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The SEO Book I’ve Been Searching For…

May 13, 2008
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Building Findable Websites
Web Standards, SEO, and Beyond by Aarron Walter

I just read the excellent book, Building Findable Websites, and it truly is the book I’ve been searching for over the last couple of years. I’ve been interested in search engines and how they work for a long time and I’ve been dismayed with the emphasis on Search Engine Optimization over other methods of building findability. This book serves as a great introduction to findability and is chock full of how-to’s and how-not-to’s.

Who’s It For?
This one comes close to really being for anyone involved with creating a website, though I think the people that I most want to read it (the decision makers) probably won’t. It’s mostly for website developers and it’s great for one-person shows (like myself) because it covers coding, creating content, working with the server, blogging and even how to add search to your site and how to use a mailing list to bring traffic to your site.

Why I Loved It
Not only did I find information I could use immediately (a clear explanation of the current state of image replacement techniques, how to write meta descriptions, microformats), I also found support for many of my own beliefs about findability:
No need to put in the meta tag with keywords, search engines ignore them.
Following web standards will help your findability, but just web standards won’t make your site rank number one on Google. Blogging software like WordPress isn’t penalized by Google for having content in multiple places (It seemed strange to me that Google would penalize the users of Blogger, which it owns).
And findability isn’t just about Search Engine Optimization. I love Aarron Walter’s explanation of the goals of findability:

“1. Help people find your website.
2. Help people find what they are looking for once they arrive at your site.
3. Bring your audience back to your website.”

Yep, that’s what it’s all about.

Minor Quibbles
Actually my only quibble is that the third chapter is about server-side strategies, which are pretty advanced and require good access to your web server, which you may not have if you get your hosting from someone outside your company. I would probably have put that chapter later in the book, but we do all know how to skim, right?
Final Word
This book earned a place beside the other books I always refer to when creating a website: The Principles of Beautiful Web Design, Bulletproof Web Design, and Web Standards Solution. I’m using some of the techniques I learned in the book in my current project and look forward to using more in the future.

10 Responses to The SEO Book I’ve Been Searching For…

  1. affordable website design on June 17, 2008 at 5:23 pm

    yeah… the book is probably great but there is no exact science to this game because it is ALWAYS changing it seems. People really don’t have to spend hundreds of dollars learning SEO, there is alot of FREE resources and info online.

  2. Busby Seo Challenge on July 28, 2008 at 10:48 am

    Is it as easy to read as “Getting Noticed on Google in Easy Steps”. I’ve read that book and it’s really basic but useful.

  3. Search Engine Optimization on January 19, 2010 at 11:41 pm

    I’m glad I found this article, it sure sounds like there are some gems on this book. I’m also interested in the server-side strategies that you’ve mentioned, so I guess I’m gonna have to get myself a copy. Thank you for the information!

  4. Hdd Backup on January 12, 2011 at 7:02 pm

    It looks like an interesting read, however I agree with a previous comment. There is so much free information online these days, you can quite easily find the resources you need to build websites/blogs, or whatever. It just takes time and a lot of reading.

  5. SEO Harlow on May 9, 2011 at 5:54 pm

    I will look to purchase this to add to my ever expsnding library of SEO books although I am still a firm believer in finding info free on Google and also trial and error.

  6. Eddie Gear on June 4, 2011 at 8:13 am

    This one looks promising. Is there anyway, I can get a copy somewhere with a discount.

  7. seo expert on August 14, 2011 at 5:01 am

    while the book may have been very useful to you, if you are actually interested in seo then you would want to stay away from anyone who says he knows how search engines work. SEs change every week and i swear not even google knows how it will work in future. So the only way to study SEO is good practise.

  8. nj seo on August 21, 2011 at 12:43 am

    I agree with the seo experts comment, the last panda update that google put out was the biggest in the last 3-5 years. Everything has changed. This is the next generations of SEO. Brands will develop on the web, the little guys will vanish.

    Words of wisdom, know you audience, and interact as much as possible. Social media is now.

  9. SEO on October 10, 2011 at 4:51 am

    Thats funny, that was the first book i have red about SEO.

  10. Miran Stoltenberg on January 10, 2012 at 2:23 am

    I never understood the meaning of buying seo books. 1 month in seo is a century in normal business. There are some main aspects unchanged but the real knowledge is in the details. On my seo site. Thank You for reading.

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