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A quick guide to search engine optimisation
Search engine optimization (SEO) is an important online marketing tool as search engines are one of the primary ways that Internet users find web sites. Unfortunately, many web sites appear poorly in search engine rankings because they fail to consider how search engines work. Submitting your site to search engines is one part of the challenge of getting a good search engine ranking, it's also important however to prepare a web site through ´search engine optimization° ensuring that your web pages are accessible to search engines and focused in ways that help improve the chances they will be found.
What is a search engine?
How search engines rank
web pages
Design issues and search
engine optimisation
Common search engine
optimisation techniques
What is a search engine?
The term ´search engine° is often used generically to describe both crawler-based search engines and human-powered directories. These two types of ´search engines° gather their listings in radically different ways.
Search Engines
Search engines compile their indexes by running computer programs (spiders)
that ´crawl° the Web and index individual Web pages. An example of a prominent
search engine is Google.
Directories
Directories use human editors to find sites and place them in appropriate
categories. An example of a prominent directory is Yahoo.
Search Engine/Directory Hybrids
Because each type of site has its own specific advantages, search sites have
begun evolving into hybrids, delivering results that combine the characteristics
of both search engines and directories. The hybrid sites provide searchers
with both high quality directory results and the depth of a large search engine
database. Yahoo is an example of a hybrid directory/search engine. The first
set of results that appear are from Yahoo's directory, backup results are
provided by Google's search engine.
How search engines rank pages.
´Ranking° is a measure of how high a Web site's pages appear in the lists of results that search engines and directories return for queries run on specified search terms. Each time that someone types in a search term and requests results, that search engine applies its own unique algorithm to calculate the relevance of each page in its index to that particular search. It then returns a list of results sorted in order of relevance.
Although search engine ranking algorithms differ, they generally use a combination of the following factors, placing varying weights on the importance of each of them:
- Keyword in title tag
- Keyword placement in meta data
- Keyword density and placement within body text
- Keyword in text of outgoing links
- Link popularity
- Page popularity
Keyword in title tag
The contents of a page's HTML title tag have an especially important influence
on many search engines' assessments of relevance. For a page to rank as highly
relevant for a given key term, that term should appear at the start of the
page's title tag.
Keyword in meta data
Many people who have heard of search engine optimization believe that it primarily
involves manipulating keywords in meta tags. Today however search engines
place very little weight on meta tags. Some engines, such as Google, ignore
meta tags altogether. It certainly is still beneficial to include meta tags
on all pages that are submitted to search engines. Sometimes search engines
will use the description information from these tags as the description in
their listings. Having the keyword in the meta description and meta keywords
may also provide a bit of a rankings boost in some of the major search engines.
Keyword density and placement in body text
In order for a page to rank highly for a given term, it is essential that
the key terms appear in the page's plain HTML text. Search engines read the
actual text of the page and look for keywords in order to understand the page's
content.
Link popularity
Another major factor in most major search engine ranking algorithms is link
popularity. Link popularity relies on the democratic nature of the Web by
using the Web's vast link structure as an indicator of an individual page's
value. A link from page A to page B is counted a vote for page B by page A.
Additionally, search engines look beyond the mere number of links a site receives
to the importance of the sites that provide those links. For example, the
more important the sites are that link to a Web page, the higher that page
will rank in search engine listings. Link popularity is a particularly important
factor in Google°s algorithm.
Page popularity
A page's popularity is a function both of the number of people who click on
the page's listing in search results and of how long those people remain at
that site before returning to the search results page.
How directories rank listings
In contrast to search engines' ranking algorithms, which sort search results
according the ranked pages' actual content, the ranking algorithms used by
directories look only at the information provided during the submission process
and approved by the directory's editors.
Design issues and search engine optimisation.
Although there are many aspects to good Web design, certain design decisions can have a significant effect on Web pages' rankings in search engines. The basic concepts are simple - plain text, unhindered text based navigation and permanent URLs are all good.
The most common design obstacles to search site ranking include:
- Text embedded in graphics Search engines cannot read text that is inside an image.
- Flash - Search engines cannot read anything in Flash. Any text, links, or images appearing within Flash will be invisible to search engines.
- Frames Most major search engines can index pages in frames. However, they will index each frame as a separate page, causing bits and pieces of the page to show up separately in the index.
- Keywords - If a Web site does not strategically place keywords within the title tag, meta tags, HTML headings, and the first paragraph within the page's body, the Web site will not rank highly for those keyword phrases. The keywords must also appear with appropriate frequency in the page's plain text content and in the text of names given to links on the page. The keyword needs to appear frequently on the page, but not unnaturally frequently, lest the page be blacklisted for ´word stacking° also known as spamming the index°.
Common search engine optimisation techniques.
Search Engines and Directories have guidelines, which defines what design factors are considered good and bad from the search engines' point of view. Below is a list of the common search engine optimisation techniques to achieve a higher ranking on most search engines.
Content Optimisation
Your web site's content is the search engine's content, so search engines
want sites with high quality content above all else. Web pages with text that
accurately reflects the products, and services offered by the website.
Meta tag optimisation
Meta tags are used to describe the content of a Web page. Current search engine
algorithms do not place much weight on metadata; in fact, some major engines
simply ignore meta tags altogether. Nevertheless, there does remain some benefit
to giving pages meta tags that concisely, accurately, and consistently convey
the central focus of the page on which the tags appear.
Title tag optimisation
The title tag also provides the title for the page's listing in search results
at some major search sites. Because the contents of a title tag often are
an important factor in the algorithms that search sites use to determine which
pages appear first in search results, choosing title words carefully and ordering
them strategically can be an important part of optimizing a web page.
Navigation optimisation
Search engines use the links within websites to crawl and index the pages
those links point to. It's very important that you have text links on your
website that contain your target keywords. Many common web site navigation
design features can inhibit or even prevent search engine spiders from indexing
those pages. Examples include a heavy use of Flash or JavaScript, the embedding
of text within graphics, and some common uses of frames. Removing such technical
obstacles can help search engine spiders find the site content to index.
Site Map
This is a textual representation of your site's structure. It includes every
single page on your site, usually categorized for easier navigation. Site
maps provide a great way to make sure that search engines, which follow links,
index every page.
Keyword density adjustment
One of the criteria that search engine algorithms have often used to rank
search results is the density of the sought keyword in the body text. Attempts
to adjust the keyword density to hit the magical intermediate value is largely
a matter of guesswork, and what works well one day may work poorly the next,
as ranking algorithms change.
Linking campaigns
Link popularity is an increasingly important part of search engines' ranking
algorithms, a common search engine optimisation technique is to try to increase
the number of sites that link to the your site. The actual ´link popularity°
is mostly based on the quality of the links, not the quantity of them that
point to a given site.
Pay-for-ranking
A few search sites - most notably Overture.com - allow sites to bid for position
in search listings for relevant keywords. These search engines typically charge
sites on a Cost Per Click (CPC) basis, therefore high rankings depends entirely
on the amount bid.
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