On Search Engines and Search Engine Optimization - www.SEO-Trix.com
Now that you have completed your
website, it is time to get it listed with the
search engines. If you believe that all you need
to do is build a website and people will just come
and see it, then you are a dreamer It takes time,
attention, a lot of patience and sometimes a
little money to market and promote your website
efficiently. I hope that the following tips will
help you succeed in building traffic to your
website.
At this point I would like to make a
clear distinction between crawler-based search
engines and human-powered directories, which are
often mixed up.
As to the directories, you don't
really need to care about the position of your
site in their search results -- human visitors
hardly ever search there. But to be listed in
their index is vital. Getting listed with them
helps crawler-based search engines locate your
site and perhaps helps it rank better, because of
the link importance these sites provide to you.
For example, Google's catalog is nothing else than
a copy of the Open Directory Project (DMOZ)
catalogue. Hence, it is extremely important to be
listed with DMOZ to get your site into the
Google's search results. Several years ago the
industry was dominated by so-called
"words-on-the-page" ranking system, which meant
that the more times a word was repeated on the
page, the higher rank the page got. The major
crawler-based search engines ranked pages based on
where and how often search terms appeared on them.
Now Google and company give more weight to pages
which come from sites with similar content. That
is why getting listed with directories helps
search engines better define the topic of your
website. The most important directories are Open
Directory (DMOZ), LookSmart and Yahoo!. Getting a
website listed in DMOZ can be very frustrating. We
know that being listed will probably help our
Google ranking, but getting in can take a very
long time. Every website and page that is added to
the directory has to be manually reviewed before
it is included. DMOZ reported employing more than
60 thousand volunteer editors at the time of
writing this article, but this number is
misleading -- that is the total number of editors
they have had since the project started. They
don't in fact have that many editors, nor anywhere
near that many. But the company is growing and
expanding its services. Now they report searching
more than 4 million sites and have recently
introduced new service, called Thumbshots, which
allows previewing links before clicking. Yahoo!
charges USD 299.00 for express inclusion to the
directory within 7 days, otherwise you will have
to wait from 2 to 8 weeks. In my opinion, it isn't
worth paying $299 to get into directory -- you can
get into Yahoo! for free through Google, since it
is powered by Google. Optimize for Google, and you
are optimizing for Yahoo!. This situation is
likely to change after Yahoo! purchased Inktomi
last year and announced the plan to develop it and
use it as the main powering engine. As for
LookSmart, the company is losing its position at a
high rate. After LookSmart had lost its largest
search portal customer MSN, two more companies --
Inktomi and Sprinks declared that they would not
renew their agreements with the company to use its
search listings.
As to crawler-, or
spider-based search engines, the situation there
is getting more and more complicated. Search
engines constantly change their algorithms and
there are thousands of hackers worldwide who track
these changes and publish them.
Still, there
are some general rules, observing which you can
reach real success without changing the content of
your site constantly and tracking the latest
algorithm changes. But first let's have a look at
what search engines "want" to see at your pages.
The first rule of the thumb: Internet is a textual
environment, so the first thing you must care
about is content. Yes, surely, nice graphic design
is very important, flash is just cool, but only
for human visitors. Search engines don't "see" the
design and you somehow need to make search engines
"like" your site so that they could drive people
to it. You need to compromise. Most search engines
cannot scan Flash objects, so you either need to
get rid of site navigation implemented in Flash,
or to duplicate it with plain HTML. Although, some
search engines, AllTheWeb being the first, declare
that now they can find links in Flash. Still, it
is always better to be on the safe side. And
moreover, Flash does not provide any textual
content, which is vital for estimating the
relevancy of the page.
So how to optimize
your pages so that search engines would "like"
them? Several issues arise in this context. The
first one is that webmasters are often at loss:
are keywords per page or per site thing? The
answer is obvious. Since it sometimes may be
difficult to tell what the topic of the site is,
especially if it touches many topics, the keywords
should definitely be selected on per page basis. I
have seen hundreds of pages containing heaps of
keywords in their meta-tags, in hope that they
would get a high rank by those keywords. This is a
complete nonsense. Meta Keyword tag has almost
completely lost its importance in respect of
positioning. For example, Google doesn't support
it at all, although Inktomi (which powers MSN and
will be used by Yahoo! soon), Teoma and some other
engines do. But to get a high ranking you need to
put these keywords in the actual text of the page.
Moreover, only one search term per page is
preferable, although two is also not so bad.
The next thing is: how to choose
appropriate keywords? Be careful, because if you
initially choose wrong keywords or words no one is
likely to search for, your efforts will go down
the drain. There are few online services and
programs, which can help you to compile a list of
keywords for your site. For example, Overture's
Inventory
(inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/)
is a service, using which you can find the most
popular words related to your keyword. Word
Tracker (WordTracker.com) offers a similar
service, but unlike Overture, it is a paid one.
