Google partly bases a site ranking on how many people click on the link.
Hi hangin,
That's completely incorrect. Google has publicly stated that clickthrough ratio has nothing to do with their ranking algorithm. If you have access to WMW, Googleguy has spoken about this at length.
Adwords are a different beast completely, and it is a common mistake to assume that what is so for adwords will be the same for natural search.
Gaudi,
As to your original question,
Probably the most important factor in the current Google algorithm is backlinks. What I recommend to you is to engage on an aggressive linking campaign. Do some searches for related keywords, and write to the webmasters asking to do a reciprocal link exchange. Just make sure that the page that they link to you from and the one you link to them from is NOT called links, link, links1, and so on. Google has placed a filter on those pages so the backlinks will not benefit you in any way. A good choice would be "resources" or "partners", things like that.
While you're waiting to hear back from the 200 emails you send out (i'm not exaggerating), you will want to work on your on-page seo a bit.
First thing is to change your title to whatever your keyword is - "architectural dvd", and then your subsequent keywords following.
Your H1 tag is in a good position, but you want to get the elements of your primary keywords in the H1 (this should be an H1, not just a change through using <font> tags - make any alterations to style with an external style sheet). again, if you're going for "architectural dvd", then it should sAY "architectural dvd" and then below in an h2, you can say Antonio Gaudi DVD to get that in.
If you're targeting Antionio Gaudi DVD's, then of course your titles/headers and so forth should change accordingly.
Using H2's to seperate content areas and paragraphs allows you to create more targeted sections, and since H2 tags carry more weight, that is of course beneficial as well.
One last thing - I would very strongly reccommend exporting your javascript at the top of the page to an external file. Text location in code matters, and by having your javascript in the file, all you're doing is pushing the relevant content further down.
(I've noticed you have a links page - called links

)