answer:For SEO, content is king. META tags help a bit and should be provided, particularly the TITLE and DESCRIPTION tags. While it is worth including, Google and all of the major search engines now ignore the KEYWORDS meta tag. Webmasters abused it so heavily, pouring the contents of a dictionary in to try to rank for every word know to man, that they gave up on it. The search spider wants to see ASCII text in the body of the page. It cannot read text rendered into images. There is scant text inside the site. There are no H1 or H2 tags or A tags wrapped around keywords. H1 and then lesser headlines indicate to a spider’s eyes that this text is more important than adjacent content. Same goes for A tags. Consider using Keywords as the lead-in text in your paragraph instead of the name of the company. The site should rank for the company name anyway, as it is a unique string. You can use CSS to style the H1 tag like you have the company name now, and make it display: inline; instead of display: block; so it flows right into the rest of the text. Once all that is done, then you can start building inbound links from other sites, setting up a blog, social networking pages linked in, and so forth.