Quick Summary of Do-It-
Yourself SEO Tips
Many
people who buy this book will never read it in its entirety. To help whet your
palate and ensure you get some value out of this text (and, therefore, read the
whole thing), here is a quick-start checklist highlighting the most important
aspects of search engine optimization and Internet marketing. When looking to
start with search engine optimization, consider the following issues:
Oftentimes using the right tools
can save you both time and money. I have created a free PDF checklist of all
the SEO tools I use. You may download it here:
You
may read this title and think that you have already accomplished this step, and
that your product (or your vision for your product) is already refined,
wrapped, and ready for purchase. However, there are many key questions that
should be considered before bringing your wares or service to customers:
- Are you interested in the product you are trying to sell? If not, why not choose a different product. The Internet makes marketing anything a possibility. You are far more likely to succeed if you are interested in what you are trying to sell. Also, it is far easier to sell people what they want than to get them to want your product. Create something the market wants.
- Is the marketplace for your product oversaturated?
Examples: Posters, credit cards,
prescription drugs, hosting, generic site
design, and ink refills are all oversaturated markets. Breaking into these
markets can be exceptionally difficult, so think carefully about what would
make your product different and needed.
- Is the product something people would want to order over the web
- Is there something you can do to make yourself different than everyone else on the market?
(Please note: “cheaper” usually is not a
legitimate branding/business model for most websites in a hyper-competitive
market.)
Example: No other e-book covering SEO
was supported by a blog that keeps up
with the SEO industry every day (at least, not when I first wrote this one).
Another example: In 2002, I
created a SEO “worst practices” directory.
To this day, nobody else has made a site like it. It earned me thousands in
the first year with a marketing budget well under $100. In the end,
ask yourself -- Would people want to
link to your site without you asking them to? If not, what creative or original
ideas can you add to your site to make people want to link to it?
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