How To Create Your USP – Unique Selling Point – Step 7

Introduction

This is Step 7 in the series about How To Build an Optimized Website that converts a visitor into a buyer. If you want to start at the Step 1 Click Here . Each step takes only a few minutes to read.

What Is USP?

USP is your Unique Selling Point. Now that I have finished writing the content for the Hudson Concrete website, it’s time to start thinking about overall web design.

I wrote the content featuring a summary of services on the home page, types of properties Hudson works on and a list of geographic areas serviced. When a visitor arrives on the site, they get an instant impression. Because I created all the services in bullet point format, the visitor knows exactly what the site is about.

Site color, navigation, simplicity, photos, categories, sub categories are designed to get the consumer to stick. Your site does not need to be expensive to achieve this impression. This first impression is a summary of your selling points.

Every Page Should Have Your USP

Once you grab your visitors attention, the next step is to expand on those key points. Start with bullet points, then expand into a brief paragraph on the home page. At the end of the paragraph there should be a link to another page that expands the selling points further.

Now you can offer your Unique Selling Points on a complete page. If you recall from one of our earlier steps, we laid out all our keywords before writing our content. Now is the time to create links from each page to the corresponding relevant page. Use photos, videos or galleries to support your content and create a mental image in your consumers mind.

Don’t Sell – Educate

One of of the worst things you can do is blatantly sell and tell your visitor how great you are. Educate your customer about your service or product in a factual way. This creates trust and credibilty. Educate your customer and let them sell themselves. Here is a List of Phrases To Avoid

  1. We Understand – Tell what you will do and the benefits, demonstrate, don’t make a claim
  2. We Believe – Your clients don’t care what you believe. Show the benefits.
  3. We Hope – don’t show weakness.
  4. We Would Be Honored – don’t talk about yourself.
  5. We Can Provide – either you can or you can’t.
  6. We Are Uniquely Qualified – says who?
  7. Premier, World Class – says who? Not believable.
  8. Industry Leader – credibility crusher. Not Believable.
  9. Top Quality – as if there’s another kind of quality? Don’t say it.
  10. Trustworthy – clients run away when they hear this.
  11. Customer First – Not believable.

Would You Buy What You’re Selling?

Put yourself in your customers shoes. Would you buy what you are selling? Would you buy from you? Be educational and factual. Your customer knows you’re in business. If they are educated, then you’ve got their trust. You gave them what they wanted. Remember, your customer searched the information you provided. If you gave them what they wanted, the odds of them buying from you is high.

Click Here For Step 8

Writing Niche Content-Website For Decorative Concrete- Step 6

Since we’re working on building a website for a concrete polishing company, which is in the decorative concrete niche, I thought I’d provide a few more tips explaining how to create content that converts to sales. This strategy applies to every small, niche business or product.

  1. What Are Your Customers Looking For? A better question might be, who are your customers? To answer that question requires knowledge of your competitive edge. Are you the low cost provider that competes on price? Or are you a high quality provider? If price is your edge, then make that point clear in your website content. If quality is your niche, then educate your customer about the benefits of your product.
  2. What Is Your Niche? – Do you take any project that comes along or do you have a niche within the decorative concrete market? Explain what types of projects you work on and your geographic area of specialization. It’s important to align your target geography with your business plan.  It doesn’t make sense to drive 2 hours to do a garage floor project for $3,000.00 dollars. However if you specialize in the restaurant market, driving 2 hours to do a $20,000.00 project might.

Size 13 Shoes and Larger

I recently read about a shoe store who specializes in shoes for those with large feet, size 13 and larger. This store owner was able to capitalize on an overlooked niche market. Competition online to rank on Google for terms related to that niche was wide open.

You can apply the same strategy for your business. If you are in the decorative concrete market you might want to focus on the restaurant floor niche. Within that niche are commercial kitchens, cafeterias or any food and beverage facility. What makes you unique? Why would someone hire you? The owner of the size 13 and larger shoe store found a niche with very little online competition. You can do the same.  Think about your competitive edge. What would your target customer search for to find what you offer? How competitive is your market online?

Niche Quest Builds Local Niche Market Solutions

Our niche is building profitable online marketing solutions for real estate related businesses, contractors, manufacturers and small business owners.

We help our clients define their niche and dominate their market. Our clients get extraordinary results. They are putting their competition out of business. We don’t just build websites. We build profitable online strategies. Every day we try to improve and get better at what we do. Your business plan should be the same.

