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Introduction_to_DIY_search_engine_optimisation
| Introduction to DIY search engine optimisation
A lot is made of the importance of search engine optimisation
and rightly so. If you are serious about getting your website
noticed, you will have to consider how your site ranks in search
engines. If you decide to optimise your site, you will either do
it yourself, or pay someone to do it for you. Doing it yourself
can be time consuming but will save you money. If saving money
is your priority and you have the time, DIY page optimisation IS
possible.
You will want to look at three aspects:
Search Engine Submission - This involves visiting search engine
websites, finding the 'submit URL / site' section - and keying
in the appropriate information. Some of them offer a free option
but this doesn't guarantee inclusion and could take time to see
results. The most important one is the open directory which will
help your ranking with Google, among others. You can also submit
your site to Google, Lycos, Yahoo, AltaVista, MSN and many
others. Before you do, make sure you know what information you
want to give them. You may be asked for a description, so have
one ready. No search engine will accept sales style copy in
their listings - so keep it plain. Most importantly, read the
guidelines for each service - it may seem like a drag but could
help your submission.
Page Optimisation - Now the search engines know you are there,
how easy will it be for them to index your site? This stage
comes first, of course - so once you register you site, you can
sit back and wait - if you do it for free - you WILL have to
wait! The easier it is for the SEs to index, the faster your
site will get noticed. So what do you need to take into
consideration? Here are a few tips:
Meta Tags and Description: These are tags at the top of your
page (HTML code) which provide SEs with information about your
site. Meta Tags are keywords and phrases, targeted to the
subject of your site. Make sure yours are relevant to your site
content. The Meta Description should reflect what your site is
about. Page Title: This shows at the top of a browser when your
page is viewed. Make sure it's relevant, has a few good keywords
- and is different on every page on your site. Site content:
This should go without saying - make your site content relevant,
useful and accurate. Reflect this in your keywords and title.
Links: Any internal links should have relevant link text or
Alt-text tags if they are graphic. Page Rank & Back Links - This
relates mainly to Google - possibly the most important search
engine on the 'net. Once indexed, Google assigns each page a
'page rank'. You can see what page rank a site has by
downloading the Google toolbar. PR is given as a rank of 0 - 10,
10 being high. Page rank relates to the number of links (votes)
Google can detect that point to your site. You can right click
(IE6) and select 'backward links' on a website to see who links
to it. As a result, many sites now engage in the sport of link
building. This can have its drawbacks, if you end up linking to
a 'bad neighbourhood'. If you want to build links - follow a few
guidelines:
Don't swap links with 'link farms' - or sites that may have a
penalty* All links aren't equal - the value of a link decreases
as the number of links on the page increases and the Page Rank
of a site will determine how valuable its link is to your site.
When submitting your link to another site, try to get them to
use meaningful link text with relevant keywords. Ensure that
links to and from your site are relevant to your site content *A
penalty can be indicated by a grey Page Rank bar or a white
'PR-0' bar. However, a grey bar can also indicate that a site
has not been indexed and a white bar can indicate a site has
been indexed but only recently - or has no recognised back
links. Penalties are incurred when a site breaks the rules set
by Google - SEO crimes include:
Cloaking - a page is made to grab SE attention and redirect to
the URL of the site in question. Keyword stuffing - keywords are
'stuffed' into image tags & other places where they shouldn't
be, or aren't relevant. Hidden text - text on a page that
matches the background colour - so it's invisible to site
visitors but not to search engines.
There are many resources on the 'net to help you optimise your
site safely. Search Engine Ethos has resources and links to get
you started.
About the author:
Rachael is a web designer who has just started her own company -
Moneytooth Web Services.
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