Archive for August, 2009

How can Local Search help my business?

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009
How can local search help my business?

How can local search help my business?

Local Search is about to undergo a period of rapid growth, as search engine and content providers begin to recognise the value of providing local results to search engine users. How does your site perform when a visitor searches the local area for your services?

Even if your website performs well in search engine results normally, you might be disappointed with your local search results. With a recent Piper Jaffray report stating that approximately 30% of online searches contain a city, county or post code or 2.6 billion local searches performed each month; can you afford to have your website not perform well in a local search?

For some businesses, local search is the only thing they’re interested in. If you only provide services to the surrounding area, then Local Search is vital to the success of your website.

What is Local Search?

Local Search is a search performed with a location provided as an integral part of the query. That could be searching Google for ‘web design hertfordshire’, searching on Google Maps for ‘web design’ and Google automatically filtering the results based on your current location or maybe just searching an online directory such as Yell.com, where you search for a ‘Who/What’ and specify a ‘Where’.

Why is it important?

As mentioned above, approximately 2.6 billion local searches are being made each month and local search is set for a growth explosion. Local Search has just overtaken offline media such as the Yellow Pages and local newspapers for the most commonly used method for finding local services, suppliers and products. All of the offline directories and phone books are developing or already have an online service as they look to get in early with regards to local search.

One of the drivers of the growth of local search is the mobile search market. With more and more mobile phones and handheld devices connecting to the internet, the mobile search market is going through massive growth and the mobile operators (Vodafone, Orange, T-Mobile) are all in agreement that local search is a logical fit for mobile devices.

How is it different from normal search?

Because of the information needed for to return local search results, the search engines (Google, Yahoo, Bing) can’t collect data and build their index of websites in the normal way. Normally, a search engine has a program called a ’spider’, which visits websites, finds any links on that website and then visits those links, indexing as it goes and building up the huge databases that power the search engine. To return local search results, the search engine needs to know the address linked to that particular website and a spider cannot determine that information on its own.

So even if your website is performing well for search terms such as your company name or the service you provide, if you are not proactive in letting a search engine know the area or areas that you provide services to, you won’t perform well in local search.

So what does this mean?

Hopefully by now, you’ll have decided that you want to get in on Local Search at the ground floor. Before it explodes and ahead of your competitors. Local Search is currently a developing area, heading for massive growth.

To get a head start in Local Search, you need to be proactive: spend some time identifying the local directories and “Internet Yellow Pages” that serve your area and make sure you are submitted to those. Visit all the big search engines and get your business listed on their local search and map pages. Have a look at Google’s local search site. Visit the main online directories and make sure your details are listed.

If you’ve decided to improve your sites local search performance, then please contact us and we’ll make sure your website is optimised for good local search performance and do all the hard work for you.

Take a look at this video to find out more about Google Local Search:

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England's Best Web Designer

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

England's Best Web Designer

England's Best Web Designer

So are Ribit Solutions England's best web designer? We’ll leave that for you to decide! But what we are doing with this article is trying to demonstrate the importance of targeted keywords for good search engine results.

Why target “England’s Best Web Designer”

A search engine such as Google or Bing is unable to determine who is England’s best web designer, as that is subjective and the result would vary depending on who you ask. Instead, when someone searches for “England’s best web designer”, the search engine will attempt to find any page in its index that is most relevant. A search engine determines how relevant this page is to “England’s best web designer” by analysing all the pages in its index and looking at things like the page title, any headings on the page, the text on the page and any links on the page.

A quick check on Google showed that nobody was targetting the phrase “England’s best web designer”. This should make it reasonably easy to get our page high up on the rankings. As a web designer, being indexed as England’s Best Web Designer could be quite handy and hopefully this article will give you some ideas on how you can improve your sites position. Try and think of the best phrase you could use for your business in this way and create a specific page to target that phrase.

“How to target England’s Best Web Designer”

So we’ve written this page to target the phrase “England’s best web designer”. If you look at the top of your browser, right at the very top, you should see the title of this page. We’ve set the title to be England’s Best Web Designer. The search engine will look at the title tag when determining what this page is about and will find a hit for England’s Best Web Designer.

Take a look at the address of this page in the address bar. You should notice that the address of the page is www.ribitsolutions.co.uk/englands-best-web-designer This is another clue for the search engine that this page is relevant to England’s Best Web Designer.

The next thing to look at on the page is the main header. No suprises there, England’s Best Web Designer. And then you’ll notice that throughout this text, I’ve mentioned our key phrase several times. England’s best web designer features prominently as a phrase in the article body, sometimes in bold, sometimes in headers, as search engines give further value to terms highlighted in this way.

As a measure, this article was written on 11 August 2009 and at that time, the page was not in any search engines index for England’s Best Web Designer. So lets see how this page does. Lots of web design companies have well optimised pages which makes this subject a little more difficult to get to the top of than other industries, but I would expect this page to at least get to the first page of results on Google for the term England’s Best Web Designer.

Update 09/09/09: So far so good! Less than a month in and front page on Google!! Try the Google search below and you should see as of today, 2nd position in Google!

Update 14/09/09: Number 1 on Google!

Try it out here:

Search Google for England’s Best Web Designer