Conclusion

  1. Define Your Niche
  2. Define Your Geographic Focus
  3. Research all relevant keywords
  4. Build your website educating your customer about your unique selling point.

Getting traffic to your website is meaningless. Getting traffic to your website that converts to sales is the goal.

Click this link to read the entire tutorial starting with Step 1 or call 1-203-762-1366.

To Move on to Step 7 Click Here

How To Write Local Optimized Website Content – Step 5

If you’re just joining us and want to start at the beginning Click Here for Step 1. Each step takes about 3 minutes to read so you’re only about 12 minutes behind.

Quick Summary

We started the week by researching all the keywords relevant to a concrete polishing business in NYC. The owner wants to expand to larger projects which requires a territory from NYC to Boston. The internet is the only way to reach a mass market, whether in a tight area of just a few towns or in this case throughout 6 states.

After we completed the keyword research (4,000 terms) we laid the terms out by category inlcluding Services, Property Types and Geographic area.

Then we created 12 pages of sub categories. Then for each page we created 5 sub-sub categories. Each page is 400-500 words. Each sub sub category requires only 80-100 words on a specific feature, benefit or explanation to educate the consumer. By breaking down by sub categories it’s easier to write quality, to the point content. We can also control the use of keywords.

Writing Content

I started out writing the home page which summarized all the content throughout the site. This serves a few purposes.

  1. Teaches Consumer About Site – when consumer comes to the site, they quickly know what the business is about. I used bullet points at the top. Then I expand the bullet points with a short paragraph about each topic. My goal is to capture the consumers attention, then get them to read more. Each paragraph will have a link to back pages with more information and photo galleries.
  2. Teaches Search Engines About The Site – even though I’m only optimizing a few keyword phrases on the home page, I use many of the keywords I will optimize on each page on the home page. The search engines follow the links and find relevant content. This is the basis of link building which is very important for optimization which we will discuss in another post. Remember the search engines (Google) are in the business of providing quality information to their visitors. The better job we do orchestrating relevance the more we get rewarded with prime, business producing positions.

So, after laying out each page with my (Sub Sub) categories on each page I knew what I was going to write. I was able to stay exactly on task without my thoughts drifting. Each 80-100 paragraph of information had meaning, it was to the point. I was also able to control the use of keywords to appeal to the search engines.

How Long Did It Take To Write Content?

I’m a weak typist so it takes me longer than most. But following this system I was able to write 3 blog posts and 8 pages of content in 1 day. My use of time was very efficient. I tried to allow myself less than 15 minutes per 100 words. Starting at 7:00 am I was finished at 6:00 pm. A very productive day.

Once I created this system, my content writing went quicker, quality of content improved and pages were better optimized. This also ends of helping me develop an image of the site design. Today I’ll finish up content. Next week I’ll edit the content, start putting together photos and have everything ready to start site design.

Click Here For Step 6

Click Here For Step 1

3 Steps To Writing Optimized Website Content – Step 4

Casey Hart Informer Messages on Hold

Review

So far we have analyzed the business plan for Hudson Concrete and completed all the keyword research. If you recall, Hudson Concrete is based in New York City. They specialize in providing decorative concrete flooring solutions in the tri-state area. The bulk of their projects have been completed in Manhattan. They have an impressive portfolio with floor projects completed for many name brands like Martha Stewart and Calvin Klein. They have expanded into the concrete polishing market and are targeting large flooring projects like grocery stores, big box retailers and industrial buildings throughout the East Coast from Philadelphia to Boston.

Step 1- Keyword Research and Page Layout

We completed our keyword research including 4,000 relevant phrases. We broke the phrases down to basically 3 categories.

  1. Services
  2. Property Types
  3. Geographic Area

Each of the 3 categories were then broken down to numerous sub categories. Then we created a page listing all the sub categories and placed all the most relevant phrases we are going to optimize for each page. We are going to write 15 pages. At this point we have 1 page with all the sub categories, title tags and meta descriptions. Remember we should have less than 60 characters in our title tags. That required some maneuvering and thinking about how we’re going to write each page.

Step 2- Organizing Keywords and Creating Sub Topics For Each Page

It really helps to have 2 screens to work with. On my left screen I have my page with each page category, title tags and meta description. Then I copy each and paste it to the top of a word doc on my right screen. Since I have 15 categories, I’ll have 15 pages. For example I created a page about Concrete Polishing, another about Concrete Repair, one about Industrial Floors and so on.

