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Welcome to Promo-Ho.com!

You've just sold your first eBook. Congratulations! Um, hate to slap you with the wet fish of reality, but do you know who your marketing team will be for this book? That's right, it's YOU, boss! Count on your publisher to hand you a contract and a snazzy bookcover, and after that, it's all you. I'm an eBook author myself, and I'm here to help you navigate through the terrifying world of internet self-promotion. Take your time clicking through the topics on the left, and drop a note in the ho bag if you have a suggestion for new content!
Showing posts with label Website Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Website Design. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2008

SEO Guide for the Rest of Us

A typical search results pageImage via WikipediaSEO, or Search Engine Optimization, is a term that gets thrown around a lot in the webmaster world. Basically, SEO is a process by which you make your website more easily searchable by the big searchy types (Google, Yahoo, MSN) and get a better rank on those search results pages. SEO experts will have you believe that you need said experts to optimize your site for you or you are DOOMED to a crappy page rank and no search engine hits ever, so help them God.

That is not necessarily true. I know I'm going to have angry SEO experts sending me nasty emails for this, but I think Search Engine Optimization is largely a racket. You do not need an entire company to make your site searchable. You just don't.

There are many things you can do on your own to make your site searchable, and, at the same time, make it a better site for your visitors.

So here's Sonja's SEO Guide for the Rest of Us:

Get someone to link to your homepage. A lot of times, that's your publisher. If you have a profile on your publisher's site, make sure it links back to your site. Once you are linked from another site, the search engines can automatically find you. This goes for all your other places on the web too. Have a MySpace page? Make sure you link back to your homepage. A blog? Same thing. A word of caution though: beware of big sites whose main purpose is a "link exchange." If you are linked from a page a search engine has classified as a bad apple, it may actually hurt your page rank.

Put titles on your pages. Look at the top of your browser window right now and you will see a title in the bar at the very top that says Promo-Ho.com or Promo-Ho.com: SEO Guide for the Rest of Us. That is your title and it is very important. If you are using a blog platform, this is likely the blog title you submitted when you set yourself up for the first time. If you are designing a website, your editing program should have a title input space. Never leave that space blank! Be sure your title is concise and appropriate. For example, the title on my author page is Sonja Foust, Romance Author. If you have a particular genre you write in, you might use that instead: Jane Doe, Historical Romance Author, for example. Why are titles so important? This is the first thing people will see when they search for your site as the big, bold, linked piece of text. In addition, search engines look at titles first to judge the contents of your site.

Use as much text as you can. Some web designers love Flash (fancy animations) and graphics and lots of other fancy stuff, and that's fine to an extent, but search engine "crawlers" (the little robots who circulate around the internet and read every website ever created) can't read Flash and graphics. If you can make it work, your navigation menu should be text rather than graphics, or at least have an "alt" tag that matches the text of your graphic. (Your web designer will know what that means.) Use as much text as you can in the content of your pages too, rather than pictures, and when you do have pictures, don't forget to descriptively "alt" tag them.

Have a clear navigation design. This will involve a menu running across the top or along the side of your page, most likely. Every page should be reachable from at least one static (unchanging) text link. Usually, that means the menu on each page should look exactly like the menus on all the other pages. If you have graphics in use for your menu bar, you may choose to do a duplication of your menu bar along the bottom as text, as I've done on my site.

Make your content good. Google says, "Think about the words users would type to find your pages, and make sure that your site actually includes those words within it" (Webmaster Guidelines). Your bio is a good place to do this. "My name is Jane Doe and I write historical romances with mysterious twists," will do better than, "My name is Jane Doe and I'm a mother of three," when someone searches for a historical mystery, for example.

Use meta tags. If you're not a web designer and you have no idea what meta tags are, don't run screaming yet. They're pretty easy. Meta tags go in the head section of your document. You'll have to look at the HTML code of your site, and then insert appropriate tags as explained at Google Help. Don't fret, though. If this is something you don't feel like tackling, it's not the most important thing in the world, despite what some SEO experts will tell you.

If you can follow some or most of those simple guidelines, you're well on your way to being searchable on the web. Good luck! As always, leave suggestions or other comments in the comments.

Zemanta Pixie

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Favicons

The girls at DandelionBlog.com have written a great article on Favicons (those little icons that show up in your browser's address bar) and how to use them.

What is a Favicon?

Favicon is short for favorites icon. It’s an icon that is associated with a particular website. It shows up in the address bar of the viewer’s browser to the left of the URL. See some examples:

Here is the readily recognized “G” Google favicon
Google Favicon

Read the rest of the article!

Favicons are really fun, pretty easy, and impress people. There's really no down side here. Go learn how to use them!

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Matchy Matchy

If you've tackled the project of designing your website, and now are ready to integrate your blog, it's not as challenging as it might sound.

If you have a domain name, you can even make your domain names match. In Blogger, there are instructions for getting your custom domain here: http://help.blogger.com/bin/answer.py?answer=55373&topic=12451 It includes setup instructions for a lot of common hosts, like GoDaddy. The advantage of doing this is that your blog address is now http://blog.yourname.com instead of http://yourname.blogspot.com.

After that, all you have to do is get your menu links from your website pointing the right places and then format your blog so that your menu bar matches your webpage menu bar. In Blogger you can customize the heck out of your template, so have fun and experiment. Sometimes it takes a few tries, but if you've already designed your website, the hard part is over.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Lots On Websites

Erica Ridley has put together a great series of articles on website design for authors.

Read the articles!

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

SRN On Marketing

Check out Sweeter Romantic Notions today for a blog on getting started marketing yourself as an author. Maggie Toussaint shares what she's learned since she began:

With my almost a year of marketing experience under my belt, my best advice is to take a deep breath. It doesn’t do any good to run in circles screaming and shouting (been there, done that). If your publisher doesn’t have a welcome packet to initiate you into the world of promotion, or even if it does, it’s a good idea to find a mentor. Someone who knows the ropes in your genre can shave hours off your time spent in promotion...

Read the rest of the article!


Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Smart Bitches Web Design

Smart Bitch Sarah, of Smart Bitches Who Love Trashy Books, has written a really helpful article on web design, with some ideas, tips, and examples I hadn't seen before:

If the site is to promote an author, product product product front and center.

Read the article!

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Pro Web Design

My friend and fellow author Leigh Barbour has written a great article on website design:

Being a web designer and webeditor by trade, I am amazed at how many writers have websites that are so hard to read and navigate.

To read the articles in the series, click here.

Leigh Barbour
Author of ZEBULON (The Wild Rose Press)

Monday, July 9, 2007

Web Resources For Authors

Author Alexandra Sokoloff has put up a great article on web resources for authors. She includes links for writing communities, professional organizations, email loops, blogs, and links on how to set up your own website and blog.

Read the article!


Friday, May 4, 2007

Websites for N00bs

Author Mandy Roth has a great article up on building websites for newbies. Check it out:

Q: I’m an author. Do I really need a website?

A: Yes. This will be one of your most powerful and affordable marketing tools. I know it can seem overwhelming at first but trust me, it’s worth it in the end...

To read the rest of the article, click here.

Mandy Roth
Author of GODDESS OF THE GROVE