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06
Jan 10

SEO for Bing: Microsoft's 'decision engine'

Michael Carden-Edwards Photograph

Ever since Microsoft’s ‘decision engine’ Bing was revealed back in May 2009, a lot of website owners have asked themselves three questions.

  1. How do I rank highly in it?
  2. Is it different to Google?

And most importantly:

  1. Will my website explode?

Many people have invested much time on internet message boards in a bid to answer these questions. Read on if you would like to too...

Bing front page

Et tu Google lover

Even if you despise Bing, never touch it and continue to reach tenderly for the big, friendly Google monster that you know and love, you shouldn’t dismiss Microsoft’s search engine out of hand. After all, a growing number of people prefer to Bing their way to websites, and you’ll want users from across the web to find yours – not just the crowd who use Google.

I must stress that until a Bing representative comes forward with strict guidelines on how to optimise your site for their search decision engine, then nothing is for certain. Lacking those, we’ve compiled our own rough guide on how to get your website up to the Bing standard.

Our Golden Rules

  1. Your site should have a high quantity of good quality inbound and outbound links. “Outbound links!” you cry. Yes. It seems that linking to other sites is looked favourably on by Bing.
  2. Your site should have lots of good quality, original content. It should be consistently good, regularly updated and and relevant to your target audience (to be honest, this is just good practice anyway).
  3. Your domain age plays a big factor. Older, trusted sites with consistently fresh content will fare very well. It wouldn’t be surprising to see marketers buying old domains because of this factor.
  4. 300 words of content. That’s right. 300. Unlike other search decision engines Bing – apparently – really likes pages to have this amount of text.
  5. Don’t bother blogging (well, not as much). It would appear that Google appreciates blogs a lot more than Bing.
  6. Titles, titles and more titles. Make sure your title tags are spot on because, without them, you may as well close down your site. Okay, perhaps that’s a big extreme: but as long as your title tags are all present and correct on your own page and the pages that it links to, then you should be fine. Bing LOVES them.

Overall it would appear that the same usual SEO practices will put you in good stead with Bing. It’s just that Bing seems to enjoy certain things a bit more than Google does. To recap, you need:

  • An older, established domain
  • Quality backlinks
  • Lots of original content (300 words or more on every page)
  • Title tags

I genuinely like Bing. I think it looks fresh, it’s pretty quick and it has enough innovative features to hook a few users who are fed up with Google (visual search is one thing I am genuinely excited about).

But do I use it?

Nope.

Not a chance.

But I don’t want to miss out on the traffic it can send me.

 

About the author

Michael is an online marketing executive in Coast Digital’s online marketing team. His work combines SEO, PPC and he takes a keen interest in social networking trends.

He joined the team fresh out of University, where he completed a degree in Computer Science. He is currently working with various B2B and B2C clients such as Morgan Technical Ceramics, Lapsafe, Multipower, Adrian Flux and EWA Ltd.

Michael is extremely passionate about online marketing and is always keen to expand his knowledge and refine his skills in relation to Web Analytics and PPC account optimization, as well as stay on top of all the latest practises and developments in the industry.

Comments

Posted By Pedro | 07 Jan 2010 07:23:28
Clever
Posted By Jon | 06 Jan 2010 03:02:53
Very good article on bing.
Although "bing it" has a much catchier sound to the favored response of "google it" to answer everday questioning. Having given bing the old test run I think I'll be sticking to old trusty.
Posted By Pete | 06 Jan 2010 01:38:36
Good article, it's interesting when looking at our Google analytics we are getting more volume from Bing. Indeed on many search terms we rank much higher than Google and we were not sure why....this helps us, thanks
Posted By Alan | 06 Jan 2010 10:48:51
Its seems to work along the same lines as Google and if you rank well in Google then you rank well on Bing.
Posted By Michael | 06 Jan 2010 10:15:08
I think this is the problem at the moment. There is such a grey area between Bing & Google that a lot of people may struggle to find a happy medium between the two.
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