I set up each page with my title tags and meta description at the top of each including my home page. My plan is to create 500 words or so on each page. To stay on task and make sure the content of the page follows the topic and educates the consumer, I broke each page down to 5 – sub categories. Sort of like a table of contents for the page.

Now instead of writing 500 words ,  I write 100 words on  sub topics, 5 times. This makes it easier for a consumer to read. It makes it easier for me to write quality content. And finally, it makes it easy for me to control the use of keywords.

Step 3 – Writing Content- Building Site Content Brick by Brick

By breaking down  content by categories, sub categories and sub, sub categories, I get an overall perspective of the sites content. We’re not writing brochure content. We’re writing content to appeal to the search engines so that we get found for lots of keywords. Then we’re writing to appeal to the consumer to convert to a sale. Breaking down categories this way enables us to create valuable educational content with easy navigation for both the consumer and the search engines.

When I write website or blog content I try to write like I’m explaining something in person.  This process turns your website into a personal education. The result is a high number of consumer page views and lots of time spent on the site. This creates a relationship of trust with your potential customer. It converts to sales and puts your competition at a disadvantage.

Don’t just think, “why bother, I can just create a directory listing or purchase a pay per click ad”. If you don’t give your customer what they are looking for, they will leave your site faster than a blink. Your customers are searching for information, not just phone numbers. If they did we’d still be using the Yellow Pages.

Creating Links

Tomorrow, I’m going to be discussing links, how they work and the importance of them. I’m also going to try and complete 9 pages of content today. I’ll let you know how far I get.

Call Me – Interested in a website that produces sales? Call me at 1-203-762-1366.

Looking For Step 1? Click Here

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How To Write Website Content Serving Two Masters – Step 3

Step 3 – Writing Web Content That Converts to Sales

If you’re just joining us, this is step 3 in our process of building a locally optimized website for Hudson Concrete. Hudson is targeting large commercial concrete floor polishing and resurfacing with high performance coatings. They are based in New York City and are targeting the Phily, NYC and Boston corridor. The same strategy applies to all local business whether in a few towns or nationwide. Here’s the link to Step 1 if you want to start at the beginning.

Organizing Keyword Phrases

I took all my keyword phrases and laid them out in my excel spread sheet. All the phrases were organized by relevance. For example, we’re going to have a category about food related concrete floors. Consumers don’t just search for concrete floors, they search for terms that relate to their use. Keep in mind that your customer is not thinking about you. They are thinking about themselves and what they want. So, we’re going to give them want they want.

From our keyword research we know that customers search for terms in the food category like:

  • commercial kitchen floor
  • food floor
  • restaurant floor, floors or flooring
  • grocery floor
  • supermarket floor
  • market floor

Vehicle Floors

  • car floor
  • truck floor
  • bus floor
  • boat floor
  • marine floor

Each page will have a category for the type of floor. I’ll optimize each phrase while providing educational information for each category. I have organized 11 page categories by floor type. Every business that wants to capitalize on the business the web delivers needs to look at their business this way.

There are thousands of terms that relate to floors. If you are in the mortgage business there are thousands of terms that relate to mortgages. Each business has niche terms your customer searches.  This is why keyword research is critical to your marketing and branding, whether online or off line.

Organizing Categories and Sub Categories- Serving Two Masters

Within each category, I create sub categories before starting to write my page content. This helps for a few reasons.

  1. Defines What consumers want
  2. Organizes keywords for optimization. Use of words follows a simple math equation.
  3. Sub categories creates focus with lots of short thoughts.

This simple process helps me see a skeleton of site. Once the frame is assembled I can dress it up to serve our 2 masters.

  1. Client – site visitor
  2. Search Engines

Title Tags

Anyone can make a website. But creating a site that ranks high and converts to a sale is another story.  When I was laying out my keywords I had to think about optimizing each page. That starts with the title tags. Title tags are the first thing the search engines see when they crawl through a page. This gives them an idea of what the page is about. Title tags should not exceed 60 characters. Characters are letters, numbers, commas and spaces. Exceeding 60 characters is like stuffing a page with content. Google and other engines know that quality content is a reflection of focus. By limiting the amount of characters on a page we are forced to create content on a single point or limited amount of points. Google, Yahoo and Bing are in the business of delivering quality content. Do it right and you are rewarded with prime, business producing placement.

