There is such a barrage of worthless articles floating around the
'Net these days. Keyword stuffed, useless ramble that was obviously
written with the sole intent of attempting to rank high. Striving
for top rankings is not a bad thing, but the purpose of writing
SEO articles is threefold not onefold: provide information, rank
high when used on your site and increase link popularity. That means
the practice must follow the purpose.
Why Write an Article?
Let's start at the beginning. Why write articles to begin with?
While having SEO content on your site is a good thing, your first
concern should be with offering useful information to your readers.
Cutts agrees with this practice and makes a point to discuss why
providing relevant, helpful information is vital.
If the information isn't helpful, those who visit your site will
have little interest in reading it. Yes, if the page ranks highly,
it might bring in a bit of traffic. But if visitors take one look
at your article then click away, what good have the high rankings
done you?
Likewise, if you choose to distribute your article throughout the
Internet, it is highly unlikely that others will elect to run your
article on their sites. If your work doesn't provide solid information
and is poorly written, it will not be considered link-worthy.
Optimizing for the Engines
Once you've decided what information you want to provide, you can
turn your focus to SEO. Copywriting for the engines requires balance.
You never want to sacrifice the reader's experience for the sake
of rankings. Stuffing keywords into text is a method that will almost
always backfire. Practically no one wants to read an article (or
website page) that constantly repeats the same exact terms to the
point of extremes.
Cutts also addressed this issue in his blog post, stating that
he included keyphrases within his own article and also used similar
terms. Cutts made a point of suggesting that we pay more attention
to keyphrase use (and the use of variations of those keyphrases)
than focusing on keyword density.
The Two Most Important Keys
The two "meta-issues" Cutts highlighted in his article
were both related to user experience, not to the practice of SEO
copywriting. First, pay attention to the content you offer. Always
impart useful, concrete knowledge to your reader. Second, study
your niche (a.k.a. know your target audience!) and write specifically
for the purpose of helping them.
There is other great information included in Cutts'
post, and I encourage you to read it plus the comments that follow.
You can find it here: http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/seo-advice-writing-useful-articles-that-readers-will-love.
These are things I (and other SEO pros) have been
preaching for years. User first, search engines second. When you
get the priority straight, the rest will fall into line without
much hassle.
Copy not getting
results? Learn to write SEO and online
copywriting that impresses the engines and your visitors with
Karon's Copywriting
Course. Be sure to also check out Karon's report "How To
Increase Keyword Saturation (Without Destroying the Flow of Your
Copy)" at http://www.copywritingcourse.com/keyword.