Posts Tagged ‘columbus ohio seo’

Top Ranking in Google for 1000s of Keywords

Monday, April 5th, 2010

By David Lee Cummings, Top Dog Marketing Group

Top Ranking in GoogleCincinnati & Columbus, OH – SEO has a new secret weapon. Now you can obtain top ranking in Google for 1000s of keywords and drive massive amounts of targeted traffic to your website in 90 days or less.

No way? Way.

We can now provide businesses in Ohio and elsewhere with an innovative search engine optimization (SEO) system that utterly transforms any languishing website into a potent traffic magnet nearly overnight. It’s called our TOP DOG Technology. TOP DOG stands for Thousands of Optimized Pages to Dominate Online in Google. It’s the real deal.

Cincinnati & Columbus, Ohio SEO Revolutionized

How do we generate such a traffic deluge through advanced SEO for Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio and nationwide clients? It’s a matter of generating useful, unique content that Google craves, as well as search engine optimizing those pages effectively. But writing the content for thousands of pages by hand could literally take years to complete. Fortunately, we know how to both automate this process and create useful, unique content of value to Google and human visitors alike.

It’s all here in our white paper:

http://www.topdogmarketinggroup.com/TopDogTechnologyWhitePaper.pdf.

Check it out. And when you’re ready to dominate your niche and drive massive amounts of targeted traffic to your website, give us a holler. We’ll transform your website into the Top Dog it’s longed to be.


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About the Author
David Lee Cummings is Director of Creative Services at Top Dog Marketing Group, a Cincinnati and Columbus, OH web design and Internet marketing firm. David is a designer and Internet marketing expert who has written and edited marketing copy for some of the biggest technology companies in the world. As well, he has propelled many clients to top search engine rankings through search engine optimization.

Republishing Rights: You may republish this article in your website, e-newsletter, or e-book on the condition that you agree to leave the article, author's byline and signature, and all links completely intact. For more information, see our Article Republishing Rights page.


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Truly Effective SEO Takes a Little Time and TLC

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

By David Lee Cummings, Top Dog Marketing Group

Cincinnati & Columbus, OH – A misconception we often hear from prospective clients about search engine optimization (SEO) has to do with its time frame. Some have gotten the idea that through SEO their website can be elevated in the search engine rankings virtually overnight. That is simply not true; at least, not for useful keywords. Truly effective SEO takes a little time and TLC.

Keywords that web users are actually searching for in any meaningful volume naturally become highly competitive keywords as many site owners optimize for them. Therefore, ranking highly in the search engines for those keywords becomes no quick and easy task, and it takes a concerted effort using many different strategies to effectively target those keywords. And it takes time.

It can take four to six months’ time or longer to achieve top rankings for competitive keywords. The activity required for best-practice, effective SEO is significant, too, and that’s why proper SEO is no bargain basement service. Good SEO simply can’t be. And that’s also why businesses with a healthy marketing budget—and a willingness to delay gratification—can dominate the search engine rankings for the most valuable keywords: they’re willing to invest the money and time to fund the type of comprehensive SEO campaign necessary for premium results. Also, once they’re ranking at the top, there’s no time to let up on the reins, because competitors are constantly gunning to knock them off their perch.

For the business owner without a strong budget for SEO, however, there is an option. They can aim for what’s called the “low hanging fruit.” These are keywords that are not especially competitive yet typically not searched for in an especially high volume. High rankings for these keywords are easier to achieve and can be had for a lower budget—and sometimes a shorter time frame—although the ROI likely won’t be as significant as what is offered by keywords of greater value. But sometimes limitations require the pursuit of low hanging fruit, and that’s okay. They’re an easy target until the budget can be increased.

For the business owner with a very healthy marketing budget and a desire for immediate results, there’s an option for them too. They can combine their SEO efforts with other online strategies, such as pay-per-click (PPC) advertising. With adequate funding, a PPC campaign can yield immediate results. For example, effective advertising in Google AdWords can place a business among the paid advertising links above or beside the natural search results at the top of the page. This strategy allows a business to be visible to web users immediately while their natural search rankings ramp up through consistent SEO efforts.

One must be very cautious, however, when employing a PPC or any other paid advertising campaign. If you don’t know what you’re doing, you can burn through your budget quickly with little results. You should always use a knowledgeable and experienced campaign manager to handle your online advertising initiatives. Managed properly, a PPC campaign should target keywords that are not only in demand but also have a high rate of sales conversion—an inexperienced campaign manager may not properly make this distinction. As well, a well-run PPC campaign should be testing a number of different keywords to discover the ones that provide the highest ROI. This also benefits your SEO strategies because it identifies valuable keywords you can integrate into your SEO efforts. A mixed strategy of PPC and SEO, therefore, is an ideal one for most commercial websites.

So, now, depending on your budget and tolerance for gratification postponement, you have a few options for SEO and other online marketing initiatives. Just make sure you are realistic about the time frame and results, willing to sufficiently fund the required efforts, and employ a team that truly knows what it is doing. With the right combination of expectations, budget, and expertise, your online business venture should be a tremendous success.


