Websites Archives - RSPR Marketing + Communications https://rspr.com/category/websites/ Design, Marketing and PR That Is Dedicated To You and Your Message Wed, 12 Aug 2020 17:26:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://rspr.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/cropped-rspr-square-32x32.png Websites Archives - RSPR Marketing + Communications https://rspr.com/category/websites/ 32 32 Common Mistakes Businesses Make with Their Website https://rspr.com/mistakes-businesses-website/ Tue, 11 Aug 2020 21:00:22 +0000 https://rspr.com/?p=1687 Business owners want their websites to be found on search engines and, once found, they want their websites to work—to be useful to visitors and effectively sell their products or services. When someone hires RSPR to evaluate their website, we almost always find problems that are hurting SEO and how the website functions. Common SEO… Read More »Common Mistakes Businesses Make with Their Website

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Common Mistakes Businesses Make with Their WebsiteBusiness owners want their websites to be found on search engines and, once found, they want their websites to work—to be useful to visitors and effectively sell their products or services. When someone hires RSPR to evaluate their website, we almost always find problems that are hurting SEO and how the website functions.

Common SEO Mistakes

  • Multiple pages are missing title tags and meta descriptions. These should be custom written within the character limits and should include the focus keyword of the page.
  • Keyword phrases that matter to the company don’t have their own pages.
  • No content has been added or changed in months or even years.
  • Pages don’t have photos, or the photos don’t have alt tags.
  • Linking has been overlooked. Pages should include internal and external links. Additionally, the importance of backlinks (beyond social media) is almost always neglected.

Common Functionality Mistakes

It’s worth noting that some mistakes that affect how a website functions also hurt SEO.

  • The website is difficult to navigate. Can visitors easily find what they came for, on both desktop and mobile?
  • The website loads too slow, weighed down by high-resolution graphics and code errors.
  • The content is out of date. Are product and service details and contact information still accurate?
  • The content isn’t written for the target audience. It’s too difficult to read, focused on the wrong topics, too short to offer any value, and/or missing the call to action.
  • The URL is cumbersome. Once you start adding in the forward slashes with page URLs, you probably don’t want it to be longer than 50 characters. No one wants to type www.thiswebsiteisentirelytoolong.com/seriously/thisistoomanycharacters/.
  • The website is unattractive. You don’t want old-fashioned style and low-quality photos any more than you want bulky, high-resolution images. The website reflects the company, so what impression does it leave on visitors?

Some problems have one-time fixes while others, such as regularly adding content, are an ongoing commitment. Websites are a necessary tool that needs regular sharpening. These are some of the most common mistakes RSPR has corrected for clients, to improve SEO and help that tool work for them.

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The Importance of Digital Marketing for Senior Living Communities https://rspr.com/the-importance-of-digital-marketing-for-senior-living-communities/ Thu, 30 Jul 2020 21:07:32 +0000 https://rspr.com/?p=1678 “Digital marketing” encompasses every method of reaching out to potential customers using the Internet, search engines, social media, and mobile devices. To understand the importance of digital marketing for senior living communities, you must keep in mind that almost every customer is conducting at least part of their research online. The majority of seniors (age… Read More »The Importance of Digital Marketing for Senior Living Communities

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“Digital marketing” encompasses every method of reaching out to potential customers using the Internet, search engines, social media, and mobile devices. To understand the importance of digital marketing for senior living communities, you must keep in mind that almost every customer is conducting at least part of their research online.

The Importance of Digital Marketing for Senior Living CommunitiesThe majority of seniors (age 65 and above) are online, with at least 82% using search engines for research. As senior living community managers are aware, prospective customers often have help from their children or other loved ones, who are even more likely to rely on the Internet to investigate possible retirement homes and assisted living facilities. In fact, every hour in the United States, there are 6,000 online searches related to senior living communities.

Internet, social media, and smartphone usage will only increase as time goes on, in every demographic. As your most important marketing tool, your website needs to be as accessible, accurate, attractive, and search-engine-friendly as possible. Is your website effectively selling your facility?

