Thursday, February 14, 2008

Your Website - Is It The Taj Mahal Nobody Knows About? - Ministry & Business Marketing, Media and Strategy Blog

One of my biggest frustrations as a sometime web designer and full-time ministry consultant is the near-universal tendency of ministries to spend all of their web budget on a killer-looking site that nobody outside of their members/friends ever sees. Ministries usually don't realize that optimizing their sites to be picked up by the major search engines, especially Google, is just as important as building a fabulous web home.

Before I dive into quick fixes for your website search rankings, let me say that search engine optimization (SEO) is not just about adding a couple of things to your site and watching it zoom. You must feature a solid amount of content people actually want, organized in a way that's easy to navigate and keeps people coming back for more. That said, and no offense to the SEO pros reading this, you can make some simple changes to your website that will make it pop in search engines. How do I know? Because these changes have done wonders for me.

1) Page title. Check out the top navigation bar in Internet Explorer or Firefox the next time you visit one of your favorite websites. It doesn't just list the organization name; it describes the ministry. Churches should include their geographical area, ministry distinctives, and denomination. Parachurches should detail their location (if pertinent) and ministry focus, in general terms like "Evangelize Africa," or "Feed America's Poor". Keep your title to just two or three key phrases that people are most likely to use when searching for your kind of website, then list your ministry name.

2) Description and meta tags. For those of you who don't know, meta tags, often in the form of keywords, feed information about your website content to all the search engines and crawlers that visit you.

I can't tell you how many times SEO experts have declared, "Meta tags are dead!" If that's the case, why do all of the best-optimized websites still use them? List the keywords that describe your ministry, such as "Orange County Baptist Church, biblical teaching, poor ministry, financial ministry, web ministry, web outreach, free plumber, free auto repairs." As with your page title, the trick is to use keywords and phrases that people are most likely to punch in when searching for your website.

3) Label all your photos. You do have lots of high-quality photos that tell your ministry story, don't you? Use alt tags to label all of your ministry photos.

Search engines don't read photos, they read text. And alt tags give Google and friends something to chew on and will pop up if your photos don't load. Consider tags such as "Heights Calvary Chapel in Chicago city-wide baptism," or "new Northpoint Atlanta community center opening."

4) Make your site contagious. Offer ways for people to subscribe by email, mobile, rss reader, and whatever else and be sure to include means for people to forward your page to friends by email, text message, etc. "Viral" websites get linked to more often, which leads to hire search engine rankings. Which brings me too...

5) You like me. You really like me! Links are a great way to boost your search engine ranking. In search engine-think, if other sites like you, you must be important. If you support or partner with other ministries, be sure to swap links with them. And if you have a blog, list it on all the major blog search engines (put in a Google search to find them).

Hopefully these tips will greatly improve your site's visibility and ministry reach. (For quick fixes to your website itself, check out this recent post.)

If you implement these changes and they work for you, I'd love to hear about it. In that event, I'd also love for you to send a few bucks our way so we can help other ministries.

I freely invite any SEO pros to add their suggestions/corrections via commenting on this blog. Let's work together to improve ministry websites, to bring God glory and advance His Kingdom...

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2 comments:

Bipper Media said...

Greetings! This is a great article, and if you do the things stated herein, then you'll separate yourself from 90% of the existing websites out there! Which explains the powerful results some sites can experience with just the title tag is optimized.

I provide advanced SEO services to global clients, and I'm a guest SEO blogger on a prominent blog, and the biggest mistake, or overlooked element in SEO is not realizing the power of image alt tags.

I've always said that alt tags to images are the same as anchor text to text links. IT IS the anchor text to the image, and with the risen focus on images, image search, etc... and the fast growing social web, and the coming age of semantic search, alt tags are without a doubt a powerful way to build authority for targeted keyphrases.

Thank you for the great post! I'm also a Christian, and I would love to help anyone with their SEO needs, questions, or input - for free of course - because I believe God gave me the gift I have, and this would be a great way to honor God with my gift.

So, visit my website www.CovenantGlobal.com to contact me - and I've refrained from anchor texting to hopefully show my sincerity and respect for this blog!

Thank you again...

Michelle Castle said...

When looking for a new church a while back, it was very difficult to find websites for local churches unless I knew the name of a church. I discovered later that some of the churches had websites, but I couldn't find them on my own.

Following these tips will help to ensure that your ministry ranks for its name and other critical keywords. You will make sure your church is listed in the phone book, so why not take the time to make sure it ranks in Google?

If you aren't sure what terms people might use to try and find a site like yours, try Wordtracker's free keyword suggestion tool at http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/.