Special offer

What is Search Engine Optimized Writing for Real Estate?

By
Services for Real Estate Pros with RealtySoft.com

When I first started writing for the internet I was mesmerized by the term search engine optimized (SEO) writing.  I had lots of questions.  What should my writing be for it to be search engine optimized?  How do I make search engine optimized writing different than regular writing?  How is search engine optimized writing different?  What is search engine optimized writing?

I researched the search engine optimized writing topic for some time, and in this article I share with you what I've learned.  I've discovered both good and bad techniques writers use for writing search engine optimized articles.  I'll tell you about some of them.  I'll also share with you what I've learned about how SEO techniques improve search engine hits.

In the end, you will find that learning to write search engine optimized writing is just like learning any other writing.  You learn to write to your audience.  But when you write search engine optimized writing, you write with a laser focus.  In our example here, the focus is search engine optimized writing.

Search engine optimized writing (SEO writing) begins with a focus on keyword phrases.  In the article you are reading now, I have chosen the key word phrases search engine optimized writing, SEO and SEO writing as major keyword strings.  For minor strings I've chosen keyword stuffing, black hat SEO and white hat SEO. 

Once the key word phrases are chosen, it's up to you, the writer, to weave them into a meaningful article.  Weaving the words into a meaningful SEO article is important.  It's here that most writers' trip when they begin to learn search engine optimized writing.  They think that all they have to do is insert as many instances of the keyword's as they can.  At its extremes this technique resulted in what has now become known as black hat SEO writing.

One example of black hat SEO writing is simply filling a web page with key words.  At its worst, webmasters choose matching colors for the keyword string's text and the web page's background color so the two would blend.  This masked to human users the hundreds of keywords stuffed in the page.  Search engines, however, lacking the human eye, saw only the hundreds of text objects.

The logic behind this black hat SEO writing technique is that the multiple instances of the key words would trick the search engine to think the page was a high content page.  Kind of a more is better thinking.  It's called keyword stuffing.  The more of the SEO keyword I have, the more the search engines will notice.

This SEO writing technique worked for a while.  But the search engine programmers got wise to it and improved their algorithms to detect this type of SEO writing.  The detection algorithms in use today pick up this technique in a hurry.  If your site is found using it, the search engines will almost automatically delist your site's index.  Quite the opposite of the effect intended.

White hat SEO writing on the other hand is written just like the article you are reading now.  White hat SEO is search engine optimized writing at its best.  It combines appropriate keywords, search engine optimized writing in our example, and highly readable content.

The content is the key.  Content is always the key when it comes to the web.  A well written search engine optimized article does the same thing any other well written article does.  It informs and entertains.  With SEO however, there is an added characteristic of search engine optimized writing.

A lot of times people will ask me "what should I know about search engine optimized writing."  One of the biggest things I tell them is to look at how you lead into your strings.  When I start writing an SEO article I ask myself "how many different ways will someone look for this string".  Then I work to include these ideas into my search string. 

Take a look back through this article and see how many different ways I framed the search engine optimized (SEO) keywords I've chosen to use in writing it.  Notice how a lot of them would be actual queries someone would key in to a search engine.  Framing your keywords is the first step to a page one search engine ranking.

Getting a page one search engine ranking is highly coveted.  Everybody knows that.  But it's debatable as to how much search engine optimized writing assists this pursuit.       

At first I thought that search engine optimized writing meant an automatic page one placement with the search engines.  It doesn't.  What I found is that search engine ranking depends on multiple factors.  Page content is only one.  I've come to learn however, that content is very high on the list of criteria.  So whenever you write, write well.  If you follow that rule, and focus your writing as I have here, in time you will be rewarded with search engine hits.

 

Biography:

Peyman Aleagha is the founder and President of RealtySoft.com. RealtySoft provides Realtors with Real Estate Web Design (http://www.realtysoft.com), Real Estate Print Marketing and Free IDX (http://www.realtysoft.com/freeidx.php) solutions. Find out more about RealtySoft by visiting RealtySoft.com

Shane OnullGorman
Eau Claire Realty, Inc. - Eau Claire, WI
Eau Claire Wisconsin, Real Estate Agent & Realtor- Buy or Sell

Doesnt google also kill any bonuses for mentioning the same thing over and over and over? I am pretty sure they discount you for doing something like this. Same with linking 2-3 outbound links per article or it detracts.

I may be wrong?

Sep 23, 2008 08:28 AM
Tim Maitski
Atlanta Communities Real Estate Brokerage - Atlanta, GA
Truth, Excellence and a Good Deal

I think you over did the "search engine optimized writing" bit.  I would put it in the title, use it at least once in the body and also have it as anchor text pointing out to an authority site on the subject.  You also might want to use it in a header tag or bold it.

Keyword density used to give you some bang, but now it seems like once is enough.  You might want to use variations of the word or synonyms also.

Once you get a reader to your article, you don't want to sound like a robot by repeating the term over and over.

Sep 23, 2008 08:32 AM
Shane OnullGorman
Eau Claire Realty, Inc. - Eau Claire, WI
Eau Claire Wisconsin, Real Estate Agent & Realtor- Buy or Sell

If you try putting it in over and over the most bang seems the title and then the first sentence. More than that I cant seem to get it to show up anywhere.

Sep 23, 2008 09:08 AM