Blogger Template by Blogcrowds

What happens when your visitors can't find what they want on your website?
They might be bored, probably they're hungry for more or they might want
to refine their search. If you have a Google Search Box, you can now retain
these 'quitters' — and make money from ads they click from their search
results!

The Google Search Box isn't just an added convenience for your visitors — it
can actually make you money!

If your AdSense ads are being ignored, add a link at the bottom of the
AdSense ads, inviting visitors to try Google search. A simple note should do
the trick. Try something like: "Can't find what you're looking for? Try Google
Search!"

A Google Search box allows your visitors to specify their exact search terms,
thereby "pulling" more relevant ads to your page. Using the Search feature,
you can pull up on-demand AdSense ads at the top of the search results.

Putting a Google search box on your site brings advantages and
disadvantages. The big plus is that all the ads the user sees are going to be
relevant. The user chooses the keyword so the results are going to be right
in line with what the user wants.

On the other hand, that means you’ve got no control over the keywords they
choose so you can’t try to promote high-paying keywords. You have to take
what you’re given. You could have a high click-through rate but low revenues
(although there’s still no guarantee that the user will click on an ad rather
than an unpaid listing on the search results page.)

But your users will leave your site at some point anyway. Why shouldn’t you
try to make money when they do click away? Even if Search doesn’t bring
you huge amounts of money, you should still use it as an added revenue
source and to bring extra functionality to your users. I look at it this way. If
a visitor doesn’t find what they want on my site, I’d prefer that they leave
some change in the “tip jar” on the way out the door!

Submitting your site to all of the search engines from Google and Yahoo!
right down to the smallest ones, and optimizing each of your pages for high
ranking can be a drag. You also have to keep submitting the site on a regular
basis and constantly check your position if you want to keep it.

The search engines are always re-indexing and reorganizing. A site that can
be in the top spot one week can be a couple of pages over a week later.
(Good news if you’re low down, not so good if you’ve spent hours changing
your pages to climb the rankings.)

That’s why many webmasters simply outsource their SEO so that they can
concentrate on content.

There are lots of companies that do this. Search Engine Blaster for example,
lets you choose from over 600,000 engines but there are plenty of others.
Personally, I think that’s a bit of a waste of time. Only Google, Yahoo and
MSN are important, in that order.

Usually, your links will lead directly to your home page. That’s where you see
your site as starting and that’s where you want them to enter.

But if the content the user wants to see is on one of the internal pages,
there’s no reason for them to have to click around to find it. Fill that page
with keywords that relate to the content on that page and it will have its own
search engine ranking — and well-targeted ads.

So if you have a site about cats and one of your pages was about cat food, it
would make sense to put plenty of cat food keywords on the page. That
would get you cat food ads and a high ranking on search engines when
someone does a search for “cat food” rather than just people who wanted to
know about “cats.”

Older Posts