19 Ways to Get More Traffic to Your Site Using Google Images

google-images.jpgOne way to get more search engine traffic is to optimize your website for Google Image Search, a tool which allows users to easily find images by typing in specific search terms, phrases and keywords.

Many people utilize Google Image search to find images for a wide variety of topics, which can range from pictures of cars to celebrities and furniture.

Images can not only make your website visually attractive: they can help you to gain more daily search engine traffic.

Highly relevant image results show up at the top of Google’s search results page when one searches for specific topics. Getting listed in this prime position can possibly send a great deal of traffic to your website.

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Introduction to Google Image Search Optimization

Google Image Search optimization is not a difficult process and only requires that you pay attention to how you label and use your images within the regular framework of your website. A lot of image optimization involves basic search optimization factors such as the inclusion of relevant keywords in the content, title and meta tags.

All of the articles I’ve read on the topic of Google Images optimization seem to be in common agreement and they offer similar suggestions, although a few of them do highlight some different methods of utilizing Google Image Search.

19 Ways to Get More Traffic Using Google Image Search

I’ve made a full list of all the methods I’ve come across so that all of you can have an accessible reference point, should you decide to use Google Images as a method to drive more traffic to your website.

Also added are a few points of my own, specifically dealing with how targeting specific image topics and integrating them within your webpages can help to attract a great deal more traffic through Google images.

Depending on your niche and images used, you’ll be able to attract a great deal of extra visitors easily with very little additional work. I highly recommending putting at least a few of these points into practice on your own website.

Here is the list of Google image optimization tips in full:

1. Insert keywords into your Alt Text.

    This is the most important part of image optimization and you should include a keyword or phrase that is relevant to the image and your webpage. The alt text should be inserted in the code for your image file.

    Here’s an example: <img src="filename.gif" alt="Alt description goes here">

2. Name your Images with Descriptive Titles.

    If you have an image of Lindsay Lohan, you could use the term ‘lindsay-lohan.jpg’ to name your image, instead of simply going with the original file name which could be something like ‘b473.jpg’. I usually name my images exactly the same way as my alt text.

3. Use relevant text around your images.

    It is recommended that descriptive text with your targeted keywords be placed immediately before or after the image itself. If you do a search for any term on Google Image, you’ll find that a short description of 20+ characters beneath every image. You’ll probably notice that the keyword is listed in bold as well.

4. Use Adsense to assess overall content relevance.

    Insert an Adsense unit on the page where your googe images are placed and see what type of Adsense ads show up. This will tell you how Google thinks the overall theme of what your page is about.

    Change your content until the Adsense units reflect the keywords you want to target. In my opinion, this is not only applies to Google images but is a generally helpful method as it improves your overall latent semantic indexing score and makes your site appear more relevant to Google for targeted key phrases or words.

5. Optimize Your Title and Meta tags.

    This should already be part of your overall optimization strategy and it purportedly helps your site to rank better in image searches as well. Like the use of Adsense for testing, paying attention to this point will help you to have better visibility in Google’s main search engine as well.

6. Use anchor text keywords in links to images.

    When you link to a specific image, use keywords instead of a generic phrase. For example, instead of using “See here” or “Click for Full Size“, try something like “Lindsay Lohan Picture” or “Lindsay Lohan in Rehab“.

7. Use Internal and Social Site Tags for your Images

    If you are using images with little or no textual content, it might be helpful to tag your images using internal tagging functions or social tags like Technorati. This may add more weight to your image and help it to rank better. If you are uploading your images using Flickr, remember to use the appropriate keyword tags as well.

8. Use Broad Categories of Images to Get a Larger Audience

    If you’re running a gadget website, you don’t have to only upload pictures of gadgets. Try upload pictures of web 2.0 sites, web applications and pictures of items related to your gadgets. For example, you can upload pictures of living rooms instead, if the gadget was designed to complement residential space.

9. Make Your Image folder accessible to search engines

    Ensure that your robots.txt file does not limit search engines from accessing your image files. This is essential if you want your images to be ranked on Google Image Search. Try not to use javascript links on image files as well as it will limit search engine access as well.

10. Re-upload your pictures to maintain search freshness

    If you have a picture that focuses on highly popular keywords, you can try to remove and re-upload another version of your image because freshness might affect relevancy and may rejuvenate your ranking on the Google Image Search engine.

11. Make your Google Images Standards-compliant.

    One way of making your images fully standards complaint requires you to include not only the alt tag but also the width, height and title tag for the image as well. Here’s an example of a fully compliant image reference you can follow.

12. Enable Google Image Search in Webmaster Central.

    Visit Google Webmaster Tools and click on the Diagnostic tab on the menu bar. After which, select enhanced image search on the left sidebar and click on the checkbox to opt into image search for your website. This can only be done after you verify your website with Google so do that before proceeding further.

13. Try out Google Image Labeler.

    Apparently, the Google Image Labeler is some sort of a online game which allows you and others to write tags for images that show up. These tags are then taken into consideration and may influence the Google Image search results.

