results:
Pay Google, or Plug away at Google

Smart companies use a mixture of both techniques, knowing that Google visitors use the different links at different stages in the buying process:
Thinking how Google thinks: the Google Quiz
Imagine you are Google. A visitor asks you to recommend the 10 best sites in the world about ‘bike shop’. You don’t know anything about bike shops yourself (you are a robot, remember?). Your recommendation will be based on factors like:
Search Engine Optimisation (SEO)
This is the art of getting higher up the Google natural results: ideally number one, but certainly on the first page. It’s a long haul process — do not expect overnight miracles. For a start, it might be two weeks before Google next visits your site. The process of optimisation means your site getting the right answers to the Google quiz above.
A central part is having a site that really is all about your subject — ‘bike shop’ in this example. Pages and pages relating to the subject. And having lots of similar ‘key phrases’ on your site. For example:
All of these key phrases tell Google that your site is all about bike shops. They also help when a searcher is looking for ‘bicycle store’, for example.
You need to make sure that these key words, and synonyms, are used a lot on your site. In particular they must appear in:
There are upwards of 40 factors that all contribute to your Google ranking, including links from other sites to yours.
As well as these active steps, you have to avoid some bad tricks which will get you banned by the search engines. These go under the heading ‘black hat’ techniques, and include ‘cloaking’ and ‘stuffing’. Google has a list of webmaster guidelines to help you stay onside.
Finally: do not get carried away with search engine optimisation and create a site that is unusable for humans. Google will always come back to your site, but a disappointed human visitor will click off… maybe to a competitor’s site!