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SEO: Steps to take after submitting to search engines

Nov 14, 2011 - by kurinchilamp / / Post Comment
Part 5: Steps to take after submitting to search engines (from the web) Maintenance check All Web sites should be thoroughly tested using a site maintenance tool in order to catch errors in operation before customers are brought to the site. HTML errors can hinder a search engine spider's ability to index a site, it can also keep a search engine from reading a page or cause it to be viewed in a manner different from how it was intended. NetMechanic's HTML Toolbox or another site maintenance tool, must be used by the Webmaster, to avoid potential visitor disasters due to site errors. (more…)
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SEO: What do Search Engines look for?

Apr 14, 2011 - by kurinchilamp / / Post Comment
Part 2: Things Search Engines Look For in brief ~ Link Popularity (Check Page Rank in Google's case). ~ How may other web pages around the Internet point to your web site? ~ Are these pages related to each other? ~ Are they considered valuable resources? ~ Anchor Text of inbound links ~ Does the link to your web site have relevant keywords in it? ~ Even if it is not directly relevant, a web page that is important that links to your site will still help your web site. ~ Presence on marked authority pages. (DMOZ) ~ Url quotation - i.e. when a page mentions the site by url but doesn't link to it. This commonly occurs in news articles that mention web sites. While it doesn't count as a link, it does count as a reference.  Number of links on pages linking to this page. If the link to your web site is the only one from a page, it's viewed as being more valuable than being one link among 100. ~ Freshness of links on pages linking to your web site. While the engines will count all links, a link from a web site that has not been updated in a year or two will be less valuable than from one that is updated daily. It indicates activity / interest levels. ~ Page Last Modified (Freshness) - just like the last point a page that is updated frequently is favored. ~ Reciprocal Links- Search engines like to see a closed loop - that a referring site as also used as a reference. So when you are giving away a link, ask for one back. It will help both websites. ~ Keyword frequency across all pages. Does the content really talk to the subject which the page and the web site is supposed to be about? ~ Keywords in the url: Using keywords in the url does have an effect for the search engine algorithms. ~ You can use keywords in the filename. For example if the page is about ford parts, then call it "http://www.sitename.com/car-parts.html" use dashes "-" and not underscores "_" to separate words in filenames. ~ Response Time - If your site is fast, it's favored. ~ Server Downtime - If the search engine robot comes by and frequently can't connect sometimes, they penalize your site. ~ Page Size - The engines tend to weigh content at the start of a document more than content further down. If a page is long, look at breaking it into sections. If a page is over 50k, then it's too long.
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SEO: What do Search Engines look for?

Mar 14, 2011 - by kurinchilamp / / Post Comment
Part I: Things Search Engines Look For in brief Each search engine weights each of these factors differently, and places the emphasis in different spots. Search Engines Look For: ~ Title tag - You need a relevant title, not just "Home Page" and use it with keywords, description all across the site ~ Headings h1 … h6 - The search engines view < h> tags as being terms of emphasis - they give weight to the words within them. Put key terms in them. ~ Bold - Of lesser importance than < h> tags. the < b> tags still emphasize terms of importance. ~ Alt text - Use descriptive short sentences in your alt tags. If it's a picture of a rose, and you're a florist try "Red Rose - Available at 'name' Flower Shop" ~ Email addresses on page - if you put up an address, make sure the domain name in the address matches the web site domain. ~ Keyword meta tags - Some engines use them directly, some check them as part of a validation process to check if they match with the content. ~ Meta description tag - Most engines look at this tag. Use distinct ones throughout your site, and distinct ones for each page. Make them particular to that page. ~ Key term placement - Terms that are higher up on a page are more heavily weighted. ~ Key term proximity - Terms that are close together are probably related, and thus the site will show up in searches for those terms. ~ Comment tags - Some engines use comment tags for content. Most engines look for them in graphic rich / text poor sites. ~ Page structure validation - proper coding is likely to be of better overall quality, and thus rewarded. ~ Traffic/Visitors - The search engines do keep track of how many people follow their links.
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