Off-Page SEO Case Study

I haven’t done a case study in a while now, so I thought I’d do another one. What I want to do this time is focus on off-page search engine optimization. When you’re trying to influence your search engine rankings, you can group the things you can do into two categories: changes you can make to the page itself (on-page) and changes you can make to other pages (off-page).

Most SEO techniques are on-page techniques: choosing a good title (perhaps the one thing you totally control that most influences where your pages shows up in the search engine results), keyword density, etc. And for AdSense publishers these techniques also lead to better ad targeting, so there’s a double whammy of benefits in doing on-page SEO.

At some point, though, you can’t do anything more to the page itself, which is where the off-page factors come into play. Or maybe you can’t change the page at all, meaning off-page is all you can do anyhow.

To make this case study fair, I’m going to use some pages from a site that I don’t control and don’t directly make me any money. The site is the Sybase site. Sybase is my employer and I think some of its pages could use a boost in the search engine results. So let’s see what I can do to help. Maybe I’ll fail miserably… that’s why these case studies are so exciting :-)

Choose Your Targets

The first thing I need to do is select the individual pages I want to influence. Search engine results are all about placements of pages, not sites.

If you’re selling things, the first pages you should look at are those that describe your products and services. Sybase has many products, most for enterprises (geektalk for large companies), and I’m going to focus on three of them: SQL Anywhere, RFID Anywhere, and Mobile Office. I’ve worked on all three products and so they’re special to me in that way.

The very first thing to do is see how well the product names rank in Google. You want your products to be in the top 10 if possible, ideally in the first one or two spots. Right now, this is what I see:

SQL Anywhere and RFID Anywhere have ideal placements for their product names, but Mobile Office needs some work. The term “mobile office” is much more generic, so it’s not surprising that Mobile Office isn’t in the top ten… yet.

Going Beyond Product Names

Product names are the obvious things to target, but you’ll also want to target other keywords. Finding those keywords can be a challenge, but there are some great free tools you can use to help you along the way.

Take the SQL Anywhere product, for example. It has a 70% share of the mobile database market (it’s database software that can be run on mobile devices like laptops, BlackBerrys, Windows Mobile handhelds, and so on) but it doesn’t even rank in the top ten for the term mobile database, though it does squeek in at #10 for “mobile database”. So there’s one obvious keyphrase to work on.

If you’re not sure which keywords to target, spend an afternoon with the AdWords keyword tool. Start by taking the URL of each page you’re interested in and seeing what the keyword tool thinks of the page. You’ll quickly put together a list of relevant keywords, some of which may surprise you. You can’t do them all, though, so you’ll have to prune the list and find just a few — maybe three or four — to concentrate on.

More about list gathering next time…

Comments

16 Responses to “Off-Page SEO Case Study”

  1. Darren on November 17th, 2008 12:42 am

    off-page optimization is a heck of a lot harder than say, onpage optimization, looking for good meta keywords, you hit the nail on the head on this one, another good keyowrd tool, software would be Seo Elite.

  2. Aaron on November 20th, 2008 2:02 am

    I agree with Darren SEO Elite is a decent software for off-page optimization. Forums/Blogs postings + article submission are very popular too!

  3. Svetlana Gladkova on November 20th, 2008 6:15 am

    Yes, Adwords keyword tool can be very helpful for this but unfortunately the majority of terms you’d want to target that are not the product names already have huge competition – and that’s a huge issue.

  4. Tony Gold on November 23rd, 2008 8:05 pm

    That’s what I was thinking.

  5. loan modification on November 25th, 2008 10:24 am

    Also using longer keyword phrases is a double edged sword. more targeted traffic vs. easier to miss

  6. Paul Mitchell on November 25th, 2008 10:43 am

    When conducting keyword research I like to group words and phrases into ‘themes’ that may be relevant to specific pages. This work can be used to define the pages that a site needs in order to capture traffic derived from various specific search queries.

  7. Informixx on November 25th, 2008 11:36 am

    Thanks for sharing.. Off-page optimization can do a big help in SEO especially when done hand-in-hand with On-page Optimization

  8. Mike on November 25th, 2008 8:48 pm

    Good comment, finding proper meta keywords is very important and can also be a hard task to complete. Some people think they can put in anything and get good results but when you think of it putting more time into finding proper keywords is very rewarding, just sometimes hard on the head ;)

  9. John on November 26th, 2008 1:48 pm

    Just came across your blog, you have some very interesting information on it! I wish that every blog I came across was as in depth as yours! Hopefully you keep posting such quality work!

  10. Slow Computer on November 26th, 2008 4:31 pm

    Off page optimization might be hard, but without it you won’t get anywhere. In my opinion the anchor text that you use, is the most important off page factor to Google.

  11. BackLink Tactics on November 30th, 2008 10:55 pm

    What I find interesting is that every single page has it’s own page rank – and it doesn’t seem to be affected by the home page.

    The home page might have a PR of 8 but pages within the site might have a 0 PR – like this comments page – where the article itself has a PR of 5.

    Does google eventually index the smaller pages or does its limiting techniques mean it’ll never get a page rank?

  12. Bakugan Battle Brawlers Pack on December 3rd, 2008 6:07 am

    off page SEO has a lot to do with backlinks with target keyword as anchor text. Guess “click here” and Adobe case study illustrate this concept most clearly.

  13. Jason on December 3rd, 2008 11:06 am

    Here is a link with 40 ways to get free backlinks:

    http://collinlahay.com/2007/11/13/the-link-building-cookbook/

  14. Marble Host on December 6th, 2008 5:13 am

    I am complete agree with you that Off Page Optimization is very important at the View point o search engine optimization.

    Blog Need to explain Factors in content, so blog become user friendly, so that user will get more useful information by your blog and you will get business traffic.

    Hope We will find next time this thing in Blog.

  15. Sam Nichols on December 19th, 2008 4:57 pm

    The only way to find out the real search volumes is to run a PPC campaign and gather the data. That’s the proper way to do it but it costs more too!

  16. Top Click Media on December 28th, 2008 9:49 am

    I completly agree with the comment that anchor text seems to be one of the most important factors recognized by Google right now. When you build links with click here or read this you get very little credit from Google.

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