My hope of laying out the efforts is to spread the work to all that can volunteer. I mean, I suppose you can deprive yourself from sleep for the next year, but perhaps we can lend a hand.
I’ll think of a way to create such layout, give me a couple of days.
More on my proposal:
- Directory submission
It is wise to keep track of the submissions.
Especially in the case of link-back directories, we should check in a few weeks if they have added us and if not delete them from our list. We should also consider adding them to a separate “other links” page. Most of those directories only require that the page is accessible within 3 clicks – that is easy to comply with - and none is really the kind of resource we want to keep on our main links page.
There is also the matter about the 250+ free directories that could be split in say 5 easily digestible chunks. I personally am not getting any traffic from those submissions (about 80 directories), but they do boost my PR (PageRank).
And that is another thing that I want to mention. As you said, and particularly about the blog submissions, most of such submissions will be crap in terms of traffic and the quality of that traffic, but they will all put a somewhat targeted link back to us.
For example,
- Press releases
As you stated, unless it is something appealing it will not get reprinted, so it is a good idea to make it appealing. But in the worst case scenario it gets out there in a page with your description and a link back. If you post the same press release to 20 free submission sites, you get 20 links back with the possibility of someone picking up the story.
- Article submission
Same idea about the links. I have seen a good article reprinted hundreds of times. That means hundreds of links back to the site from a clean easy effort. There is also the benefit of targeted incoming traffic from people who were technical enough to enjoy the article. Worst case scenario, none of the articles picks up; you still end up with some 20 links back from each article.
About the keywords,
Is our engine allowing us to set personalized meta tags for each page?
We could do some automated PHP process to generate and set the keywords, or we could do it manually with something available out there, such as this:
http://www.abakus-internet-marketing.de/tools/topword.htmlAlso, in my semi-experienced opinion, the sole most important phrase of a site is the title. I would strip as many non-keyword-y words from it as possible. For instance, this thread reads:
Experts Round Table :: View topic - SEO effort for ERT
9 keywords, 5 of them (give or take) are excess baggage.
My suggestion:
ERT :: SEO effort for ERT
5 keywords, 4 are topic related (and coincidentally the first one is related too)
Also, about those SE friendly URLs, I have noticed that Goggle and Yahoo have absolutely no problem indexing my site, even without the oh! so acclaimed google sitemaps. For example, try this search on any search engine:
netbulge php redirect pages
Yahoo, Google and Altavista will show you the article. MSN on the other hand gets it terribly wrong (sends you to the registration page for some insane reason).
My point is that, although it is much better to use search engine friendly URLs, it won’t stop a good search engine from properly understanding your site, especially if we use the Google sitemaps feature:
http://www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/login