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About the Author
David Lee Cummings is Director of Creative Services at Top Dog Marketing Group, a Cincinnati and Columbus, OH web design and Internet marketing firm. David is a designer and Internet marketing expert who has written and edited marketing copy for some of the biggest technology companies in the world. As well, he has propelled many clients to top search engine rankings through search engine optimization.

Republishing Rights: You may republish this article in your website, e-newsletter, or e-book on the condition that you agree to leave the article, author's byline and signature, and all links completely intact. For more information, see our Article Republishing Rights page.


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Should You SEO It Alone?

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

By David Lee Cummings, Top Dog Marketing Group

Cincinnati – SEO (or, search engine optimization) is a technical and time-consuming undertaking. As a small business owner, should you take the time to learn the art and science of SEO? Or are you better off hiring out this essential Web marketing task?

To help answer this question, let’s look at some numbers involved with SEO.

Since you own a small business, one of your primary goals is obviously to make money. Your time is extremely valuable and cannot be wasted away on ineffective tasks. Therefore, it’s imperative that you focus your precious time on the competencies that are most profitable for you, whether you do business nationally, internationally, or locally in Columbus or Cincinnati.

Is SEO, therefore, a profitable activity for you to take on yourself?

SEO—The Breakdown

Let’s assume that your time is worth $100 per hour. Here’s how the value of your time breaks down when spent on the SEO efforts of about a 10-page website:

• Time to teach yourself how to conduct bare-bones adequate search engine optimization—40+ hours.

I am estimating on the low side here. It took me, a guy who earned a perfect GPA in grad school (I’m not bragging, just making the point that I’m no dummy), many more excruciating hours than 40 to learn SEO sufficiently enough to do it right. And I’m still constantly learning, because the field of SEO is constantly evolving; as well, to be the best, one must maintain a competitive edge over other SEO specialists.

• Time to research and analyze keywords—3+ hours.

• Time to integrate keywords in HTML code—4+ hours.

• Time to integrate keywords in website copy—12+ hours.

This time could be even greater, because keyword phrases can be very awkward in syntax and therefore difficult to incorporate gracefully into the text. It takes a master wordsmith to do this task well.

• Time to obtain sufficient inbound links—4+ hours (per week).

This task is an ongoing one that requires much time and careful effort to do right. Today’s best practices advise building links through time-intensive manual efforts. Trying to take shortcuts, such as by employing automated link-building software, can actually cause the search engines to penalize and degrade your website.

• Time to keep website content fresh—4+ hours (per week).

The world’s #1 search engine, Google, loves new and frequently changing content. So, you’ve got to keep your website consistently updated. But you can’t just slap on any website copy: it has be both appropriately keyword rich and compellingly valuable to your visitors.

• Time to conduct all other various SEO tasks—8+ hours.

SEO—Final Analysis for Your Business

Okay, so in total all of the time required to conduct effective initial search engine optimization is at least 75 hours. Furthermore, add at least 10 hours per week of ongoing work—really powerful SEO work can easily be a 40-hour-per-week endeavor—to keep your website at the top of its SEO game.

So, 75 hours multiplied by $100 per hour (the value of your time) equals $7,500. Is this not-so-insignificant sum of money worth your time to spend learning and executing SEO on your own?

Before your answer, also consider the fact that the 75 hours plus 10+ hours ($1,000+) per week you spend conducting search engine optimization is also taking you away from the things you do best to make money in your business. Moreover, if you do a lousy job on your SEO work and end up essentially no better off than when you started, it’s like taking you away from your business and core competencies for 150 hours (75 hours on SEO plus 75 hours of lost time that you could have spent on more lucrative activities), or $15,000. Is that risk and expense—including the $1,000 per week, or $4,300 per month, in ongoing work—worth it?

For significantly much less than the $7,500 (or $15,000) initial cost of your time plus $52,000 annually (or $104,000) in ongoing cost of your time, you could instead hire an expert search engine optimization firm—like Top Dog Marketing Group—to do your SEO dirty work. That firm would do a far better job than your novice efforts could likely produce, thereby saving you many thousands of dollars and much frustration if you inevitably yield miserable results on you own.

With time and patience, the SEO firm will move your website up in the search engine rankings—effective SEO is no overnight gimmick—and manifest a flow of quality leads to your business. If you have a solid sales department in place, many of these leads will then convert into customers.


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About the Author
David Lee Cummings is Director of Creative Services at Top Dog Marketing Group, a Cincinnati and Columbus, OH web design and Internet marketing firm. David is a designer and Internet marketing expert who has written and edited marketing copy for some of the biggest technology companies in the world. As well, he has propelled many clients to top search engine rankings through search engine optimization.

Republishing Rights: You may republish this article in your website, e-newsletter, or e-book on the condition that you agree to leave the article, author's byline and signature, and all links completely intact. For more information, see our Article Republishing Rights page.


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