Archive for August, 2005

Web Content Writing

Saturday, August 20th, 2005

One major entry point through which I began learning the craft of SEO (search engine optimization) was the field of web content writing.

Web content writing is more or less a synonym for online copywriting. “Web content” refers to all of the text that appears on your website, whether informational, descriptive or persuasive in nature. In terms of SEO, however, web content writing has one important, additional feature. Namely, web content is optimized.

Web content is the single most important factor in ensuring that your website will achieve the highest rankings in search engine results for relevant key phrases. The more competitive the key phrase, the more web content writing you will need. Most search engines ascribe significant “weight” to the sheer volume of information a website contains. In addition, good web content writing will be infused with a strategic key word density. This is the optimal number of times a search term should appear in your page in proportion to the total number of words. Use a phrase too few times and the search engines will give you a low ranking; use a phrase too many times and you will be penalized as a “spammer.”

In order to make the most of your web content writing, it is a good idea to run a full analysis of highly-searched phrases which relate directly to your products, services or information. The most popular phrases should be targeted first, followed by the secondary and tertiary search phrases. (For more information about key term selection, click here.)

In an ideal situation, you would have at least one page of content on your site for every possible relevant phrase a person could enter into the search engine. In the real world, of course, you will have to make decisions according to your immediate needs and available resources. While gaining high search engine rankings through the use of web content writing is important, it would be a mistake to view this as the only purpose the content should serve. Once again, getting a potential client or other member of your target audience to your site is important. But once that person finds you, it is important to consider how the web content writing (which will then be read by a human, not a search engine) will translate into action on the part of the user.

“Action” may mean the purchase of a product, a request for services, or a change in attitude; whatever it is your web site is trying to accomplish. If you have a need for good web content writing for your site, informationarchiTECH can help. We will work closely with you to determine exactly what needs to be communicated to your audience, and do it in such a way that your website will become more “findable” in the search engine results.

We have written content for a wide range of clients, including retail, educational & service oriented companies.

How Wide is the Sea? Information Architects and SEO

Friday, August 19th, 2005

Richard Wurman once described information as an impending tsunami advancing upon our shores. And yet a tsunami is nothing but a re-ordered sea. What really concerns us is not only the frightfulness of the storm, but the size of the ocean from which it’s power is drawn. We are not so much drowing in information as we are gazing upon its vastness with slack-jawed wonder, our eyes searching the horizon in the distance for where, if anywhere, another shore can be found.

The ultimate problem of information cannot be confined to a single area, a particular industry or body of company data. More and more, the problem of information has become an issue of mapping, with the ultimate goal of instant and infinite mobility. Here, on this shore, you have a person in need of information. There, just beyond the horizon, you have the information. In between these two shores is an angry sea of restless, and growing irrelevance. But just how wide is this sea?

All too many information architects have found themselves caught in a narrow chute of understanding about their role. Their informational design begins with the dangerously misinformed assumption that the user has already found his/her website or system. Information architecture is considered in terms of internal structure, very little in terms of external positioning. Where does the typical user go, after all, upon opening a browser?

A search engine. And here is where the challenge begins. No information architectural design is complete unless the findability of the structure itself is taken into consideration. We live in a world of 2 billion websites. Correspondingly, the search engine catalogues (though they describe only a slice of the total available information) are growing at an exponential rate. The real challenge of an informational architect is not simply to attractively or cleverly organize information on a website or system, but to facilitate and expedite the user’s journey from oblivion (represented by the empty field of a search engine’s search box) to the ultimate goal: your relevant information.

An information architect, then, is an SEO with honor. The information architect does not want swim against the tide of Google’s noble mission, forcing his/her client’s websites to the top rankings for any term, however irrelevant. This, after all, would be a disservice to the client, the search engine user, and the entire vision of “findability.” The philosophy of an information architect is not to drive massive amounts of traffic to a website by any means necessary, but to attract the specific target audience for which the particular product, service or information was originally intended.

The information architect’s mission goes beyond that of an “honorable SEO,” however. Findability is a commitment, as has been stated, that runs the full gamut between the user and the information he/she seeks. Ideally, the IA wants the user to find the exact page on a website that relates to his/her search (the “landing page.”) Where they miss, however, an information architect should design the site in such a way that the information is easily findable, wherever the user lands.

It is here that the more commonly understood and discussed aspects of information architecture come into play—i.e. the “user experience.” Specifically, information architects should be familiar with search technology, category management, metadata, graphic design/layout and link structure. These and other tools should be visibly available to the user and allow for quick access to any information contained within the boundaries of the website.

How wide is the sea? As wide as the distance between you and the information you seek. And if you haven’t guessed it by now, the sea is getting wider every day. As this natural process continues to unfold, information architects will become in greater demand by those who wish to part this sea, create an easy and obvious pathway, or to use Wurman’s phrase, “making the complicated clear,” from this shore to the next…

About Me: I am a Web site and application developer based in Lafayette, Louisiana. I specialize in Internet marketing, social media applications, search engine optimization, and interface development.

Contact: Aaron Lozier
skype aaron.lozier
phone (337) 205-2365
fax (801) 348-2280
email lozieraj@gmail.com

Reach Me Online
(Contact Form/Live Chat)

Polyols | Honey Bee Polyols - Soy Based

| Natural Oil Polyols | HoneyBee Soy Based Polyols