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Learn moreIn the last decade plus that I have been working in the search engine optimization industry (SEO), I have been fortunate enough to come into contact with many small business owners looking to build a brand on the Web.
Since the small business owner's first priority is to run their business and not to be an SEO "expert," I wrote a popular primer for small business SEO to help small business owners get started with step-by-step basics that will lead them in the right direction.
While the primer covers a lot of "what to do right" with your SEO efforts, it’s always a good idea to look at some “what not to dos,” too. With that in mind, here are six common SEO mistakes many small businesses make—and that you should avoid.
1. Building a site on a free subdomain or social media site
As a website accumulates inbound links, it begins to rank better within the search engines. When you build your site on a free subdomain, you risk that if you ever choose to move your website (and there are numerous reasons that you may decide to do so), you will lose credit for all of the links aimed at your "free subdomain" website.
Why? Because most free subdomain providers don't allow you to 301 redirect your old site on their service to your new one. A 301 redirect is the only way to "tell" a search engine your site has moved without having to start over again from square one with your search engine rankings. Same goes for using a social website, such as a Facebook page, as your only online presence.
2. Duplicate or non-descriptive title tags
The Title Tag attribute is largely agreed in the SEO community to be one of the most important "on page" aspects of SEO for each page of your website. Simply stated, the Title Tag attribute tells the search engine what your page is about. Many small business owners make the mistake of making their homepage Title Tag attribute merely contain something generic like "Home," which does little to tell the search engines what your website is about—and therefore what words and phrases they should be ranking it for.
Additionally, many small business owners often use the same exact Title Tag attribute on every page of the site. Each page should have its own individual title describing the content on that specific page.
3. Building primarily flash-based websites
It used to be that search engines couldn't index the content on Flash sites—period. Flash optimization has come a long way since then, but if you think regular SEO is tough, then Flash based SEO techniques will seem like rocket science. While having Flash based components isn't a problem (such as a flash banner rotating images of your products), most small business owners would be better off avoiding heavy use of Flash, unless they also have the budget to bring in Flash SEO professionals to ensure the search engines can read it.
4. Using "splash" pages as homepages
We've all been to that website that has the very sexy graphic or Flash animation on its homepage that users need to click to enter the "real" website. Not only is this bad from a usability perspective (these pages confuse some people and they simply leave the website) but it's also bad from an SEO perspective, for a couple of reasons.
Everything we've discussed above has been related to "on page" search engine optimization efforts. But not everything you can do for your site SEO-wise actually happens ON your website. SEO also involves "off page" factors. Below, we'll discuss two that small business websites typically ignore.
5. Not optimizing local listing pages on popular local sites
Twenty percent of all Google searches are local in nature. And lately, Google Places is showing up at the top of the search results for more and more of those search queries. If you want to be found for locally based searches on Google, claiming and optimizing your Google Places listing is vital.
Additionally, Google pulls data from many other websites and it's believed that they take that data (mainly reviews) into account when ranking your Places page within the Google Places results. This means that claiming and monitoring your listings (and getting good reviews) on sites like Yelp, CitySearchs and others is important to your SEO efforts.
6. Doing nothing on the "link building" front
Links are still widely believed to be the single most important "off page" SEO factor. Simply put, without links from other websites, your site won't rank. The more competitive your niche? The more links you will need to get.
Unfortunately, many small business owners put their sites up and completely ignore the inbound link building process afterward. While link building can often be confusing to some small business owners, and it can definitely be time consuming, there is no doubt that if your goal is to improve your search engine rankings, you absolutely need inbound links.
Luckily, many folks in the SEO industry share their link building knowledge on a regular basis. Two guides to check out? 101 Link Building Ideas and The Professional Guide to Link Building.
Rae Hoffman-Dolan aka "Sugarrae" is a serial entrepreneur and well-known SEO consultant specializing in SEO audit services and link building strategies. She is also the Co-Owner and SVP of Marketing for Speedy Incorporation.
#1 was definitely an issue here in our area since Google and Intuit came up with www.virginiagetonline.com. The sites are set up on a free subdomain and in the long run it just wasn't worth it.
#1 always, always kills me when I talk to business owners. They forgot the old saying, "you get what you pay for." And the design along with that "free" hosting is usually a walking horror show.#5 is the next biggest thing. I'm still surprised in this day and age how many business owners in Washington DC, northern Virginia and Maryland have NO idea they can and should list in local business directories, let alone claim their Google listing to prevent problems with competitors.I've been trying to persuade the local small business development organizations to save new business owners from themselves and educate these folks about how critical it is to their success to do their website right the first time.Great points - thanks for compiling!
a few things I would [never] do on the Internet:a) try to create a professional business presence using free web hosting solutionsb) creating a domain name for free on a free domain for web hosting solutions websitec) professionally market myself using blogger.comd) exchange banner ads on traffic exchange sitese) domain squattingf) black hat SEOg) buy links for instant "search engine optimization" gratification purposesh) everything else under the sun that is not positively affiliated with "SEO"i,j,k,l,m,n,o,p,q,r,s,t,u,v,w,x,y,z ---> steal other people's content and plagiarize & scrape "duplicate content" from other websites using RSS scraper programs!That's pretty much it for now in the nutshell… LOLhttp://www.DrewryNewsNetwork.com
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Robert Visser 5 months ago
Just a point of clarification on web standards in reference to item No. 2. Duplicate or non-descriptive title tags, “title tag” is a colloquialism. Using the the term “tag” when referencing a Title element is ambiguous and open to confusion with a title attribute. Please see the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) documents below.HTML 4.01 SpecificationW3C Recommendation 24 December 1999The global structure of an HTML document7.4.2 The TITLE elementhttp://goo.gl/o2htIand7.4.3 The TITLE attributehttp://goo.gl/xJnN0or if you’d prefer:HTML5A vocabulary and associated APIs for HTML and XHTMLEditor’s Draft 30 September 20114.2.2 The title elementhttp://goo.gl/L3gLQFor a Title element there is a difference between what Google displays on a search engine results page (SERPs) and what may actually be indexed. Beginning in late May 2010 we began seeing discussions on the forums that Google had increased the number of displayed characters on their SERPs to 70.There are some additional places we can look for guidance.The input filed for a Business Title on the form to create (or edit) a Google Places business listing has a limit of 80 characters.On Aug. 17th, 2011 Matt Cutts stated in a Webmaster Central Help video, “What role does being in DMOZ play in rankings?” http://goo.gl/xPzQZ , that Google does still relies on DMOZ listings for a few asian countries (the implication being non-roman alphabets) as well as for some snippets. The input field for a title element in a DMOZ listing is limited to 100 characters.Again, neither the character counts of 80 nor 100 specifically indicate Google has any limit on the number of characters which might be indexed for the Title element.As far as authority given to the keywords placed in a Title element, long tail keyword phrases at the beginning of the field (to the left on a roman keyboard) receive a higher value.