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> Get Articles > Advertising > A Theme-Based Website, Part 5- Promoting The Site

A Theme-Based Website, Part 5- Promoting The Site


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Julie Georg
julia44rtsyahoo.com

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http://www.marketing-seek.com


TITLE: A Theme-Based Website,

Part 5- Promoting The Site

AUTHOR: Julie Georg

CONTACT: julia44rtsyahoo.com

COPYRIGHT: ©2002 by Julie Georg. All rights reserved.

WORD COUNT: 828 including resource box

FORMAT: This article is formatted to 60cpl.



You have permission to publish this article electronically

or in print, free of charge, as long as the byline and

resource box are included. A courtesy copy of your

publication would be appreciated.





A Theme-Based Website, Part 5- Promoting The Site



©2002 by Julie Georg



All right, we're going to wrap this up. I now have a

terrific theme-based site, jam-paked with high value

content and built to feed those search engine spiders.

However, my site is going to just sit in web space if I

don't do some work to promote it. Fortunately, I'm well

prepared. My site is optimized for listing with the search

engines. I have hundreds of keywords to use for Pay-per-

Click engines and my content is theme-focused and OVER-

delivers so directories should have no problem listing my

site. Let's take these one at a time.



Search Engines: The most important thing I need to do is

submit my pages to the major search engines. They will

deliver, by far, the most traffic to my site. I'll submit

to AltaVista, Excite, Google, HotBot, Lycos and

NorthernLight. Each has it's own policies, which I need to

be sure to follow. Then I'll check my site's log files, to

see which of their spiders have visited, and which pages

they took back to the engine. If I don't see an engine's

spider within a certain amount of time after submitting,

I'll resubmit, according to each engine's acceptable

limits. Next, I'll watch for when each of my pages has

been indexed (listed by the engine). All this takes a lot

of effort and time, so I might consider a service like

Position Agent ... http://www.positionagent.com ,

although it's not cheap and not all the engines are

covered. Or I could try AgentWebRankingSuite...

http://www.aadsoft.com/agentwebranking/ranks.htm , which

is free and runs on my computer. Or, if I've built my

site with SiteBuildIt!...

http://buildit.sitesell.com/assist3.html , it will do all

the submitting, spider-spotting, index-checking and rank-

tracking for me.



I'll use this information to tweak my pages. I may adjust

lower ranking pages to be more like higher ranking ones.

I'll probably experiment a bit with changing keywords in

META tags or playing with keyword density, maybe increasing

or decreasing content. It's tedious, but I know that the

engines will deliver the most traffic to my site. I'll

tweak until at least half my pages are in the top ten on

half the engines. Any more tweaking after that is probably

pointless because the engines will occationally change

their ranking formulas and things will move around, usually

evening out in the long run. I'm better off adding more

high-value content pages to my site than continually

tweaking.



Pay-Per-Click Search Engines: I want to research and

submit bids for keyword placement at Overture, Bay9.com and

Findwhat among others. The most popular keywords can be

expensive, but my theme-based site is working a niche and I

have hundreds of less popular keywords I can bid on.

Because I'm paying for clicks, I want to be sure my title

and description really relate to the keyword I'm bidding on

and are completely relevant to my site so that they only

attract highly targeted traffic.



Major Directories: Links to directories will bring some

traffic and help my link popularity. Directories don't use

spiders. Real people review the pages and decide what gets

listed. Luckily I've loaded my site with lots of great,

single-theme-focused content. To be listed at Yahoo I need

to decide if it's worh the $299 for my business listing.

It's unlikely that I'll be able to submit for free, as my

site will be generating income. I can submit to Open

Directory for free and to Ask Jeeves by telling them what

question my web page answers. I'll automatically be listed

at AOL and Netscape when I submit to Open Directory.



Less effective but useful methods of promotion: First

there's "word of mouth", which I'm certainly going to get

because I'm delivering great content. Second, I'll

eventually add a newsletter subscription to my site. And

I'll probably use some of my great content as articles to

submit to other people's ezines. Perhaps I'll do some

offline advertising as well.



Once I've done most of the above, I'll analize my traffic,

checking click-ins and click-throughs. I can create

special tracking links to measure the success of my

efforts. I'll build on what works and improve or get rid of

what doesn't. I now see the beneficial results of building

a theme-based site. I'm working a niche and getting highly

targeted traffic. I offer my visitors valuable content and

deliver them to my merchants in a ready-to-buy state of

mind. My site scores with the engines, my visitors and my

merchants. And all that spells WEB BUSINESS for me.

Now, I think I'll kick back and start thinking about my

next theme-based site.......



Need help coming up with a theme? Maybe I can help.

Send me an email. mailto:yourhelplinemail.com



About the author:

Julie Georg is a consultant to individuals and small

businesses interested in establishing a web presence.

Step-by-step directions for building a theme-based site can

be found in the excellent, free Affiliate Masters course.

Blank email mailto:tamsassist3sitesell.net





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