Free Google Search Engine Optimization Service!

75

By SaiKit

Web Search Engine Optimization (aka SEO) is not getting the attentions it deserves from more than 95% of the webmasters out there. Most websites that do it consistently and systematically often get their pages ranked and listed in the first few pages of the Google search results and enjoy being one of the top 3% high traffic websites, while the other billions of websites get buried in the Deep Web forever.

A community based, article submission directory site like hubpages.com is a very good place for beginners and individual infoprenuers to get their few web pages noticed, comparing with the time and effort it takes to build an independent niches site out there on your own. Hubpages.com has social, recycle traffic that circulate re-visitors (hubbers) around the hubs (Google detects every visitor and track her behavior while reading your hub) and thus increasing the overall search engine ranking for each hub. Every hubber wins.

Please pay attention: The problem is, I think a lot of hubbers simply stop there and wouldn't make an effort to further optimize their organic search engine ranking. Social traffic from fellow hubbers (including visitors from social bookmark sites such as Digg or StumbleUpon) is nice, but they generally don't click your ads or buy your recommended products. When they visit your hubs, at least half of them are simply hopping around hubs. Social visitors are NOT as desperate and as focus on finding a product, a solution, or a service for their specific needs as the traffic from search engine.

Many Webmasters/Hubbers Are Leaving Money On the Table As We Speak

If you don't do SEO for your hubs or webpages, you are leaving at least half the money on the table. Hubpages.com is such an intelligently designed community articles site that is designed to push up your search engine ranking for whatever keyword you centered around your hub within a very short time, comparing with independent niches site. But most of the hubs that I have seen is not based on a high demand, low competition keyword. (Competitions mean the number of credible publishers that are fighting for the ranking of that specific keyword for their webpages) Instead, they used many general, low-CPC, and non-specific keywords for the headlines, summaries, and URLs of their hubs.

But all you need to spend is just an extra 5 minutes of your time on each hub to optimize it. It's one of the easiest thing to do. But many SEO companies are charging a small fortune for this service.

From the business view point, what good would it does if you get the phrase "My fun time in Paris" ranked and listed on page one in Google search result? Would people search for the words "My fun time in Paris" through the search engine?

Highly searched keywords that center around the word "Paris" are keywords like "travel to paris", "climate in paris france", "paris hotel and casino", but a lot of publishers are probably competiting for them too.

High demand but low competition keywords that are conquerable for small time webpage builders like John and Jane would be keywords like "london to paris train", "disneyland paris package".

Higher Adsense CPC value keywords would probably be "paris hotel and casino", because hotel or casinos would bid for this keyword in Google Ads. You can place this type of high CPC keyword near Adsense spawning space on your hub or webpage to trigger expensive Ads.

But I don't do guesswork. I have methods and tools that help me find out exactly what the demands (Search volume), competition, and CPC are! I will explain in the last parts of the page.

Does SEO Keyword Compromise Readability Of Your Article?

If you are only able to find a handful few high-traffic-low-competition keywords and have to settle for one or two, then you are probably not going to find keywords that can easily fit in smoothly with your headline, hub summary, and content.

For example, if you have to use the exact phrase "paris hotel and casino" in your content, it is fairly hard to appear natural in your content. It looks out of place.

But we are talking about picking the best, profitable keywords out of hundred of keywords that have the word "Paris" in it, so if you are able to generate a long list of "Paris" related keywords, with the info of their level of demand, competition, and CPC values lay out clearly in a spread sheet, then you should be able to pick one or two keywords that are profitable, while at the same time has wordings that fit in nicely into your headline, summary, and content.

Good SEO should be both readable to Google search engine and human visitors at the same time.

I know some hubbers do do SEO, or they think they were doing it, but...

They don't know what their organic competitions are!!! If you are using Google Adwords Tool, it doesn't really provide you with the number of competitions from content publishers for each particular keyword, but it only shows the competition for Google Adwords advertisers.

Google Adwords Tools Doesn't Provide Competitions Data From Other Websites

Google Search Engine Optimization for hubs & hubpages.com
See all 4 photos
Google Search Engine Optimization for hubs & hubpages.com

So How Do You Get Real Data For Competition?

You do it one keyword at a time, manually, by typing “allintitle:” before your keyword in the Google search box, and it will shows you the number of real competitor beneath the box.

(I use softwares that generate data for hundreds of keywords. I don't do it manually and I will show you how you can do it as massively and as quickly as I do it. Just learn the manual one first)

Enter "allintitles:" before keyword to find the number of websites that optimize this keyword in their webpages
Enter "allintitles:" before keyword to find the number of websites that optimize this keyword in their webpages

Are You With Me So Far?

  • Yes
  • No, I am lost
  • Sounds Interesting, definitely read more
See results without voting

The term "paris louvre hotel" has 83,800 competing sites fighting to get Google lists it on the first few pages.

A large number of those sites aren't content rich sites that Google loves to rank, so they fall way below in search results and will remain there forever. So your real competition is probably half of that number.

Another thing is that the global search volume for this particular term is only 49,500. (According to Google Adwords Tool) So there are more competitors than visitors. If I have a website that is about traveling in Paris or something like that I won't even compete for "paris louvre hotel" in Google search engine ranking because it doesn't worth my effort.