Meta Description

The second thing the search engines see is a description of what the page content is about. We use our keyword phrases in the description. Google and others are looking for relevance throughout the page. The Meta Description is an expanded version of the Title tags.

Page Content

I try and write about 500 words per page. The content is an expanded version of the title tags and meta description. It’s critical to carefully use, not overuse, the keywords. Ideally I want them used in the beginning, middle and end of my page content.

Sub Categories

Consumers want information quick. And remember, they have certain wants. Sub categories enable a consumer to get what they want from a page, avoiding what they don’t want. Short, to the point paragraphs are easier to write and easier to control use of keywords.

Profit Producing Websites

Keep in mind that customers are not searching for fancy websites. They are searching for information. Search engines search for websites that provide quality information. Our goal is to give each master what they want. That’s what gets rewarded with prime placement and high conversion to a sale.

Step 4 – Local Optimization

Tomorrow I’ll discuss how I write content with each page in mind and how they relate. I want to be able to create links that consumers and search engines can follow to learn more. I want to make it easy for the search engines and consumers to learn about each website quickly and easily. This improves optimization and increases conversion to sales.I’ll also talk about creating content that optimizes in local markets.

See you tomorrow. Step 4 – Click Here

Looking For Step 1? Click Here

Questions? Contact Us

Organizing Keywords For Optimization – Step 2

Organizing Keywords

After I gathered all my keywords yesterday I put them in an excel spread sheet. Each general term has it’s own page with list of long tail phrases. In total I put together a list of about 3,500 terms. I’ll use these during the next year when updating the blog. For now I’m just going to use 30 phrases along with the appropriate cities and states.

For example “NYC Concrete Polishing”,  “Brooklyn Restaurant floor” or “New Jersey grocery floor”.

Content Writing

Today I’ll start writing the content for the site. Each page will have two – three keyword phrases along with the cities and states we will optimize.  Concrete Polishing is a large ticket business. By that I mean most floors are large. They typically range from 5,000 – 100,000 square feet.  That means gross pricing in the $25,000 – $500,000 range.  Capturing this market requires a broad geographic area. Though the Boston area is wide open online, I’m wondering if we want to target that area along with the NYC metro area. It might be too far.

When building a niche business online you get what you go after. Targeting more than you can handle can impede on your productivity. I’m thinking that we should target NYC, Brooklyn, New Jersey, Connecticut and Long Island. That’s a big market. If we target the Boston area as well, every time they are up in Boston, it leaves the core market open to competitors.

Business Plan Optimization

If Hudson Concrete was going to specialize in Restaurant floors we would have a different strategy. For example we might just go after NYC and various neighborhoods within NYC. Restaurant floors are usually about 2,000 – 3,000 square feet. That means floors projects of $15,000 – $30,000. A smaller, local market will be more productive than a large area.

If Hudson was targeting the garage floor market, we would target an even smaller area. Maybe just a single county in New Jersey, Connecticut or Long Island, perhaps smaller. Dominating the garage floor market may require an area of only 3-10 towns or part of a county.

It’s important to align your business with the internet the right way. The internet produces massive amounts of business. Going after too much can be as unproductive as too little business. Dominating your niche online requires focus and faith that the plan will work. If the plan isn’t working, make adjustments.

As we create the Hudson site we will discuss the business plan as it applies to internet marketing. Stay tuned and we’ll see you tomorrow after I’ve created some content. I’ll be discussing how I create educational content that converts to sales.

Questions? Contact Us Step 3 – Click Here

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Hudson Concrete Floor – Niche, Concrete Polishing and Overlays

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Profit Producing Websites Start With Keywords – Step 1

I know the selection of the right keywords produces sales. Well, not exactly. Choosing the right keywords, then building your website with the right content and layout, produces sales.

Keywords teach us a lot about our business. General terms teach us the size of our market. The more detailed keywords, called Long Tail Keywords, teach us what consumers want. Our goal is to give the customer the information they want.

So let’s take a look at the Google keyword tool and start doing some research. The process I’m going to be explaining over the next few weeks applies to every business.

Today I’m starting work on a site for Hudson Concrete of NYC. Hudson is a high end specialty contractor. They apply decorative concrete coatings on floors.  They also do concrete polishing.

The most logical term to search is floor, decorative concrete floor, concrete floor or concrete polishing. That’s where we start. Customers start searching general terms. Then, like all of us, they start narrowing their search.

Here are a few terms that I found.

