Top SEO Myths Exposed

Search engine optimization, or SEO, is the process of making your hotel’s website easier to find in search engines. With the majority of people beginning their travel planning process with a web search, SEO has become an increasingly important discipline for hotel marketers.

However, there is some misinformation floating around the web, being propagated by quack “gurus.” Some of these myths are outright lies, but they are more likely to be tactics that no longer work: constantly-changing search algorithms make SEO a rapidly changing science. I want to debunk some of these myths before they hurt your optimization efforts.

Basic Tactical Myths

Myth: Adding a lot of keywords to your page’s title will help rankings

Fact: Stuffing the title with keywords will give the appearance you are a spam site. Since Google will only display up to 68 characters in the title tag (cropping to complete words), I recommend you write a short, people-friendly title that contains one or two of your most important keywords.

Myth: HTML META tags such as keywords and description are very important, and should be stuffed with as many keywords as possible

Fact: Meta tags don’t play that big of a role, and again you definitely don’t want to stuff your tags with keywords if you want to avoid being penalized as a spammer. You do, however, want to write a compelling Description tag. That’s what people see when they perform a web search, so you want to encourage clickthroughs with a strong benefits statement.

Myth: Adding every keyword to every page is good

Fact: Doing this confuses search engines – and your guests – about the purpose for each page on your site. Instead, group your target keyword list into themes – and use one theme per page. (More on this in SEO for Hotel Websites)

Myth: Trading links is a good idea

Fact: Exchanging links may be a good idea for referral business, but don’t do it for SEO purposes. Google’s Matt Cutts has explained they don’t reward reciprocal links like they do one-way links. Instead, create great content that naturally attracts links.

Myth: You should submit your site to search engines

Fact: That may have helped 10 years ago, but today search engines can find you. If your website has existed for more than a week, there is a strong chance Google has already found you. A better strategy is to get links from existing websites. I’ve taken several brand-new websites to Google PR4 (a ranking importance measure) in less than 3 weeks.

Myth: Submitting your links to directories is the best way to improve your ranking.

Fact: Google frequently penalizes sites that get listed in shady directories. Since it can be hard to determine the legitimacy of a site, pursue a better way and create some great content. If you’re publishing great stuff and interacting with other people online, getting backlinks is only a matter of time.

Many of the above myths have been debunked by others, and thankfully are becoming less common. But every few weeks I still hear someone asking about these tactics, so I wanted to put them to rest. Let’s move on to more high-level misconceptions.

Dangerous Strategic Errors

Myth: SEO is a hoax

Fact: As we see success stories from companies of all sizes, this is less common than it used to be. When done correctly, natural search engine optimization can be your most effective method of bringing new visitors to your website.

Myth: SEO is a one-time event

Fact: The notion that you can improve your search ranking by just changing a few website components is false. Today, search engines look at dozens of factors to determine how relevant and useful your content is. Yes, I wrote the 15-Minute SEO Tuneup – but the reality is that it needs to be part of an ongoing process.

Myth: Your goal is #1 ranking for your top keyword

Fact: While you should aim for the top position for a popular keyword, your real goal should be to rank near the top of results for dozens (if not hundreds) if different keyword combinations. A quick review of your website analytics will reveal that people find you through hundreds of different search queries. For this reason, you need to build your internet presence to be as large as possible.

Myth: Search optimization is a job for the web designer

Fact: Optimization is a strategic marketing function, and has nothing to do with design. It requires comprehensive keyword research, a knowledge of branding, and careful targeting of guest personas.

Myth: It’s all about the rankings

Fact: It’s actually all about how many qualified potential guests you bring to your website, and how many of them book a room. Rankings and overall traffic are meaningless unless you can convert that into sales.

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Article by Josiah Mackenzie // June 04, 2009 Josiah spends pretty much all day, every day looking for ways you can use new media and the social web to improve your business. To bring him on your team, you should look at our Insider's Circle program here.

Comments

 
  • thank u for ur post on Dangerous Strategic Errors

  • Josiah, I’ve been following your blog since we met in Berlin and I just had to post a comment today. How do you do it? You post regularly, yet each post seems to contain incredibly valuable information! Sure, it’s aimed at a niche, but the niche is surprisingly large and struggling at the moment. Without doubt your blog would give a lot of hoteliers a massive advantage on their competition, if they only use it to grasp what is going on out there and tinker with some of the ideas for their own businesses.

    I’m very impressed. In fact, I don’t recall having ever been this impressed with an industry related travel blog. It’s the value that’s hidden in these posts when used properly that impresses me, as a lot of others are not going to be posting this kind of thing publicly. If I ever meet a hotelier struggling with the web, I’m sending them your way!

  • >>>Myth: Trading links is a good idea

    There is a little bit of a misconception about this. Relevant reciprocal links (ie in your niche or closely related to your niche or locality) can be helpful. Also, deep links (ie not top level domain links) provide good links for businesses and non-profits and are smart SEO practice. (Of course you have to take into account the quality or trust level of the domain that Google associates with a particular issue or search)

    Fantastic list Josiah. Very nice.

  • @Sam – thanks for stopping by! I appreciate your kind comments. I spend a lot of time writing everything I know about how hotels can gain a competitive edge, so I’m glad you like it!

    @Nathan – great reminders: getting links from other websites about your topic…and trying to get those links to pages deep within your site are both worthwhile goals.

  • Hello Josiah,

    Congratulations for the fantastic job you have made on this blog. Just today I found it for a first time through this article at eHotelier newsletter. I have a comment regarding the influence of the web designer to the SEO process.

    As you probably know it is important for the search engines, the html code of each page to be implemented according to the W3C standards. In order a web page to be cross browser compatible and W3C friendly, you have to use advanced CSS. A web designer must have a deep knowledge of CSS technology in order to be able to understand how the graphics that creates would be converted from image to html. Some times it is difficult to convert the designers concept to a valid html format. For example, few years before it was impossible to create a W3C valid website with a flash movie to the background. Although many designers did that.

    Of course the web designer is the last piece of the chain regarding on site optimization, but definitely they must have some basic knowledge about that.

  • Dimitris, you’re 100% right. Web page coders play a very important role in making sure a website’s architecture is solid. I was referring more to the “design” function of a web development team.

    To produce an effectively optimized website, designers, coders, and marketing folks all need to work together.

    Thanks for stopping by!

  • Great article. There is many thing to learn from you article. Thanks for posting such valuable blog :)

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