If it's CPC value is high I might consider placing it besides Google Adsense ads so it might trigger high value ads for people to click, but I will not place this term in my url, headline, and summary box. I will never try to rank this term on Google. But I will choose some other high traffic, low competition keywords for my hubs and webpages.

Since I don't do it manually, I have a lot of Excel worksheet with tons of quality data for tons of keywords. See below:

Extensive SEO data for 800+ keywords (Google Search Engine Optimization)
Extensive SEO data for 800+ keywords (Google Search Engine Optimization)

This is one of my many keywords lists in Excel Spreadsheet. Each sheet has over 800 keywords in it. Using the function of Excel, I can sort the data in descending/ascending order in term of demand, supply (i.e. competition), profitability, pcdm (average click number for ads), cpc, profitability (A calculated result based on math formula for demand and supply), and keyworth (formula that incorporate everything).

This week I wrote a hub with the keyword "Life Insurance With Cash Value" in the url, summary, and headline. I chose that keyword phrase because it is highly searched by Google visitors, but competition from other sites is very low.

Then I put the phrase "term life insurance" in the first paragraph of that hub because I want it to trigger high value Adsense ads. The average CPC for this term is $20.23!

See how I did it:

seo keywords in url. Each word is separated by '-'
seo keywords in url. Each word is separated by '-'
SEO for hubpage summary. I place the exact keyword in the summary
SEO for hubpage summary. I place the exact keyword in the summary
Try to trigger high value Adsense ad in your webpage by placing high value keyword (CPC) near it
Try to trigger high value Adsense ad in your webpage by placing high value keyword (CPC) near it

SEO Is Super Easy And Quick To Implement

If the techniques I just shared with you sounds like so much works, then it's just your mind doing tricks to you. It's not that hard. The process is so quick you just go to the spreadsheet, sort out the data, and quickly pick out the best keywords that can really go well with your headline and content without looking awkward to human visitors, and just place it properly in your url, headline, and summary like I did it for my hub "Life Insurance With Cash Value".

Then, on the same spreadsheet you re-sort the list in term of "CPC" or "Keyworth" and pick the best Adsense triggering keywords to place near ad spaces. Make sure you don't overdo it in your article. 2-3% keyword density is about right. More than that you might incur penalty on Google ranking.

What If I Only Write Stuff That I Love To Write?

Human comes first! You are not a data machine. If you think of something that you love to write, then write it! In fact, you can have an idea of what you want to write, then try to find the SEO keywords for it.

Just produce new keyword spreadsheets that center around the main word that most represent your new article.

For example, I might want to write "How to curb hunger during dieting". But upon SEO research, I find that none of the words are good for SEO. So I enter "dieting" into the software, and produce 800+ keywords that have "dieting" in the phrase, and see if any phrase can properly represent what I want to write. If I find the best, I will use it on the headline.

Note: Use the exact wording of that SEO keyword, don't change anything! If you do, it's not the same keyword anymore.

If there is no good SEO keyword phrase you can find from the "dieting" list, then you may produce new spreadsheet list with "hunger" or other concept word to see if there are some other phrases that can do the job.

For example, "How to stop hunger pangs" might come out in the "hunger" list, which is just as fine as my original headline "How to curb hunger during dieting". I can simply add words to make that "How to stop hunger pangs during dieting".

Adding words before or after the SEO keyword for a headline is fine. Google won't penalize that.

What do you feel about this hub?

  • Exciting! I will implement your techniques in my hub!
  • I want to do it, but what software should I use?
  • It is a good idea, but I am afraid I am not as skillful as you
  • Can you help me do it?
See results without voting

Pay It Forwards

If you like what I share, then please share it on bookmarking sites such as digg, stumble upon, and other sites like facebook and twitter. Also, please vote! Thanks buddies!

Comments

eternaltreasures profile image

eternaltreasures 23 months ago

nice expert looking hub!

blondie 15 months ago

Many thanks into your insightful article!

Do you mind me asking what software do you use to produce your spread sheets?

SaiKit profile image

SaiKit Hub Author 15 months ago

The Excel Spreadsheet. Just the common one you use on Window or Mac. Haha

adamz513 profile image

adamz513 15 months ago

Wow. I have no clue what you are talking about but it sounds good. So where do I find the top CPC's?

SaiKit profile image

SaiKit Hub Author 15 months ago

Go to Google Adwords Tool and login, and play around a bit and you will find that out.

Tyler Bracken profile image

Tyler Bracken Level 1 Commenter 14 months ago

Do you type the allintitle: (allintitle: choosen phrase)

without speech marks every time?

The reason I ask is because I do it like this: allintitle: "choosen phrase" and the two get different results.

Tyler Bracken profile image

Tyler Bracken Level 1 Commenter 14 months ago

also, on your excel spreadsheet, does the 'supply' = the allintitle results and the 'demand' = the number of global searches? thanks

SaiKit profile image

SaiKit Hub Author 14 months ago

@Tyler

I didn't notice there were two different results with or without quote mark. Good catch

Spreadsheet, the supply and demand used the scale of Site Build It! It's not produced manually

bell du jour profile image

bell du jour Level 5 Commenter 7 months ago

Thank you so much for all the invaluable info! I have already improved my earnings a little by implementing some of your tips!

thanks again Voted up and awesome

Bell

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    Please wait working