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Page 1 of 4 SEO is a set of methods
aimed at improving the ranking of a website
in search
engine listings. The term also refers to an industry of consultants
that carry out optimization projects on behalf of clients' sites.
Using search engines, visitors can find sites in a variety
of ways: via paid-for advertisements in the search engine results pages
(SERPs), via third parties who are listed in the search engines, or via
"organic" listings, i.e. the results the search engines present
users. SEO is primarily concerned with improving the visibility of a site in
the organic
search results. 
High rankings in the organic search results can provide
targeted traffic for a site. Obtaining that traffic by other means can
potentially be expensive. For particularly competitive terms, the cost per
click can run several dollars, or more, when pay
per click advertising or banner
advertising are used. For even moderately competitive terms the cost can
range from a few cents to several tens of dollars per visitor. Given those
costs, it often makes sense for site owners to optimize their sites for organic
search.
Not all sites have identical goals in mind when they
optimize for search engines. Some sites are seeking any and all traffic, and
may be optimized to rank highly for common search phrase. This can be a poor
marketing strategy for a business because it can generate a large volume of
low-quality inquiries that cost money to handle, yet result in little business.
The "shotgun approach" to search optimization can possibly work well
for a site that has broad interest, such as a periodical,
a directory,
or site that displays advertising with a CPM
revenue model.
Other sites target a specific population, with particular
needs or interests. Many businesses try to optimize their sites for large
numbers of highly specific keywords that indicate a prospective customer who is
ready to buy their product. Focusing on desired traffic can generate more
high-quality sales leads, and fewer time-wasting inquiries.
Origins of the Term
SEO began in the mid-1990s,
as the first search engines were cataloging the early Web.
Initially, all a webmaster
needed to do was submit a site to the various engines which would run spiders,
programs to "crawl" the site, and store the collected data. The
search engines then sorted the information by topic, and serve results based on
pages they had spidered. As the number of documents online kept growing, and
more webmasters realised the value of organic search listings, it became
imperative for search engines to sort the vast collection of pages they had
spidered and display the most relevant pages first. This was the start of a
search engine vs. SEO struggle that
continues to this day.
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