SEO Tips - An Insight With A Difference

Mike Barker has managed the process of developing and promoting over 1,000 websites since 1996. He has a unique understanding of the internet that few others share and is a master at generating traffic to websites and converting visitors into buyers. Mike's SEO Tips are not theory, they are practical ideas that have worked in real situations!

Tips on Search Engine Optimization from Mike Barker

Archive for 'Content Managed Systems (CMS)'

Somebody asked me last week if we could combine WordPress with Business Catalyst – integrate a WordPress blog into the Business Catalyst interface.  Nice Idea, but not possible without a large development team and a couple years up your sleeve.

But what if somebody was doing that? Making a flexible system that was focused on Internet Marketing and SEO, which had a CRM and store etc. tightly integrated. Now that would be a Kick-ass system. Certainly both WordPress and Business Catalyst have their limitations and for a number of reasons, the BC model is proving to be troublesome. Particularly:

  1. Having all sites on a central system means updates are applied across the whole system without exception. It’s generally great to have updates, but what if you had used a whole lot of custom code? What if upgrades conflicted with your code and as a result your site came down or didn’t function properly.
  2. BC has no staging area, so when sites are effected by updates, you have to try and fix them on a live site. This is particularly stressful when your client is testing it before your QA team can look at it and often one change affects something elsewhere on the site.

There is also the limitation of having a software company develop, vs having an online community develop. The Internet is changing rapidly and what yesterday was considered “out there” is today considered a standard feature – and the pace is rapidly accelerating.

Will the Adobe software  development style of working be quick enough to keep up with change?

Here’s something else to consider when you are wondering what system is best to use:  Security.

With WordPress, there are some serious security holes and particularly if a developer is not aware of them, your site can be quickly hacked or compromised. For instance, the dafault setting on many wordpress files allows Global read/write access, meaning that anybody who knows how to access those files can change them and gain access to your server, passwords etc.

This problem does not relate only to wordpress, it is probably any free CMS software that you host yourself. If you are not aware of security issues and correct settings on this software, you are potentially open to hackers. There are of course also security issues with shared hosting environments depending on how vigilant the hosting provider is in checking for and controlling security breaches.

Business Catalyst on the other hand is a hosted solution, where there is tight control over those settings and breaches are not as likely to occur and if they do, it is Adobe Business Catalyst’s problem, not yours. This is one advantage a hosted solution has over a free, host-it-yourself solution.

If you are considering using Business Catalyst as a development platform, here is a group of good Business Catalyst Designers you may want to contact.

With Adobe’s launch of CS5 and it’s introduction of Business Catalyst to it’s huge database of web developers, people will begin to ask the question: “Is Adobe Business Catalyst good for SEO?” and the answer is “yes and no” – which is basically the way you would answer a question like “do guns kill people?” Business Catalyst is a tool or a platform and it is what you do with it that makes it good or bad for SEO.

Adobe Business Catalyst is a tightly integrated set of web tools, each of which is reasonable on it’s own – you will find a better CMS, or a better CRM on it’s own, but not integrated in the way they are in Business Catalyst. The CMS has all the SEO features we expect these days from a Content Management System, like the auto generated XML Google sitemap, plain English page names and and it does not fill your page with redundant source code.

But whether your site is good or bad for SEO is entirely up to you. It depends on you writing clean CSS, doing your homework, researching keywords and including those keywords in the right places on your website. It’s not really Adobe Business Catalyst that will be good or otherwise for SEO, it is you.

So what is Adobe going to do now with Business Catalyst?

While BC partners focus on the detail such as “are they going to expand the Triangle plugin?”, there is a bigger issue and that is the platform. Many of us were overjoyed that Adobe bought the system and not Microsoft, who are known for making radical changes and using customers as their QA team, but Microsoft is still involved with this – The system is built on .NET, using SQL Databases.

Why did they choose that platform? Try developing a system in Australia using Php/MySql and finding enough good developers – Those guys are a bit thin on the ground there, and anyway, even to us open source evangelists, .NET has proved to be quite stable.

But if you were a company like Adobe and you were looking at something that could become the world’s biggest hosting platform, would you want to be locked in to paying Microsoft Server and SQL licenses for eternity? I imagine there are some serious price discussions happening behind the scenes between the two companies and I bet there are other options on the table.

