Appearing on ’s 1 - 10
web results is every web administrator’s dream.
With generating over 85% of all Internet
search engine referred traffic, reaching that
privileged ranking can differentiate the
professional Internet players from the amateur
website owners. As a matter of fact, numerous
tests have demonstrated that the top three
results are read by the majority of web surfers,
the remaining results on that first page are the
second most efficient ones, but only about 10% of
Internet users explore beyond the third page of
results.
In other words, if your company is not part of
the elite, or the top 30 results, the probability
of being contacted by a client becomes almost
non-existent. Thirty spots are all you have. And
only ten of them are reserved for the cream of the
crop. Is this truly all the space that is
available for everyone around the globe? In
reality, there are several factors that make those
top rankings that you so feverishly compete for
less contended than they first appear. The answer
lies in the segmentation and accurate
identification of your market niche along with an
effective positioning of your website for this
niche.
For now, you may want to temporarily forget
about the Internet and start by asking yourself
how many competitors you have in the real world.
Or, if you prefer, you may want to list those
businesses that are offering a product or service
portfolio resembling yours and targeting the same
client segment that you are profiting from. It is
entirely possible that you may have already gone
the extra mile differentiating your product or
service offering, finding a market niche that can
be addressed in a unique way, or identifying some
other competitive advantage of your own. In other
words, you may already be competing with a reduced
number of firms, probably less than 30, and
perhaps even less than 10. If this is what your
real world looks like, why should it be any
different on the Internet? Even if we accept the
fact that there will always be markets or segments
that will attract a greater number of competitors,
as long as we have accurately segmented our piece
of the pie, we will frequently find that only a
handful of competitors are vying for our same
portion.
Let’s look at this issue now from an Internet
perspective. Can we all fit in ’s top 10
results? The answer is a definite yes, at least as
it applies to those results generated by search
terms that potential clients use when looking for
companies like yours. The good news is that
has reserved for your business a small number of
pages where your website can appear on the top
three results, and then, a handful more where your
site will definitely rank among the elite, but
where, unfortunately, you will also contend
alongside your closest competitors. Therefore,
constantly measuring and tracking the amount of
traffic that a site experiences does not seem as
important -after all, in a real shop, one is more
interested in helping customers than visitors.
Instead, you should concentrate in assuring that
when potential Internet clients look for your
products or services they can indeed find your
website. Let’s see how this is done.
1. Accurately identifying your market niche
You must get to know the type of clients that
you are addressing: who they are, where they are
located, and how they look for your products or
services. Keep in mind that the typical Internet
user begins a search using very broad terms. For
example, someone in Great Britain looking for
homes in the Costa Blanca of Spain may enter
“houses in Spain” as search terms. However, those
same keywords could be used by a student who is
interested in Spanish architecture, or by a person
looking for rental property in Madrid, or by an
economist who wants to know how real estate prices
have recently faired in Spain.
When a search engine returns an unmanageable
number of results, users typically restrict their
next search by including more specific criteria.
For example, they may limit the geographic
coverage -“house in Costa Blanca”-, include the
type of product –“townhouse in Costa Blanca”-, or
add an action –“opportunities + townhouse in Costa
Blanca for sale”. If your business happened to be
a small real estate agency in the town of Javea
-in the Costa Blanca of Spain-, a potential client
of yours would probably belong to the profile of
those that entered “opportunities + townhouse in
Costa Blanca for sale.”
Nowadays, a great majority of Internet searches
are conducted by entering concepts consisting of
two or three words. However, after a user becomes
more familiar with Internet search engine
technology the tendency is to type in more
specific and detailed phrases.
2. Identifying your keyword sets
Are you targeting a general English speaking
audience or perhaps Scandinavian customers that
may be interested in buying luxury homes in Javea?
One of your first criteria should therefore be the
language.
After a language is selected, you must figure
out how potential clients will look for your
website. Keep in mind though that if you are a
small real estate agency in Javea, focused in
selling local properties to a British market, for
example, it will be extremely difficult for your
website to appear as part of the elite results
when someone simply types in “real estate in
Spain” as the search criteria. At the same time,
be aware that the chances of your small business
capturing a customer that entered those terms in
are much reduced. The problem is that “real
estate in Spain” is not the space where your small
local company should be competing in. If, on the
other hand, you had correctly identified your
market niche, you would be enjoying a definite
advantage when users entered more specific terms,
such as “townhouses in Javea”, “villas in Javea”,
“apartments for sale in Javea”, or “real estate
agents in Javea”. In summary, the keywords that we
select must always identify very clearly our
specific market niche.
3. Optimizing your website
Your next step will be to ensure that the
contents of your website reflect precisely the
products or services that your clients are looking
for.
If you are wondering how search engines
classify websites, you must bear in mind that
after all, a website is nothing more than
information. Books have been organizing and
presenting information for centuries. If you were
handed a book and asked what the book was about,
you would probably first look at its title,
subtitles or any other text on the book’s cover.
Next, you might turn the book over and look for a
summary or synopsis on its back. A third level of
information could be derived from looking at its
index. Finally, and without having to read the
entire book, you would browse through some of the
pages, where individual chapter and section titles
would catch your attention. If you were
considering buying the book, you would probably
take a look at recommendations from prior readers,
paying more attention to those that you consider
experts in the field.
is no different. When it comes to
classifying a website, will look at the
title of the default page, at its description or
subtitle, and at the contents inside the page
itself, which if properly built, should be a
synopsis of what the users will find in the
website. will next evaluate the website’s
navigation or indexing by traversing through the
various links inside each page or chapter. While
navigates through a website, it will repeat
the process of looking at the title, description
and contents of each and every page.
In the same manner as we use recommendations
from prior consumers before making a purchasing
decision, will also take into account those
links that point to your pages from external
websites. And, the more important and prestigious
those external referring sites are, the higher
your own website will be rated by . It is
therefore extremely important to have a good title
and description for our website’s home page, but
it is equally important to make sure that the
titles and descriptions for the remaining pages
accurately reflect their contents (nobody wants to
read a book whose chapter titles are all the
same). It goes without saying -unless your company
name is Coca-Cola or Nike- that you should not use
the name of your business as a page title. If
someone already knew your company by name, they
probably would know your web address as well.
4. Learning from your clients
You should review from time to time your
website’s traffic statistics and derive from them
those search engines and search terms that have
primarily been used to find your website. At the
same time, this information will identify those
keywords most often entered by your potential
clients. If you then create new pages using these
same concepts and look for partners willing to
include in their websites a referral link to your
home page, you will start noticing a progressive
improvement of your website’s ranking, at least
for those searches that deliver the most
profitable results.
Conclusion
In your race to become a highly ranked website,
do not try to compete using very broad terms. Your
site can join a search engine’s elite (top 30
results), or even be part of its cream of the crop
(top 10 results), if you identify and segment your
market niche accurately. In fact, even though you
may end up registering less Internet traffic than
before, or less than your competitors, the ratio
between the number of visitors that simply pass
through your site and the number of potential
clients, also known as the customer conversion
ratio, will be much higher. After all, what are
you most interested in, traffic or clients?