I was watching the news on TV the other
day and I couldn't help but notice the amount of times the newsreaders and
reporters repeated the same things over and over again.
First of all there was the announcement
of the main headline accompanied by dramatic music: "Today's main
headline: a dramatic event happened today". This was followed by one of
the newsreaders telling us again that 'a dramatic event happened today' and
then his fellow newsreader telling us that they would be bringing us all the
reaction from five different continents to the 'dramatic event that happened today'
as well as trying to gauge the 'mood on the street' where the 'actual' dramatic
event 'actually' took place.
Then one of the reporters joined in by
saying things like: "Yes, that's right, it was here, just behind me, where
this dramatic event happened today?" before switching to another reporter
who told us that she didn't actually witness the dramatic event that happened
just behind where her colleague was standing, but she had been talking to
witnesses who did see the dramatic event as it happened.
Five minutes
into the programme I was still none the wiser and I was beginning to wonder why
I was being treated like a goldfish.
It occurred to me that perhaps the
makers of news programmes were actually retired SEO experts who had been in the
job for too long. Let me explain.
When I set up my first website I said
what I had to say in 50 words. I had a service to sell, I told people how much
it was and how they could get in touch with me if they were interested. What
else was there to say? But I soon realised from studying SEO that search
engines much prefer you to use 250 words even if you can adequately explain
what you want to say in 50.
If Content really is King as the search
engines will have us believe then the Queen must be struggling to get a word in
edgewise.
It's all very well saying that a
website should be informative and content-rich but there is a tendency for
human beings to talk more and say less. The news I heard on the radio this
morning told me more in two minutes than the TV news did in fifteen: purely and
simply because it got straight to the point and told me the facts without any
waffle.
A website that takes that approach
however, is likely to be ranked by the search engine machines (or the 'agents'
as I sometimes prefer to call them) as uninformative and content-poor.
People don't have time to wade through
page after page of someone babbling on about this, that and the other: they
just want to know what is on offer, how much it costs and how they can get
their hands on it. Ok, I'm simplifying things a little but you get the picture.
There are many websites on the World
Wide Web that have lots of text and are also very informative. Sometimes you
need to go into great detail to explain something thoroughly. I accept that.
But often it is not necessary and what we have to say can be said in just a few
words.
A website that uses only a few words to
get it's point across will struggle to gain a good search engine ranking,
purely and simply because robots are unable to evaluate the quality and
relevance of what is being said in the same way a human can.
Turning a site like this into one that
has a good search engine ranking, but without sacrificing any of the aesthetic
quality of the site, has become an art form in itself.
Unfortunately many people who don't
have much to say and seek that elusive top ten ranking in Google end up
repeating themselves endlessly whilst being under the impression that they are
in fact increasing the keyword density of their site.
By increasing the
amount of times their keywords are repeated, have they really optimised their
site? Maybe they have in one sense, but how much has been sacrificed in the
process?
If a website reads like a script from
the TV News you know that it has more repetition and less optimisation. I know
we call it 'search engine optimisation' because we are optimising for the
benefit of the search engines, but ultimately it is human beings who use search
engines and human beings who will visit your site.
Your site may well be number one in
Google but if it is not optimised for human experience then your success will
prove to be rather hollow.
SEO: optimisation or repetition? There
is a difference.