14. Use Javascript to prevent framing of your webpages

    By adding a piece of javascript code, you can prevent your images from being framed when users click on the image within Google Image Search. Visitors will not see the Google image frame but the full site and this may encourage more pageviews for your site as well. This practice may not entirely be endorsed by Google so try at your own risk.

15. HotLink Images from Google Search

    This involves going to Google Image Search and to do a search query for the image you want. Visit the original webpage and copy the image location to hotlink it on your own website. This helps your website to show up high among the image search ranks. For an example, check out these search results for Jessica Alba (slightly NSFW).

    Most of the images in the top row are hotlinked and actually rank better than the original image source. You should probably note that hotlinking is frowned upon by most webmasters because it leeches their bandwidth, not to mention that you might be violating copyrights as well.

    An alternative method of hotlinking is to hotlink Google’s cache itself. This short tutorial gives clear indication of how to do it but this method only allows you to use thumbnails, not to mention that some webmasters have reported seeing no results after trying this method.

16. Use Image Sizing to Target a Search Term.

    The size of your image may determine the amount of visits you receive from Google Image Search. Some people use Google Image to search for wallpapers and if you’re targeting a specific keyword, try creating it in the form of a wallpaper or in the form of an icon, depending on how much competition there is for the specific image.

17. Use Images about ‘Hot’ Topics.

    One easy way to get more visitors from Google images involves the deliberate use of images to catch visitors who are searching for ‘hot’ topics, some of which can be easily found through the use of Google Trends. For example, screenshots of popular ongoing TV shows could be integrated in some way in some webpages. Note that for maximum effect, your content should be relevant to the image used as well.

18. Create a separate page and link to the page and image

    This process involves adding an optimized page webpage on your website along and link the image to that specific page which visitors can access via the ‘back’ anchor on the new page whenever they find your page through Google Image Search.

    I have not personally tried this but some have claimed that it helps both the regular search rank as well as the Image Search rank. See this page for the method in full.

19. Monitor the Number of Google Images Indexed

    An important part of Google Image Search optimization is to monitor how many images on your website are indexed by Google Image Search to see if you are taking the right steps to optimize your images.

    The easiest way to do this is to use a site search operator. For example, here is a list of images indexed on Boing Boing. Simply change boingboing.net to your url: http://images.google.com/images?q=site:boingboing.net



Converting Google Image Search Visitors

Getting traffic from Google Image Search is very nice but you’ll need some way of converting them into a customer or future reader. This can be quite difficult because visitors are likely to click away if after they find the image.

Here are some conversion tactics you can use:

  • Place your image on a webpage with highly relevant content
  • Link to other relevant webpages and image galleries
  • Promote a special offer related to the product image that you’ve used
  • Allow users to copy the image and paste it on their website (try this script)
  • Include call to actions at the start and end of webpages



Try Experimenting with Google Image Search..

I’ve recently gotten a decent number of hits for a image which was experiencing seasonal surge in search queries for a specific term and I’m sure that the list of tips above will help you to get some extra traffic from Google Images as well.

You can start by first trying out a few images in your webpages or new blog posts to see if you actually get some traffic from it. Remember to monitor traffic through your stats package and tweak for optimum results.

For more traffic building tips, do subscribe to Dosh Dosh’s blog feed.

References

46 Comments - Share Your Thoughts
  • Great post, again. Of course, you can just hotlink top ranking images. This makes your site rank well and Google frame will redirect to your site :)

    Quick, slightly morally dubious win!

  • Great post as usual. SEO is one of the most cost-effective ways to grow a blog/site.

  • Good stuff.

  • Fabulous information. I was looking for info on this subject. In the early days I did not know about it. I can’t imagine how many of my photos are labeled something like “Photo1.”

  • wesley on July 12th, 2007

    Re-upload the image? Do you mean the exact same image or a different image since google will probably see if it’s the exact same image with only the date modication timestamp differently.

  • My experience has been the opposite of this: I got tons of unqualified traffic with a really high bounce rate. This happened because I changed the focus of my blog from a more free-form and artistic blog to a blog about helping others blog more effectively. I was getting an excessive percentage of image search traffic for content that was no longer available. I finally did a 301 redirect for one particular page and image, plus I enhanced my 404 page. The unqualified traffic dropped like a rock, which meant that my overall traffic dropped as well. You would think that would be a bad thing, but the previous numbers were artificially inflated by the fruitless image searches.

  • Is Google still able to index your images if you have hotlinking disabled in your htaccess file? I’ve been wondering about this, because I’ve set my htaccess to allow partial access though I’m not sure it’s enough to let the Googlebot through. I don’t want to miss out on some image search traffic, but I don’t want people hotlinking my images either (fricking morons were linking some of my images as avatars on message boards). I mean what does it take to download it and upload it to Photobucket so you’re not wasting my bandwidth, 30 seconds? Lazy shytes.

  • Nice unique topic. Have not seen one like this yet. However, think out of all the tips, the part about alternate text and relevant text is really the most crucial and should play the biggest part in your SERPs.

  • Great post again Maki. I wonder how you find your topics everyday. They are so unique and useful.

  • Great article, and i want to thank you for including my article on Tareeinternet.com as a reference source for this tutorial.

