| Guide For Getting Higher Search Engine Ranking |
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Source:
Entireweb.com Date: 22-SEP-2004 Search engines have increasingly gained prominence in influencing user behavior. Both generic and specialized search engines enable users to get directed to relevant websites in the most efficient, fast and integrated manner. The immediate consequence for webmasters is a strong proportion between the search engine placements and user traffic.
Improving rankings in search engines requires considerable
understanding of how search engines work, how they order results and
how you can use this information to optimize your website to improve
your ranking. What follows is a preliminary guideline to get you
started. The manually indexed search engines are obviously harder to manipulate, however they are also very few in number compared to their Spider-indexed counterparts such as Google, Yahoo, Alta Vista, etc. The way a spider indexes and ranks a website is very much dependent on what information it receives from your website and how you have designed the site. Therefore it is essential to develop your website keeping in mind the search engine placements instead of doing a corrective job afterwards.
Keywords Therefore it is very important to judge the keywords on your site by understanding what phrases or words users would most use to perform the search. To help you get this information, there are keyword research tools available on the web which enable you to find out how often any phrase is searched for on a search engine.
Creating copy for the website A thumb rule is to have a keyword every 12 words of text and minimum of 100 words of text on the page. You can have more than one keyword for a page but that also reduces the individual importance of each keyword. It is advisable to use your keyword as the first word on your page. Many
search engines index websites by the meta tags in the documents'
HTML. The "title" and the "description" meta tags are often used by
search engines in indexing. It is essential to use your keyword in
the title tag. Use relevant words in keyword meta tags such as
synonyms of your keyword, or words directly relevant to your page. Tables: Spiders do not have a problem reading the content of tables, however if you use nested tables, it makes it difficult for spiders to navigate through your website. Frames: Frames always pose difficulty for spiders. Some spiders are absolutely unable to read frames pages, while others see only the master page and therefore will not be able to read complete webpage because of which your website will not be indexed properly. Graphics: Do not clutter your webpage with graphics. Not only these are not read by spiders and reduce space for text but also affect the speed of loading of the page which often turns off the visitors. Flash: Most spiders are unable to index Flash content or follow their navigation links. Flash should be an optional link with a duplicate spider-friendly HTML page. Password-protected page: Spiders cannot enter password-protected pages.
java-script:
Search engines are unable to read java script and java-script should
be placed as an option for visitors, similar to use of Flash.
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