Future Look at SEO

Auto Date Thursday, July 7th, 2005

As each search engine introduces new algorithms that brings varying sets of rules that make it harder for the SEO community to operate within it’s established practises, one can’t help but wonder about the future of SEO in general.

It’s about time the community as a whole faced a few realities, once these are addressed we can move on and work with the evolution that search engine optimisation and search engine marketing is going through. Search engines such as Google make a large majority of their money by selling ads whether it is through pay per click and adsense or other means.

Only ten websites can be on the first page at any given time for one particular phrase or keyword –all websites from a commercial sense would like to be at the top – It doesn’t serve a search engines interest for natural rankings that have their sites inflated with search engine marketing techniques to be sitting in top positions. By doing this, search engines lose potential revenue. They know this and write and implement rules into their latest updates (algorithms) to defeat and make it less easy for SEO’s to optimise a website for top positions by using unnatural techniques.

The job of a good SEO is to work within the scope of the new updates and find the ‘best way forward’ there are still several cards left in the deck so to speak. For all the misgivings I hear in various forums about Google it does appear to work towards the basic principles of ‘content is king’ if you got good content your popularity will go up and the links will come. The web was created with communities sharing content. Google cannot be seen at this point to be straying away from this one most important facet of the World Wide Web.

Another major factor in keeping ahead up with good SEO is the optimisation and development of quality websites. Web standards play a role here and this is something Google cannot be seen to be ‘bucking’ either. As the web moves forward so does it’s associated technology. One of these technologies is providing a better user experience for visitors. Visitors will vote with the back-button for a poorly developed website. We are now over the stage where we can produce the drivel that has plagued the web for so long. Visitors are no longer impressed just by having a website, they no longer look at the web like the new ‘snake-oil’ technology it once was. Visitors expect information and to find what they came for. No more gimmicks and or slap-hazard sites, the only new technology they want to see is technology that helps them or enhances the user-experience.

Accessibility
Part of this technology is accessibility/usability. Designing a website that meets W3C standards for usability will not only be good from a ethical point, but increase traffic and lighten a sites code considerably, sometimes as much as 50%. Building a full accessible website using enhanced coding such as CSS2, XHTML and content driven will see a site rising through the search engines quite rapidly.

The future of SEO should include clean coding habits and start working with newer techniques that are currently available. I simply do not understand why a majority of SEO’s continue to work to the same criteria and keep using the same old techniques then kick and scream when another search engine updates upsets or undoes their work. The future of SEO has to shift with the latest updates and the web as it goes through another evolution.

Why are a majority of SEO’s are so scared to try something new? What holds back a consultant working with the most technological advanced apparatus ever known from trying new ideas and ‘pushing the boat out?’ A lot of it can be placed firmly on the back of complacency, getting used to proven ideas that soon become old. Part of it is inexperience. A good SEO today needs coding experience and a real understanding how the net works, what makes it tick and where it is going. Go back and look at the basics and build upon them, this should be the mantra of every SEO worth their salt.

Mobile Web Optimization

For our part and I know a few others (not enough IMO) realise part of this future will be the web on the move. This includes having fast and easy access to the mobile web at all times through mobile smartphones and PDA’s. Building websites that are easily accessible onthe mobile web and optimising these sites will be huge for the SEO industry. New rules will have to be learnt and old habits will have to be left behind. The future of these of ’smart-sites’ will need a good optimiser (mobile search optimisation (mSEO)) to ensure that they receive maximum exposure and ‘first in place’ for any visitors looking for their product on their smartphones. Optimisation techniques will include: Delivering light and speedy pages. Optimising for only one or two well thought out key-phrases. Smart ad copy that will be a few sentences and need to sell to its intended audience. The use of CSS2/CSS3 and developing sites in XHTML without tables.

Picture this: A person arrives in a city or town – lets call the town nowhereville – they get online with their smartphone and access the mobile web through one of the mobile search engines such as Google or Yahoo’s mobile search they type in “hotels in nowhereville” they want to eat: “restaurant in nowhereville” they need to get there: “directions to YumYum restaurant in nowhereville” and who comes up first will be the site that has been optimised for this platform. SEO’s and potential mSEO’s take note: If you want to be around to gripe about a search engine update in three years, then now is the time to shift into gear and start looking ahead. Google will soon release it’s mobile search engineand the rules for being considered for a listing will be quite stringent.

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Related Resources:
Future of SEO - Southbourne Internet Ltd
Accessibility Standards - W3C
Google Mobile Search
Yahoo Mobile Search Engine

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One Response to “Future Look at SEO”

  1. Nicola Rae Says:
    July 10th, 2005 at 8:35 pm

    Hi Vincent.
    This is a really interesting and relevant article.

    From all the research that I read on seo, there appears to be a resounding lack of user focus.

    As u state, users want information and they want it fast. As infant users of the World Wide Web we loved gimmicks, graphics, pop-ups much like children reading their first books. These techniques made the web an exciting place to be. As the web matures, so does the expectations of its users particularly in B2C or B2B environments and us such web practitioners need to understand that information and communication - fast and efficient is what users now want.
    In terms of seo, accessible and usable web design just makes sense! If your users can traverse your site using any number of varying technologies, you can be sure that Google will be zipping round your site picking up all the luscious and relevant keywords and that you’ll beat your competitors every time.

    If I were a search engine developer, i would be developing algorithms that rank and index accessible sites as they make lighter work for search engines. This in turn has a positive effect on googles roi as traversing these sites becomes a more efficient and less problematic process. Saving time - saving money.

    I agree with your comments on mobile seo - again - user focus and accessible design. In general, web practitioners have remained niaive by not realising that accessible web design is not so much about designing websites that can be accessed by users with varying disabilities, but actually it is about designing websites that can be accessed with various technolgies that any user may be using to access the web.

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