Linux and open source programming, certainly. I’d use a new, efficient programming language like Ruby on Rails – MySQL? Maybe not – after all, Sun is now the owner and the licensing of that database could always change. Maybe Adobe will snap up another good open source database like PostgreSQL – a relational database resembling Oracle and a good alternative to both MySQL and MS SQL.

Whatever happens, these are exciting days for BC partners and I think the speed with which the system is released to the Adobe community will be a good indication of the platform they have settled on. It would certainly take time to replicate the system in another technology.

Adobe’s recent aquisition of Business Catalyst has put the spotlight on this growing CMS system and excited many Business Catalyst system owners.
So why would I write about this in a blog about Search Engine Optimization?
Simple – I run a company that specializes in designing and pluggine websites into this system one of only two outside of the developed world.
Of course officially, Adobe and Business Catalyst are giving very little detail about any changes, but for what it’s worth, here’s my take on the whole thing:

Adobe’s recent acquisition of Business Catalyst has put the spotlight on this growing CMS system and excited many Business Catalyst system owners.

So why would I write about this in a blog about Search Engine Optimization?

Simple – I run a company that specializes in designing and developing websites in this system – one of only two companies outside the developed world who do this.

Of course officially, Adobe and Business Catalyst are giving very little detail about any changes, but for what it’s worth, here’s my take on the whole thing:

  1. It’s good news for everyone, Adobe has a history of not messing with programs that are working, they just simply improve them. Look at the Macromedia takeover. Many of us thought for instance that Fireworks would be discarded as Photoshop handles so much of that functionality, but Adobe kept the full product range intact.
  2. This deal makes sense – Business Catalyst’s target market is Web developers and they all use Adobe products- and Adobe has their contact details. This is the logical next step in Adobe’s expansion into software as a service (SaaS).  It could also make them a major player in web hosting.
  3. It is a stamp of approval on the Business Catalyst platform. So Business Catalyst users can be assured of having a system which is about to become the generic CMS. It will have a long shelf life and will be developed into a more feature-rich system, probably more tightly-integrated with other Adobe products.
It’s no secret that Adobe has been tinkering with cloud hosting for some time and this takeover really confirms they are barreling down the SaaS (software as a service) path. And why not? It’s the easiest way to cut out the pirates and increase profits.
One BC partner commented he was afraid of Adobe selling the hell out of Business Catalyst and him losing his competitive edge – that could be true, but it would be far worse not to be a Business Catalyst partner when others are clambering to be a part of it.
We have more information on Business Catalyst on our website: http://www.businesscatalystsupport.net or visit the official Business Catalyst website: http://www.businesscatalyst.com

This is one of the most common questions asked, but it is probably as vague as asking “what is the best kind of horse?” The answer is of course, it depends what you want to do with it.

There are a multitude of different systems available now and all have some good points and some areas that they are less than perfect in, but often, despite having so many systems available that can just be modified, we have to build the website from scratch.

This is because a website which is purpose-built is built to do only the functionality required and so it runs faster, compared to an off-the-shelf system that has a multitude of features that you don’t want and some you have to modify to use.

But often an off-the-shelf solution is best. This website for instance is a WordPress blog. It literally took 30 minutes to set up and another hour to do the custom logo on the header and replace the standard file. It uses a standard template called ‘iNove’ which can be easily loaded from the back end – and it is literally the best solution for my requirements:

I want a blogging engine I can post information on and get it out to the online community. I want something which is SEO friendly (and WordPress has some good SEO plugins), has a Google site map and is easy to customise for my basic requirements.

Now if I wanted to sell a whole lot of products, or have an integrated forum, or have a membership area or have a back end where I could see subscribers and communicate with them, it would be a different story. I could probably find enough plug ins and modify them with code and front end script and do pretty well anything, but the basic system was not designed for that and it would not be the best solution.

Something like Business Catalyst (Good Barry) might be better. If I wanted to catalog thousands of products and have them appear in different ways in different parts of the site, I might be better to use MySource Matrix. If I wanted a sophisticated shopping cart with all the features: upsell, shipping options etc. and just a few static pages, then I would probably be better to use a shopping cart engine like X-cart and so on.

You don’t put a Thoroughbred in the gym to strengthen it so it can pull carts and you don’t try and make a Clydesdale run faster to put it on the racetrack – they could never be as good as the horse that is bred for the job.