Why Your Web Site's Rank Matters! There's a pervasive myth among Web site managers that simply submitting
your Web site to hundreds of search engines will increase traffic
to your site. That's just not true! Submitting alone does not guarantee
that your site will be visible to search engine users. When someone
queries a search engine for a keyword related to your site services,
does your page appear in the top 10 matches - or does your competition's?
If you're not listed within the first two or three pages of results,
you lose, no matter how many engines you submitted your site to.
There are two barriers to solving this problem. First, you have
to know the techniques that will move you into a top 10 position
- the very techniques contained in this special report. Once you
learn how to achieve a top 10 search position, you have to monitor
your progress - a crucial step that takes hours to do right. A top 10 ranking in a major search engine such as Yahoo!, Lycos
or AltaVista often will generate more targeted traffic than an expensive
banner advertising campaign. Plus, a good search engine position
is free - anyone can do it. Consider this: Virtually everyone begins their Web browsing at one of the
seven major search engines. Your rank within these search engines
determines how many people will find and visit your Web site.
Major search engines attract more distinct visitors than any
other Web sites. In fact, seven of the ten most visited Web
sites are search engines. Other forms of online advertising such as banner ads are expensive.
Just a few good positions under a few important keywords can
deliver the same or better results - for FREE. Being in the Yellow Pages doesn't ensure even one phone call
-you need a good listing and a large display ad. In search engines,
the higher you rank under important keywords, the more traffic
you'll get.
Search engines generate more traffic to Web sites than almost any
other source. This was demonstrated by the Tenth WWW User Survey
conducted by the Georgia Institute of Technology, October 1998
(paraphrased): The ways in which people discover Web sites: 1. Links from other Web pages 88%
2. Via search engines 85%
3. From friends 65% This widely respected study shows that almost 90% of Web users
find Web sites through search engines. This proves something most
of you probably already know - good positioning in search engines
will produce big results!
We highly recommend that you review the Georgia Tech report
yourself at:
http:// www. gvu. gatech. edu/ gvu/ user_ surveys/ survey-1998-10/
This Tutorial details the specific steps you will take to
move your Web site into a top position. Best of all, it's not hard!
You don't need to be a super-talented Web page designer to do the
things to your Web pages that will improve your rankings. Most of
it is rudimentary HTML coding and we provide much of the code for
you! This special report is about teaching you the steps you need to
take to succeed. These specific techniques will move your site from
"The Land of the Lost" into "The Land of the Found" - found at the
top of search engines' rankings, that is. No single tip can guarantee
you a top position. However, by using this information your odds
are greatly improved. You can do this. It's not hard, but it takes a little time. Our
reviewers made it through the entire book in an hour or two. If
you give it an hour, you'll build your traffic. When you build your
traffic without spending advertising dollars, you'll have unequivocal
online success. Read on and learn all you need to know to get your
Web site into a top position! |