A Free-Reprint Article Written by: Jason OConnor 

Article Title: 
How A Blog Can Seriously Help Your Business

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Article Description:
If your business website doesn't have a blog, get one. A
blog, if done right, can act as a direct and indirect
mechanism that brings large amounts of qualified visitors to
your site, many of whom may become customers.


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1213 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-10-22 11:48:00

Written By:     Jason OConnor
Copyright:      2009
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]



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How A Blog Can Seriously Help Your Business
Copyright (c) 2009 Jason OConnor
The Net Gazette
http://www.TheNetGazette.net/



If your business website doesn't have a blog, get one. A blog,
if done right, can act as a direct and indirect mechanism that
brings large amounts of qualified visitors to your site, many of
whom may become customers.

This is mostly related to the way blogs interact with search
engines and the traffic I am speaking of will come from search
engines, mostly Google.

Before I explain how you can do this to help your website, let me
first give some background on how search engines work, Google in
particular.

When it comes to optimizing your website (or blog for that
matter) for search engines you must always keep in mind two
things: on-page optimization and off-page optimization.

On-page optimization is the elements of a Web page that better
optimizes it to be found and ranked well in the search engines.
These elements can include on-page content such as the actual
sentences and paragraphs on the page, the headlines (or headers
or Hx tags), the links, the links' text, the title tag and much
more.

Off-page optimization means the things that are done on sites
besides your own, namely link-building. Off-page optimization is
the process of creating links (or causing others to create links)
on other websites that point to your site. Inbound links as these
are often called have a major impact on how well you rank in
search engines. Generally speaking, the more inbound links, the
better. But the quality of the sites with these inbound links, or
the way the search engines perceive the sites, is even more
important.

To rank on the first couple of pages on the search engines
requires work on both on-page and off-page optimization.

Two additional and important pieces of information that you'll
need to understand are related to site content and internal
links.

Search engines also very much love new, original and quality
content, and they like to see your website regularly adding this
kind of new content. You don't need to add pages every day, just
add pages at the same rate over time. So if you add a page a week
to your site, keep it at around that same pace, or increase or
decrease gradually.

A website can be considered a living entity in a sense. It
certainly shouldn't be static. It should grow over time. And the
fantastic thing about content is that the more of it there is on
your site, the more chances you have getting found in the search
engines.

The idea that inbound links help your search engine rankings that
I explained above can be extended to your own internal pages as
well. In other words, the more links to a particular page coming
from other pages within the same site will boost that page's
rank as well.

Think of it this way. If you had a ten-page site, including a
product page and every page on the site contained a link to your
product page. If all other things were equal, your product page
would rank higher than the rest of your site's pages (besides
the home page which is given a little extra weight).

Now let's consider what would happen if there were only you and
your competitor in your industry (only if that could be true!)
and your site still had those ten pages while your competitor's
site contained one hundred pages. Furthermore, your competitor
set it up the same way as you where he added a link to every page
on his site that pointed to his product page. If all other things
were equal his product page would outrank your product page every
time. Why? Because he had 100 internal links pointing to his
product page and you only had 10.

If you put all these pieces together now, on-page optimization,
off-page optimization or link building, content creation and
internal linking, can you begin to see why a blog may be a good
thing? A blog helps with all of these.

A blog that is regularly updated is providing a mechanism for
adding fresh content on a regular basis. Plus, it's so easy to
use a blog that anyone can use them, so even if you or your
employees don't know a thing about Web pages and HTML, you'll
still be able to add new content to your site.

Consider this. If you add fresh, quality content to your blog on
a regular basis by writing posts, something the search engines
love, and within each post you link to an important page within
your site, let's say your product page for instance, you're now
building links to help your rankings using your blog. With this
additional link your product page gets that much more boost in
the search engines.

Remember how I explained that links from within your own site
help your rankings? Adding links within your blog posts pointing
back to your other important pages of yours that you want to rank
well is a great way to help your rankings.

And every time you publish a new post, you're giving the search
engines one more entry point into your site. Your site will
quickly get bigger, and with each new page your site gets more
visible.

Keep in mind that the links you make within your blog posts
should be relevant. Only link to your product page from a post
that has to do with your products. And also, blog posts ought to
be useful to your site visitors. The less you talk about your
products and instead offer useful, free information that people
can use, the more traffic and repeat visitors you'll get.

Remember that people really don't care about you, your website
or your products, they only care about how you can help them. If
you sell furniture, a blog post about how to find the best deals
on furniture would be far better than a post about how your
chairs are the best in the world.

One important thing to remember is that if you plan on creating a
new blog for your business as a way to augment your website be
sure you put the blog on your actual domain. This means that you
would not use a remote service like Blogger.com. Instead, you
must have the blog on your business website's address (or
domain). For example, if your website address is
http://www.yoursite.com/ then your blog should be located at
http://www.yoursite.com/blog or http://blog.yoursite.com/

By adding a blog to your business website you are creating a way
to get more traffic. You'll get direct traffic from your posts,
which get indexed by the search engines and drive traffic to your
site from searches. And you'll get indirect traffic from your
other site's pages ranking well in the search engines because
they have links pointing to them from your blog posts.

You'll be regularly adding fresh content to your site, which
search engines love, thereby creating more ways to be found in
the search engines at the same time. And each post provides a new
opportunity to create a link or two to other pages and blog posts
on your site, thereby boosting those pages' rankings.

Like I suggested at the beginning, if your business website
doesn't have a blog, go get one.

Copyright 2009 TheNetGazette.net






---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jason O'Connor is a Web business and marketing professional 
who produces The Net Gazette, a free online Web business and 
marketing periodical. The Net Gazette covers topics that range 
from (http://www.thenetgazette.net/sept-09/BlogsSEO.htm) 
blogging for business to Twitter. Read the September edition 
here: (http://www.thenetgazette.net/sept-09/sept-issue-09.htm) 
or visit the main website here: http://www.thenetgazette.net/


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