  1. Concrete Floor
  2. Restaurant Floor
  3. Store floor
  4. Retail floor
  5. Dog Kennel Floor
  6. Medical Floor
  7. Hospital Floor
  8. Showroom Floor
  9. Warehouse Floor
  10. Industrial Floor
  11. Garage Floor
  12. Parking Floor
  13. Auto floor
  14. Car Floor
  15. Truck floor
  16. Church Floor
  17. Office Floor
  18. Mall Floor
  19. Food floor
  20. Station Floor
  21. Marine & Marina Floor
  22. Non slip floor
  23. Commercial kitchen floor
  24. Stadium Floor
  25. Concrete Floor repair
  26. Epoxy Repair
  27. Polished floor
  28. Cleaning floor
  29. Waterproof floor
  30. Floor grinding
  31. concrete stained floor
  32. Gallery floor
  33. Lab Floor

And you thought a floor was just a floor. I’m going to use every one of these terms and a lot more to build this website.  Why? Because we know that people search for specific floor types that relate to their use. Within each one of these 33 terms above, there are 50-100 related additional keyword phrases. There are 2,000 – 4,000 terms that relate to this niche. As I find them, I’ll be putting them in an excel spreadsheet and save them in a file.

I’ll choose the most relevant phrases from within the  listed terms and start laying them out by category.

Getting Hundreds Of Top Google Positions

I’ll get into it in a later post but we can only use 2-3 keyword phrases per page along with the towns, cities and states we plan to target.  If we abbreviate states like NY or NJ, we can fit in more than if we type out the full name like New York or New Jersey. More people search abbreviated states than type the full name. In this case, the terms we are optimizing have very little online competition.

Since we’re targeting 4 states – NY, NJ, Pa, Ct that means 133 possible Google positions. That is ultimately what we want, hundreds of Google positions (plus Yahoo, Bing and MSN).  By implementing a blog and article marketing strategy, that number will grow exponentially. Google learns. When Google regards your online strategy as the best information in your target market, they reward you with top placement. The reason is that Google is an information provider. The better the quality of information they provide, the more people will search on Google.

Here’s What I’m Thinking About

  • What people want to know.
  • Pro’s and cons of each.
  • How they are installed
  • How long the process takes
  • How to maintain each floor
  • Color Options

Then I’m going to start defining where Hudson Concrete is going to focus. New York City, New Jersey, Connecticut, Boston, Phily.  Considering the amount of keywords, I’ll be thinking about how much business and what kind of business the internet will produce.

Optimizing these terms in all the major Metro markets may be too large. In many cases 3-6 towns may be more than enough. It depends on the niche you’re after.

I also have to research how much online competition there is in each market. One thing for sure, people start with general searches, then they narrow their search to local areas. Narrow searches result in a conversion to sale over 65% of the time. That’s why local optimization is so profitable for small businesses. And as you will see, a directory listing will not convert to a sale unless you deliver what your customer wants.

Tomorrow we’ll go over the website categories and how I’ll start developing optimized web content. Let me know if you have any questions. 1-203-762-1366 or click Contact Us and send me a note.

Step 2 – Click Here

How To Build A Profit Producing Website For Your Niche

Starting Monday I’m beginning the process of building a website for Hudson Concrete of New York City. This is going to be a site that ranks extremely high on Google, Yahoo and Bing. Every day I’m going to chronicle what I’m doing that day to build the site.

You’ll be able to watch the process from start to finish and beyond. This is not just a website, but an optimized website that will produce sales. To the dismay of the competition, Hudson Concrete will be getting all the online business in their target market. It’s a local niche business development strategy that can be applied to thousands of niche businesses nationwide.

What the process will include:

  1. Keyword Research – Though I’ve already done preliminary research, I’m going to get very detailed.
  2. Keyword Layout – We’ll sort through all the keywords and organize an optimization plan for getting not just a few well placed keywords, but 50-100 and more.
  3. Content Creation- I’ll explain the process of creating content that defines the niche, educates the client and how it develops a sense of trust that converts to sales. I’ll discuss how the website will shorten the sales cycle.
  4. Photos – I’ll discuss how and where to use photos that support the educational content making site memorable which brings customers back while simultaneously producing word of mouth leads.
  5. Site Design and Layout – We’ll go through the options for layout, design and site navigation.
  6. Site Launch– Once site is launched I’ll discuss what is involved in the optimization process.
  7. Blog Updates – I’ll be explaining how and why to use your blog.
  8. Article Marketing – Few  know the impact and importance of an article marketing campaign. We’ll review why and how to create articles that we submit to article directories. We’ll discuss how to create links to specific web pages and why.
  9. Directories – We’ll go through why submitting your site to directories is valuable and I’ll show you how.
  10. Word Of Mouth Marketing – I’ll show you tactics for using your website as part of your word of mouth marketing strategy.

