I was recently contacted by one of my best clients who asked
me what I thought of his decision to make a major change to
one of his highly ranked pages. His initial concern was that
visitor sales conversion ratio was low. At almost one percent,
it was just below normal, but I'm always happy when a client
wants to improve. Conversion and rankings though, are very
different beasts and his concern was overly focused on the
former to the total exclusion of the latter.
As his SEO I should have realized that the top rankings of
this already optimized page were in danger when his first
sentence referred to the existing "Dusty, tired old page, that
just isn't getting enough sales." That page had just been
optimized for search engines about 6 months previously, and
went from page 10 (invisible) or so of the Search Engine
Results Pages (SERP's) to the top three on the first pages of
all three major search engines virtually overnight after a few
tweaks to gain traction from a popular movie reference to his
product.
The page had been up for several years before the movie
release without gaining substantial web sales of that same
product, but our optimization six months ago lead to a leap in
sales and consistently improving page visits after that
theatrical release. But sales plateaued over time and slowly
decreased after the movie which had mentioned his product
transitioned to DVD sales. Somehow he hadn't forseen that
decrease and wanted to continue the level of sales he had
enjoyed while the movie mention was fresh.
To achieve the continued sales though, he wanted to completely
replace the page text with new material he'd been given by the
manufacturer of the product. As is the case with marketing
material provided by many companies, keyword density was
non-existent with emphasis was on slick new photos, covered
with stylized, graphical text. Text with keywords that
couldn't be repeated in any page text since they had already
been embedded in the image graphics several times.
What to do? I suggested creating an entirely NEW page with the
manufacturer provided information linked within his site menu
links on each page and from the sitemap. While maintaining the
old page for it's top rankings in the search engines we could
simply use internal linking to keep the search engines
crawling that (old dusty) fully optimized page. That way we
would still rank in the top 5 for that page and it's coveted
keywords and provide the new conversion focused page to site
visitors from the menu links.
For some reason though, the client insisted on using the
existing filename for the new content and moving the old
content to a NEW filename! Why? Because he wouldn't have to
have his programmer change a script which loaded a rotating
banner to a select few highly trafficked pages. The programmer
costs too much to change a few lines of code for a profitable
product page?
This tactic meant that we would completely lose the existing
rank on the next visit of the search engine crawlers after the
new page was posted. I was convinced that we could gain the
rank back, but only over time and with substantial extra work.
The cost to the client to get a new page into the top five on
SERP's was going to exceed the cost of programming updates of
banner rotation scripts. But he insisted we use the new
manufacturer provided (image only) content on the old
filename. OK, I relent.
The web designer wanted to use the new manufacturer provided
page in an iframe and embed the old page text in noframes tags
- making it visible to search engines, but not visitors. Silly
idea and borderline spam technique that may drop our top five
rankings off the charts. I dug my heals in and refused that
idea.
The client suggested simply keeping previous metatags and
title tag to maintain ranking. Sorry, that simply won't work.
If it did, we'd return to the bad old days of simplistic
keyword stuffing in those (no longer) magical metatags. I
started to wonder ... "Am I here as an SEO only to stop
designers from using SE spamming techniques, programmers from
having to write new code and clients from doing absurd keyword
stuffing in metatags?"
No you actually have to use carefully crafted keyword rich
text on the visible page - and NOT embedded in graphics files
as text painted across photos with photoshop and illustrator
software. Search engines can't read text on images and that
image "Alt" text in the HTML is no longer useful in SEO since
it has been so badly abused by simplistic optimizers for
ranking gains before the search engines began to ignore it in
their ranking algorithm.
The new page may initially see sales increases due to the
pretty new photos (there is zero text on that new page) but
after a long series of email exchanges with this client and a
final phone discussion over ranking issues, he proceeded with
this change anyway. I normally don't hope for poor rankings on
client pages, but since this one runs counter to every fiber
of my SEO being, I'm actually looking forward to that torpedo
striking and the ranking to sink off the charts and the client
to pay attention to his SEO's advice.
The old page is still showing up in cached pages at the search
engines, so they haven't yet crawled the new version. I will
dutifully point out the sinking of the venerable "SS Search
Engine Ranking" ship next week when Googlebot revisits this
client site and finds all that text has disappeared from his
previously #1 ranked page and suggest to him that he review
his WebTrends traffic reports to see that it has settled to
the bottom of the ocean.
I guess I better get busy finding a way to rank the previous
(old optimized) page on the brand new shiny filename. Won't he
be surprised to learn that most of his sales come from that
(newly named) "old dusty page" within a few weeks?
Copyright ? September 3, 2005
Have you done anything to torpedo and sink your ship "SS
Search Engine Rankings" lately? Call me at 562-572-9702 if you
need a salvage operation to raise that venerable ship from the
bottom of the vast search engine rankings ocean.
http://www.seoptimism.com/SEO_Contact.htm
Mike Banks Valentine operates the article distribution site
http://Publish101.com and a Small Business Ecommerce
Tutorial for Web Entreprenuers at http://WebSite101.com