Readability before SEO
Thursday, November 1st, 2007Earlier today I posted about Abalone Designs, and pointed to an interesting article on the site. One of the statements really stuck in my mind: Your web site can be optimized for the most competitive keyword in the world […] and it will do absolutely nothing whatsoever for your business if your web site is not user-friendly. It reminded me of the first time I experienced ‘professional’ Search Engine Optimization.
At the time, I was quite familiar with copywriting, had written copy for a half dozen or so websites, but was not overly familiar with SEO. Since it was on someone else’s bill, the charity copy that I had provided was passed off to this individual to optimize. When it came back, it definitely took advantage of useful keywords, but the copy lacked any real flow, and everything seemed forced. If I were a customer looking at the site, I would have been turned off after reading the first page.
While Keyword Usage & Content Relevance are definitely important in establishing a high ranking in search engines, I’ve always thought that the website should still be easy to read. Professionals may tout all sorts of nonsense about keyword density optimization, linearization, and things like tokenization, filtration, and stemming, but if your target is the average joe, they would probably prefer you simply got to the point.
Relevant keywords should be carefully placed throughout the text, but not by sacrificing how your website reads. I would never try and describe my blog as ‘the best Web 2.0, Internet Technology and Internet trends blog in Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond, and the surrounding Lower Mainland and Greater Vancouver suburbs blog.’ First, I’m not… but more importantly, who would want to read anything else I’ve written if that’s how I describe my blog?
If you choose to entrust your content to a professional, it’s important that the end result is something that satisfies your target customers as well as your search engine ranking. It’s definitely re-assuring to see a professional in the industry making a similar statement.