At the end of the site building process you’ll have a good idea of what is involved in building an optimized web site and the processes involved. You’ll learn how to maintain your site to obtain new positions on the search engines and dominate your niche. You’ll also learn why you need an internet marketing campaign if you are serious about building your business.

See you on Monday.

How To Find Profitable Long Tail Keywords For Your Niche

According To Search Engine Journal, over 60% of online sales come from the bottom 20% of keywords.  The bottom 20% are the long tail. These are terms that consumers search as a result of an education process.

Think of yourself as a consumer searching for something online. You start out by searching a general term. You look quickly at the results and you process the information. Most likely it’s not exactly what you are after. But you may have learned something. Maybe you see a few words that educate you about your search. So you do another more descriptive search.

If you are really a buyer, you keep drilling down your search until you find what you want. If you don’t find what you’re after, you quit or go onto to something else. But when you find what you want to stop. You stick on that site. Because they have what you want you immediately trust the source.

The only way to capitalize on the long tail conversion is to know your niche. The more you know your niche the more you know what consumers want. Create the content on your site that consumers want and you’ll see a conversion to sales. Even if your site visitor doesn’t buy from you today they might later. That depends though on how well you have defined your niche and how well you have communicated your message.

Dig deep into your niche keywords. Create content that keywords tell us your customer wants. Give your customer what they want, not what you think they want. Thta’s what puts money in your pocket.

Are You Getting Smoked By Your Competition?

The easiest way to know who is getting all your business. Just go onto Google and start searching for a business that does what you do, as if you were the customer. Think before you start this exercise.

Put yourself in your customers shoes. What does your customer search for? They are not searching just for a phone number or directory listing. If that’s what people searched for we wouldn’t need the internet. The Yellow Pages would do.

Your customer is searching for information, that’s why they search. They want information that’s valuable, educational. That’s what Google is in the business of delivering, quality information. When you start your search, do you know what your customers are thinking about when they sit at their keyboard?

Let’s say you are a kitchen remodeling company.  Your client who wants a new kitchen probably doesn’t know where to start. But they’ll start somewhere with a few clicks. To put ourselves in the mind of our customer let’s take a look at keywords that clients search for.

Using the Google Keyword Tool I found 95 keywords under the term “Kitchen Remodeling”.   Some terms you might think to discount at first because they don’t have a lot of monthly searches. But look closely at the terms. Some terms only apply to certain niche markets. For example “kitchen cabinet remodeling“. Someone searching this term isn’t looking for a complete remodel. They are looking for new cabinets. What goes with new cabinets? A kitchen cabinet remodel might open up lots of issues. Like damaging the floor or back splashes, the ceiling. Wait…I just found another. How to remodel kitchen and kitchen remodeling cost.

Here’s more terms, small kitchen remodeling costs and kitchen remodel before and after. Now we can start seeing what is in the mind of your client when they do a search. This is only the beginning. Do another search for kitchen cabinet remodel and you’ll find another list of keywords. Or just search kitchen cabinet. You’ll keep finding more terms that relate to your business. Keep searching and put these terms into your excel spread sheet.

Once you’ve put together a list of a few thousand terms, start putting together a list of those terms that most closely match your business. You might start seeing a niche emerging that you didn’t see before.

When you search for your competition you know what your customers are looking for. Now, what you want to do is write content for your web site that answers what your customer wants. Each web page will have a couple of specific keyword terms. Write your content by staying on the topic of those terms. This is what your customer wants.

This is the paradigm shift caused by the internet. Consumers no longer get what they get. They get what they want. If you deliver what they want, you are on your way to creating a relationship with your potential customer. And that’s what converts to sales and develops new word of mouth business.

So if you are getting smoked by your competition, you know the steps to start taking to reverse the trend. Even though the recession is still raging, there is business in your market. What you need to do is smoke your competition by delivering what your customer wants. Build your web site that delivers the content your customer wants, optimize it in your local market. Your customers will find you, buy from you and not your competitor.