    Alot of webmasters don’t so it’s refreshing to see a link. Thankyou and keep up the good work.

  • Thanks for another excellent article. I think these are excellent suggestions, but number 9 has me flummoxed. How do you accomplish that? I am a person who didn’t even know that the robot.txt file even existed until a couple of minutes ago. The fact that I understood the rest of the tips makes me feel smart, though…

  • Nice article, but don’t you think that “image traffic” are useless? The ones, who visit your page are just looking for images, not at content of your webste…

  • I think iamafiliate has a point. If you read my previous comment above, I actually took steps to decrease my image search traffic, because it was completely unqualified (wrong type of people) and it was skewing my analytics.

  • In response to iamaffiliate’s comment (#16) - it depends. If you’re blogging about SEO, image traffic may not convert well. However, if you have a how-to blog or something related (for example, my blog is about guitar making and guitar design), then image traffic can indeed be valuable. While a picture may say a thousand words it doesn’t always tell you what you need. That’s where something like a how-to blog has a potential hook. Like many SEO efforts, your results may vary…

  • Maki on July 13th, 2007

    Hey Everyone! Sorry for not replying earlier.. was a little tied up with something. ^_^

    Wesley

    I’ve not tried re-uploading an image so I’m not sure which is a better option. According to the article I referenced, I think they meant that one should re-upload the same image. Or you could try uploading a different image as well to see if that works for you.

    Lincoln,

    I just took a look at your site and it appears that Google Images is indexing some of the images:
    http://images.google.com/image.....ustice.com

    I’ve heard stories of how some webmasters are not getting indexed because they turned on hotlinking in full. Partial access should be fine as long as you allow the Google image bot in. Some people I know do target disable hotlinking according to individual ips instead of disabling it in full. That can be time-consuming but it’ll work if you’re not being hotlinked very often.

    For more information on how to structure your htaccess file in order to disable hotlinking but allow the Google image bot, check out this article:
    http://www.shock-therapy.org/articles/hotlink.htm

    Michael and iamaffiliate.com

    If you’ve changed the overall theme/focus of your blog, the value of the Google images traffic would drop considerably because it would be much less relevant. Conversion for image traffic is one big issue that many people face.. and as you’ve mentioned, the high bounce rates are a general indication of that. However, I’m generally in the camp that believes that traffic is better than no traffic.

    The rate of converting random image traffic into regular visitors/customers might not be high but I do think that if your image is relevant to the overall theme of your site, it will help in conversion. Even if only 1% of every 1,000 visitors becomes a part of your audience, you’ll get 10 new readers. If you get a lot of Google image search traffic, this figure can turn out to be rather considerable. I agree with Robert when he says that the theme or niche of the site matters as well when it comes to Google images.

    Bloggrrl

    I’ve checked your site and I think you haven’t got a robots.txt file set up yet. The following article is quite useful if you want to learn more about the robots.txt file:
    http://www.outfront.net/tutori.....robots.htm

    As long as you DO NOT include the following Google-bot user agent in your robots.txt file, your images should be indexed. :)
    User-Agent: Googlebot-Image
    Disallow: /

    See the following link for Google’s official guideline on removing an image from Google image search.
    http://www.google.com/support/.....swer=35308

  • Another thorough how-to post! thank you

  • I personally think your first three points are probably the best but the others may help and may be worth trying out..

  • Sometimes I wonder if images distract from the content. According to crazy egg the most often clicked on items on my blog are often my images. Maybe I should turn them into links for related articles, or purchase a photo. I suspect that they are right clicks though.

    Question, are there any wordpress plugins you can use with add more fields to the image link?

  • Heidi - Images distracting from content? For my guitar blog, it makes absolute sense to have images. In no way do images distract from the content. In fact, they serve to support the content.

    Although I only recently started seeing image traffic to my blog, so far I’m seeing this traffic hang around. It’s not simply traffic in search of images. The images are acting as hooks for the content.

  • Thanks - great article. Checking whether our images were indexed by Google revealed a strange problem. If one searches with “moderate safesearch” only 3 images appear to be indexed. But if one searches with SafeSearch off, hundreds are indexed. Our images are far from unsavory - why does Google think our images are “unsafe”?

    Does anyone know how to address this?

  • Thanks so much for this info…

    I guess we’re really learning new things everyday indeed.

    Without reading this post, I’d have no idea how much help we can get from the free images available from Google image search.

    Much appreciated.

  • Just an update on my results with image traffic - So far so good. Page views for image traffic are only 10-15% off what they are for articles and time on site is similarly close. It’s still early but it certainly indicates that there is value here. But as I suggested previously, the degree of success from image search traffic will depend on the nature of your blog. I can at least attest that a “how to” or design related blog (mine is a bit of both) should do well with optimizing images.

  • Thanks for the great tips!

    Davin Warner

  • Great post. This will help me to optimize the images on my metal roofing site!!!

  • I learn lot off tips about image optimization through this information, really it’s good tips.

  • Is there a difference if I keep my images on PhotoBucket or on my server? Do I get higher ranks if they are on my servers?

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