Senior Living Community Website Checklist:

  • Mobile Optimization. Enter your URL here to see if your site is mobile friendly. https://search.google.com/test/mobile-friendly
  • Large Buttons and Text. The size of the words and the buttons to click or tap affects how well older visitors can use your site on both desktop and mobile.
  • Easy Navigation. Make it easy for visitors to move around your website and find the information they’re looking for.
  • Accurate Information. Make sure all the facts and links on your site are correct, especially contact information.
  • Search Engine Optimization. Is your website appearing in search results as high and as often as you would like?

Beyond your website, digital marketing possibilities are endless. Every facility has different services, target customers, and branding, so a digital marketing plan needs to be customized just for you. However, in general these are RSPR’s most recommended digital marketing methods for senior living communities to get the best return on the dollar.

  • Local Listings. Starting with Google My Business, local listings are essential to helping people in nearby neighborhoods find your community when searching online.
  • Google Ads. We recommend varied Google Ads campaigns—search, display, YouTube, and more—to reach your full target market when they’re searching in Google or viewing content related to senior living.
  • In addition to video ads on the platform, it’s important to have a YouTube channel and make regular video posts.
  • Facebook reports that 62% of online seniors aged 65+ are on the platform, and 72% of those between age 50-64 are on the platform. We recommend posting to the senior community’s Facebook page at least twice per week. Setting up a variety of Facebook advertising campaigns will increase brand awareness, page likes, interactions with posts, visits to the retirement community’s website, and more.
  • Other Social Media. Don’t underestimate the benefits of having a broad social media presence that includes LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, and more.
  • Online Media Relations. More and more people get their news online. Get your community in the news with a media relations plan.
  • Email Marketing. Use a friendly and informative email newsletter to keep in touch with prospects and the family members of residents.

Are you ready to take your marketing to the next level? RSPR Marketing + Communications takes pride in offering comprehensive marketing plans that are customized to get results for you. With experience and skill, we’re the best choice for managing digital marketing for senior living communities.

 

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How to Rank Higher on Google https://rspr.com/rank-higher-google/ Fri, 08 Dec 2017 23:29:08 +0000 http://rsprdigital.com/rspr/?p=1055 If you want your website to rank higher on Google organic (not paid) search results, you need to understand the factors that determine Google ranking. Although the details frequently change whenever Google updates how its algorithm works, such changes are always in keeping with Google’s goal—giving users the most appealing and useful results for their… Read More »How to Rank Higher on Google

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If you want your website to rank higher on Google organic (not paid) search results, you need to understand the factors that determine Google ranking. Although the details frequently change whenever Google updates how its algorithm works, such changes are always in keeping with Google’s goal—giving users the most appealing and useful results for their search.

So how does Google decide which websites are the best to put on the first page of search results? Here are a few of the basics.

Website Setup

There are some things you should make sure your web developer has addressed.

Is your website responsive—does it deliver a great user experience across all screen shapes and sizes? What is your page speed—do your pages load fast enough? Do you have sitemap.xml and robots.txt files? Are there any broken links on your site? Are there any 404 errors to fix or 301 redirects to set up? Has your web developer validated your HTML and CSS coding?

Keywords and Content on Your Website

Keywords used to be enough. You could load up a page of your site with fifty repeats of the word for which you want to rank on Google and call it a day. Today, such keyword stuffing has negative effects, because search engines evaluate content and context. Google’s algorithm updates are always working hard to better weed out the spam sites, and you don’t want to be one of them.

If there is a keyword phrase for which you really want to rank higher on Google, dedicate a page of your site to that phrase. Use that phrase in the header tag and in one or more subheadings on the page. Write the content naturally, including the phrase a few times within the text, which should be at least 300 words. Include at least one relevant photo on the page, and give that photo an alt tag with the phrase. To take it a step further, on other pages of your website, use the phrase within text and have it link to that page (this is called internal linking). Then find other ways to get people to visit the page by promoting it on social media and asking your vendors to link to it on their websites (external linking).

