Related Links

Featured Links





Recommended Products



 

 
Featured Articles

Circle of Traffic
Your company is on the web, your site is receiving few hits, but you know that the number of Internet users is growing by leaps and bounds (285 million users worldwide, to be exact). So it is only a matter of time until the number of Internet users ...

Sell More Books With an E-mail Newsletter
If you're selling your book online, you're practicallyguaranteed to increase sales by publishing an e-mail newsletter, or "e-zine." Why? Well, for a start, it's a super way to givereaders a taste of your expertise and style along withsamples of your ...

The 3 Best Website Traffic Sources
Copyright 2005 Jim Edwards Not a day goes by that any serious website owner doesn't wonder how to get more traffic to their site. This intense desire to generate more clicks makes virtually any online entrepreneur easy prey to many of the traffic ...


Google
Google - The Ultimate Web Writers Style Guide
 

Forget that Google is a search engine. Just for a moment, imagine it is a style guide. A very different kind of style guide.

Instead of this particular style guide being written as a static book by an expert or two, it is written by studying the searching and browsing habits of hundreds of millions of web users.

Get the idea? Not a search engine. A style guide. A constantly evolving style guide that works from its insights into how people use and read web sites.

A style guide that puts the visitor first, puts their needs ahead of the academic opinions of experts.

A style guide that automatically rewards sites that serve their readers the best.

If we study Google not as a search engine, but as a style guide, what does it tell us about how we should write our web pages?

>> 1. Make the subject of each page absolutely clear.

As visitors arrive at your site, regardless of the entry page, the first question in their minds is, “Am I in the right place? Will I find what I want here? Can I achieve what I want to achieve here?”

Fortunately, the web page format gives us a title, headlines, first paragraphs and subheads we can use. So it makes sense to use them to make it abundantly clear to our visitors what the page is about.

We’ll do this for our visitors. But, because doing so helps our visitors, Google will reward us.

>> 2. Make your home page short text clear

First-time visitors to your home page are unlikely to be able to achieve their objective through that page alone. So you need to write short text that will quickly and clearly let them know if you have what they want deeper in your site, and how to get there.

This means using the right words in your headings, subheads and short descriptions. It means anticipating the words and phrases most visitors will have in their minds and will scan for. It means understanding which words and phrases best correspond to your visitors’ needs.

Write these headings and short


descriptions with your readers in mind and, once again, Google will reward you.

3. Make your text links relevant and descriptive

A text link that says, “More...” or “Click here” or “Learn More...” tells the reader nothing about the destination page.

Visitors scan your text links in the same way as they scan headings, subheads and short text. So provide them with clues. If you have an interior page about a weight-loss hypnosis service, write a link that says something like, “More on weight-loss hypnosis”.

Do this and you’ll be helping your readers a great deal. And yes, Google will reward you for your efforts.

>> Concluding thoughts...

By all means use a traditional style guide. They are great for getting your grammar right and choosing the right words. That said, many of them conflict in their recommendations as to the correct online terms. To some, a web site is a web site, to others it’s a website.

But back to Google as a style guide for a moment. This whole exercise, this make-believe about Google being a digital, interactive style guide is all about the importance of writing for your readers.

Yes, what I have been talking about it using the correct keywords and phrases in the appropriate places.

However, too many people write their pages with Google as the primary audience. I think that’s the wrong approach. You get a clunky text flow that, intuitively, feels wrong to the reader.

Instead, write with a clear understanding of what your readers need. Do this and you’ll find that the best keywords fall into the right places with an appropriate frequency.

And Google will reward you.

About the Author
Nick Usborne is a copywriter, author and speaker. You can access all his newsletter articles on writing for the web at his www.ExcessVoice.com site. You'll find articles and resources on how to make money as a freelance writer at www.FreelanceWritingSuccess.com

News



Troubles galore as BJP enters final year of rule (Karnataka Newsletter)
New York Daily News
Bangalore, May 26 — Karnataka's scandals-scarred, dissidence-riven Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government completes four years of its maiden rule in the state next week, depending heavily on its troubled national leadership to stay in power in the ...

and more »

As Left Front plans, quick-footed Didi acts (West Bengal Newsletter)
New York Daily News
Kolkata, May 26 — Despite the negative publicity she has been receiving for her various antics as West Bengal chief minister, the feisty Mamata Banerjee's ability to lead lightning fast movements on any issue can never be doubted. The Left Front (LF), ...

and more »

Latest Newsletter from Executive Compass Strengthens Stellar Reputation
Virtual-Strategy Magazine
UK's top bid management company, Executive Compass continues its winning streak as evidenced by the report of impressive seventeen important successes for its clients in its latest newsletter. Executive Compass continues to rage into the first half of ...

and more »

CPI-M jittery as police dig deeper into murder case (Kerala Newsletter)
New York Daily News
Kozhikode, May 26 — The CPI-M top brass in Kerala is getting nervous with the police closing in on the party's lower and middle-level leaders in the murder case of former party leader TP Chandrasekharan. Chandrasekharan, 51, a popular local leader in ...

and more »

FIA WTCC Newsletter 22
PaddockTalk
This is the second time the FIA World Touring Car Championship visits this modern and demanding racetrack, located in Southern Portugal, which was inaugurated in 2008. Among the many possible layouts offered by this impressive, state-of-the art venue, ...

and more »