Also, you can use the software package NetPromoter
(www.Net-Promoter.com), which finds sites, which
are similar to your site, but rank higher, scans
their pages and their meta-tags and extracts
related keywords. In addition, you can use an
ordinary thesaurus. It would be definitely
ridiculous to try to compete for some generic
words, like "computers", "software", "programs" if
you sell computers or software through your site,
because the competition is too severe. Try to be
specific. Go regional if you sell your products in
a specific area. You have much more chances to
rank higher if you choose to compete for
"computers in Ohio", than just for "computers".
Keyword density is another thing that must
be taken into consideration when writing a page.
It is a percentage measure of how many times a
keyword is repeated within the text of the page.
For example, if a page contains 100 words and ten
of these words are "computer", then "computer" is
said to have a 10% keyword density. There are
programs that will rate keyword density by
singular words or by groups of words, like "new
computers in Ohio". Normal percentage of keywords
for a single page is about 2-6 %. This is the
keyword repetition percentage in normal speech.
Some experts even say that the normal volume can
be up to 16 per cent, but I have never seen pages
with so high keyword density. Actually, I think
such page would look more like Search Engine spam.
This article is dedicated to search engine
optimization -- take a pencil and count the number
of repetitions of this phrase on the page. You
won't get outside 2-6 percent for these words. By
the way, for finding out the keyword density on
the pages of your site you can use any of numerous
online services and programs, like Keyword
Density.com (www.keyworddensity.com/) -- a free
online service, Ranks.nl (www.ranks.nl/), GRKda
(www.grsoftware.net/search_engines/software/grkda.html)
and some others.
After choosing the
keywords, you need to place them correctly. There
is an order of importance for the structural
elements on a page. How you build your content
from top to bottom is critical when writing a copy
for the web. Search engines try to deliver the
information most relevant to your request, so the
principles here are the following. People
typically scan information when they perform
searches. Elements that are bolded, in a different
color, set off by bulleted or numbered lists, are
usually the things that we see first. This is
important, if visitors don't see the terms they
are looking for, they then move on to other
websites to find the information that they are
scanning for. This also works for the search
engines. Google gives much weight to words placed
in link texts, Title tag, bolded text and alt
texts to images. Make sure there are keywords at
the beginning of the page. Placed there,
especially in header tags H they will be
considered words, introducing the content of the
page, hence more important than ordinary text.
There are so-called on-page and off-page
factors that influence page importance. Among
off-page factors, links are the most important.
Search engines like Google attribute link text to
the target page; they treat it as an important
element of the target page. Much has been said
about link popularity for Google. Last year
American bloggers tried a trick, which was later
called "Google Bomb". They placed links,
containing phrase "miserable failure" and pointing
to the official White House biography of George W.
Bush on their pages, which caused the biography of
the US president to be No. 1 by the query
"miserable failure". The idea became so popular
soon that the first four positions are now
occupied by George Bush, Jimmy Carter, Michael
Moore, and Hillary Clinton. Make sure that each
page contains at least one outgoing link, since
pages with no links are called "dangling pages",
and these are the things you should avoid.
Probably, the most important on-page
element is the Title tag. The text from this tag
is displayed as the title of the page in search
results. Make sure that the page's search term is
included in this tag. There is nothing wrong in
repeating it twice, just make sure it reads well.
Think of newspaper headlines. With a few words,
they make you want to read a story. It goes
without saying that each page's Title tag should
be different from the Title tags on the site's
other pages.
I have already mentioned
header tags. The main problem about their usage is
their size. For example, H1 tag may look quite
imposing against the other elements on the page.
But it is easily controlled by Cascading Style
Sheets -- you can control both the size and the
font. You can even try a little trick on search
engines -- define the font color of these headers
to match the background color, the latter one
being composed of monochromatic images. This may
actually work on any elements of the page. But
don't try submitting such pages to directories --
people have more chances of noticing fraud than
search robots.
There are several programs,
which may help you analyze and optimize your pages
for search engines. The abovementioned NetPromoter
(www.Net-Promoter.com) has a module, called Page
Analyzer -- a utility, which analyzes your pages
either by Google criteria or general search
engines criteria, also analyzing keyword density.
Also, the program most popular in the USA, Web
Position Gold (www.WebPosition.com), contains Page
Critic module, which does approximately the same.
AddWeb (addweb.com/) is another popular program
for search engine optimization and submission,
which has recently released its latest version.
Surely, experienced webmasters can easily do
without these programs, but for a novice they
would be of great help, especially for
understanding the indexing processes and tracking
ranking changes. Search engine software is also
suitable for larger companies that manage many
websites and wish to maintain an in-house
marketing team. An individual or group can be
trained in the use of the software and the basic
skills involved in search engine marketing. Also
it may be good for small or medium business that
cannot afford to employ quality SEO personnel. A
good SEO campaign will actually cost you nothing
in the long run because it will amount to
increased exposure and increased traffic, which in
turn, will bring an increase in revenues.