Titles, Snippets, and Structured Data

How each page of your site looks in Google search results matters. The title tag is what appears as a bold headline in your search result entry and should be 60-65 characters long. The snippet, sometimes called a meta description, is the text beneath the title that should be around 155 characters. If you’re using a content management system (CMS) like WordPress, make sure you have an SEO plugin that allows you to write unique titles and snippets for each page of the site, and that you use the appropriate keyword phrase within each.

The structured data, sometimes called schema markup, is the additional information Google may include in the search result listing, such as operating hours, pricing, and review ratings. Setting up structured data is a way of helping search engines interpret and index both basic information (name, address, phone) and more complex information (events, products, articles). The more information Google has, the greater the chances Google will use it.

History and Other SEO to Rank Higher on Google

Two types of history are relevant here. First is your website’s history of being clicked on when Google shows it for that particular search term. The more often your site is chosen, the more often and higher Google will show it for that search in the future.

The second relevant piece of history is the user’s. Your site will show up high and often for someone who has a history of visiting your website. If people from a particular city or region tend to choose your website over your competitors’, then a searcher from that city is also more likely to be shown your site higher in search results.

SEO stands for “search engine optimization,” which is the general practice of improving your search engine ranking to maximize website visitors. To rank higher on Google, there are more aspects to SEO than what has been listed here so far.

One such factor is backlinks—how many websites and online articles out there have a link to your website? Another important factor is claiming your business on all social networks and directories, including Google My Business and Google+, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and more. Are your website address, location address, business name, and phone number consistent across all online directories?

Search engine optimization is broad and constantly developing. Having a well-written, organized, user-friendly website is only the beginning. One final factor you must overcome to rank higher on Google—the factor that is out of your control—is your competition. If your product or service is offered by many other companies in your target area, you’ll have to fight that much harder for your Google ranking. Contact RSPR for help with your SEO.

 

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How Many Pages Should Websites Have? https://rspr.com/how-many-pages-should-websites-have/ Fri, 29 Sep 2017 23:42:25 +0000 http://rsprdigital.com/rspr/?p=1005 If you ask RSPR to search engine optimize your website, I can almost guaranty we will recommend adding more pages. Sometimes people ask us, “How many pages should websites have?” Of course, the answer to that question changes from one company to the next. But the answer is usually more than you’re expecting. Having lots… Read More »How Many Pages Should Websites Have?

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If you ask RSPR to search engine optimize your website, I can almost guaranty we will recommend adding more pages. Sometimes people ask us, “How many pages should websites have?” Of course, the answer to that question changes from one company to the next. But the answer is usually more than you’re expecting.

Having lots of web pages, in and of itself, is not what will optimize your website. You can throw onto your website all the words and pictures you can find, and they won’t do you any good if they aren’t carefully organized.

How Many Pages Should Websites Have? Basic Guide:

  • Make a list of keywords. Write down all your products and services, organizing them in an outline or funnels. Then think about all the keyword phrases that, when typed into Google, you would want your website to appear under, and organize these phrases within your lists of products and services. RSPR uses Google’s Keyword Planner tool to narrow down similar terms and keyword phrases to exactly the right phrase that people search the most. Each of these phrases, then, should be its own page.
  • Write for the reader. Although SEO is all about pleasing search engines, the user’s experience on your website is more important than ever — for the obvious reason that you won’t sell your products and services to them if you’re being spammy, but also because Google recognizes landing page quality. Search engines want to show higher quality websites that people actually read and spend time exploring.
  • Avoid keyword stuffing. There is such a thing as overdoing it. Use your strongest keyword phrase for the page around three times throughout the copy, making sure that it is appropriate and not forced. Try to keep your pages around 300 words. Variations of the keyword can also appear, as long as it flows with the writing.
  • Don’t forget the basics. People expect there to be a contact page with full contact info and a Google map. People know to look for an “about us” page when they’re searching for more detail about a company. Frequent social media users expect to see icons for Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, and more in your header or footer. Having a “service area” page is also important information for both users and search engines. Include a blog and a page of customer testimonials, and you’ll be well on your way toward a search engine optimized website.

 

 

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