The Philosophy of Writing for Search
You have read hundreds of pages about how your site can appeal to search engines, and why it is so important, but now we turn the tables on you. The best philosophy for writing for search is: Write for people first, not for search engines.Chapter 5, "Identify Your Web Site's Goals," you decided your Web site's goal. You have developed your search marketing program to support that goal. As you reconsider your Web site's goal, think again about your Web conversions. Selling a product. Downloading that white paper. Passing a lead to a manufacturer's rep. Getting a donation for your cause. Don't forget what your goal is: getting conversions.If you get high rankings in search because you "chase the algorithm," but you have not written with people in mind, you might not get anyone to click through and eventually convert. Let's look at an example. To optimize a page for its "digital cameras" search marketing campaign, Snap Electronics could have produced the prose in Figure 12-3.
Figure 12-3. Overoptimizing your content. When you try to stuff keywords into every phrase, you produce stilted, unreadable copy that converts no one.

Figure 12-4. Writing for people first. You can write for your reader while still taking care to repeat the phrases needed for high search rankings.

Ethically, you feel better about yourself because you know that when your pages come up, the searchers really do want to see them and you are providing a valuable service to them, rather than wasting their time.You don't have time to chase the algorithm.
If you are one of those people waiting for a book called The Four Habits of Highly Overworked People, you know that you are not going to make time for a new full-time job of out-guessing the search engines. Even when you guess right, you need to make time to guess again next month. As the years go by, ranking algorithms increasingly reward rich content written in an engaging way, so the higher the quality of your content, the better your site will do as search engines continue to improve. Excellent content is the best way to invest your precious time.You cannot afford the bad publicity from spamming.
If your executives are squeamish about any hint of negative reporting about your company, a story about unethical search practices is not a risk you are likely to take.You are focused on conversions, not rankings.
You know that the illusory gains you make from overoptimizing do not bring you customer conversions anyway, so why not work for conversions first?
In the end, it is your decision, but we strongly advise you to play it straight. Be factual. Avoid the overheated hype. Unlike other forms of marketing and advertising, a straightforward approach is often the most convincing on the Webeven a "soft sell" can sometimes be best. Now let's look at some specific techniques for writing copy that puts the visitor first but will still appeal to search engines.