mistake #3: Your content doesn’t include terms your prospects search.

You can learn what prospects desire by figuring out what terms they search when finding sites similar to yours. This task is easier than you might think.

A great device for finding keywords and phrases to include in your content is the Free Keyword Suggestion Tool from Wordtracker. Simply type in a word or phrase in the search box and, in a matter of seconds, you’ll get an estimate of that term’s daily search volume.

Once you know your words or phrases, place them where people -- and the search engines -- will see them, such as in headers, title tags (see Mistake #4) and the beginning paragraphs of your copy.

Using a keyword tool is also helpful in coming up with article topics (review Mistake #2).

Website Mistake #4: Your title tags don’t match your content.

Title tags are the descriptive text displayed in the blue bar at the top of your browser. Not only are they important for telling visitors what’s on each of your website pages, they’re essential to high search engine placement.

Many times I see only a company name listed in the title tag area. You might get a little traffic using this tactic -- but only if you’re a well-known brand that prospects search. I recommend using terms that describe your product or service.

For example, here’s the current title tag from my home page: Phoenix copywriting and marketing consultant, sales letters, seo website content. (Note: I’ve read conflicting reports on title tag length. This example is probably a little long. However, I’m still testing what length works best.)

Wordtracker’s Free Keyword Suggestion Tool can also help you come up with title tags.

Website Mistake #5: You’re not using your website statistics to your advantage.

If you have a website, you must monitor your visitor statistics. These reports are a treasure chest of traffic gold that can help you determine where your visitors come from and what terms they search to find your website.

If you see visitors using certain terms over and over to land on your website, write more copy that incorporates these words. This technique is one way to build what’s called your "long tail," a term that refers to using 3-, 4- or 5-word phrases that are specific to what you sell.

For example, here are some phrases from the statistics for a debt consolidation site I worked on: "negotiate lower payments with creditors," "contact creditor to lower payment," "secret debt payment plans" and "free debt settlement secrets."

It’s easy to see how quickly you can turn any of these phrases into an article. Once you start monitoring your statistics, you’ll rarely have trouble coming up with topics for new website content.

Need an easy way to keep track of your website traffic? Try Google Analytics. It’s free and only takes a couple of minutes to set up.

Monday, March 3, 2008

A Simple Shortcut for Writing Irresistible Benefits

Do you know whether you’re promoting features or benefits in your marketing materials?

The answer to this question plays a significant role in the effectiveness of your marketing message.

While features are facts, benefits explain why facts are important. It’s these benefits that target your prospects’ emotions – a key factor in selling situations.

People buy for emotional reasons first. Then they look for facts to validate the purchase.

When you only use features in your marketing materials, you ignore the real reasons why your prospects need your product or service.

An easy way to write response-boosting benefits is to follow your features with the words “so that.” You can physically write these words or just say them mentally.

Here’s a basic example: Let’s say you’re promoting a computer monitor with a 19-inch screen.

Your primary feature (or fact) is the 19-inch screen. With a little research, you can quickly create benefits, especially when you understand your prospects’ needs.

Maybe studies show a 19-inch screen is the optimal size for reducing eye strain. One benefit might be …

The computer monitor screen is 19 inches … so that … you can reduce eye strain by up to 57%.

But why stop with just one benefit? You’ll discover even more powerful benefits when you use “so that” multiple times.

… you can reduce eye strain by up to 57% … so that … you can diminish the times you experience blurred vision, neck pain and fatigue… so that … you can work more comfortably … so that … you can complete more projects in the same amount of time …

A description only touting a computer monitor’s screen size does little to target a prospect’s emotions. However, once benefits are added to the copy, prospects learn why they are better off purchasing the product.

Below is an example of a benefit-oriented sentence pulled from a Sleep Number advertisement I recently saw online.




The feature is the “Outlast® Adaptive Comfort® material.” The material’s benefit (or the “so that”) is that it warms and cools “to keep you comfortable through the night.”

