US Work From Home Free

Work From Home with NO FEES

&
 

Aug 04 2008

Optimizing Before Building Your Site

Published by Robin Green at 9:24 am under Freelance, Jobs, Work from home Edit This

  For good placement in search engines you will want to make sure your site is optimized so that search engines can place you better. It can be time consuming but is well worth it in the long run. You will not be disappointed in the progress your site makes.

  1) Determine what your sites purpose is and the specific terms.

  2) Use keywords within your site on every page that pertains to what your site has to offer. It can be a single word or a phrase, but keep your phrase down to no more than 3 words for better placement.

  3) Register a domain name for your site.

  4) Design the site and keep in mind the easier to navigate, the more people will want to come back. Also pick a design that is eye catching.

  5)  Write and acquire content for each page. Keep it on point with the site.

  6) Optimize content by embedding keyword and phrases within your text.

  7) Tag your site by embedding keywords into you HTML tags so that search engines can observe.

  This is the best way to get your site out there to millions and keep it going. You will see your visitors grow daily. We have added new jobs on the Freelance Job Posting page. Stop by and see if there is anything for you.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
Possibly-related Articles:                                        (auto-generated)

One Response to “Optimizing Before Building Your Site”

  1. betchaion 04 Aug 2008 at 11:05 am edit this

    thanks always for yur well meaning to help us building our site. i must admite it is indeed hard work, like i do not know how long will it take for my site to get referrals from search engines :( .

    thanks for your comment in my site Robin, i always appreciate it.

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

Some Today.com contributors may have received a fee or a promotional product or service from a manufacturer for promotional consideration, while others receive no consideration at all. Each contributor is responsible for disclosing any such promotional consideration.