Here are more examples from an advertisement for Amazon’s new Kindle wireless reading device:

• Revolutionary electronic-paper display (feature) provides a sharp, high-resolution screen that looks and reads like real paper (benefit).

• Wireless connectivity (feature) enables you to shop the Kindle Store directly from your Kindle – whether you’re in the back of a taxi, at the airport, or in bed (benefit).

• Unlike WiFi, Kindle utilizes the same high-speed data network (EVDO) as advanced cell phones (feature) – so you never have to locate a hotspot (benefit).

• Email your Word documents and pictures (.JPG, .GIF, .BMP, .PNG) to Kindle (feature) for easy, on-the-go viewing (benefit).

• No monthly wireless bills, service plans, or commitments – we take care of the wireless delivery (feature) so you can simply click, buy, and read (benefit).

Give the “so that” technique a try the next time you need to transform your facts from features to response-boosting benefits. This simple shortcut is certain to increase your prospects’ interest while generating more sales.

Monday, January 14, 2008

The Easiest Ways to Create Eyeball-Grabbing Headlines for Your Marketing Materials

Join Tom Trush, content specialist for Write Way Solutions, and special guest Joey Borane, director of marketing at Design44, on Thursday, January 31, as they present ...

The Easiest Ways to Create Eyeball-Grabbing Headlines
for Your Marketing Materials

During this seminar, you’ll discover …

• How to use your choice of 5 words in any headline to tap the most powerful force in direct marketing and seize your prospects’ attention

• Why an advertisement from the early 1900s was so profitable it ran for a record-setting 40 years without a single change … and how you can achieve similar results

• How a $3.29 purchase found in your grocery store’s checkout lane can instantly improve your headline writing skills and ignite your sales

• A 2-word question that transforms your product or service’s features into the benefits your prospects desire

• 8 marketing pieces you can use for any type of business and how to use each one with the most success

• What eating on an airplane has to do with writing headlines that seduce your prospects into reading your marketing materials

• How to use the magic 4 P’s of marketing to create unmatched demand for whatever you offer your prospects

• Why getting a “yes” response in a headline question can spell doom for your marketing message

• How to use a skill you started learning in first grade to create headlines that “test” your prospects’ needs, while building desire for your product or service

• The single most important quality you must have in every headline … and how you can include 3 additional attributes to make it even more powerful

• 5 things you must know about the human mind to maximize your marketing and, ultimately, create more sales

• 11 secret formulas for writing response-boosting headlines that will pump up any promotion

• And much more!


Seminar Schedule:
7:30 – 8 a.m.: Networking
8 – 9:15 a.m.: Presentation
9:15 – 9:30 a.m.: Q & A session and free raffle

Location:
RE/MAX New Heights Resource Center, 6437 S. Central Ave., in Phoenix

RSVP:
Please RSVP to Tom Trush at info@tomtrush.com by Jan. 29 to secure your seat.


Comments from previous seminar attendees:

“You are awesome! Thanks for the tip about ‘Onlywire,’ it works very well. Now when I Google “SoMo Vacations,” I’m #1, #3 and #6 in the top 10! Not to mention the other tips you shared that got SoMo Network to the top of Google. I just want you to know I appreciate all your ideas, insight and expertise. If you ever need anything, please do not hesitate to ask.”

Isreal Young
Owner, SoMoVacations.com


“Your seminar was amazing – one of the few marketing seminars I've been to that has real take-away value. I started using the secrets and tips the next day and, best of all, they fit into my non-existent marketing budget!”

Shaun Breese
Co-owner, Urban Cookies


“By simply using your tips in a press release to announce a groundbreaking event, we received news coverage from a local business publication, an interview with an industry journal in England, a potential consulting opportunity, and three requests from people interested in leasing space at one of our developments ... and that was just within the first 6 hours of sending out the announcement!”

Jeffrey Garza Walker
Director of New Business Development, P.C. & Development