August 23, 2005 Comments
It is hard to believe the all too short northern summer is almost over.
In less than two weeks, kids will be going back to school and commercial
webmasters will be gearing up for the autumn and winter sales seasons. This
is as good a time as any, perhaps better than most, to cover SEO 101, the
basic techniques that form the foundation to an advanced SEO or SEM campaign.
For the purposes of brevity this piece starts with a few assumptions.
The first assumption is a single, small business site is being worked
on. The second assumption is that the site in question is written using
a fairly
standard mark-up language such as HTML or PHP. The last assumption is
that some form of keyword research and determination has already taken
place
and the webmaster is confident in the selection of keyword targets.
Believe it or not, basic SEO is all about common sense and simplicity.
The purpose of search engine optimization is to make a website as search
engine friendly as possible. It’s really not that difficult. Basic
SEO doesn’t require specialized knowledge of algorithms, programming
and taxonomy but it does require a basic understanding of how search
engines work. There are two aspects of search engines to consider before
jumping
in. The first is how spiders work. The second is how search engines figure
out what documents relate to which keywords and phrases.
In the simplest terms, search engines collect data about a unique website
by sending an electronic spider to visit the site and copy its content
which is stored in the search engine’s database. Generally known as ‘bots’,
these spiders are designed to follow links from one document to the next.
As they copy and assimilate content from one document, they record links
and send other bots to make copies of content on those linked documents.
This process continues ad infinitum. By sending out spiders and collecting
information 24/7, the major search engines have established databases
that measure their size in the tens of billions. Every day, both Yahoo
and Google
claim to spider as much data as is contained in the US Library of Congress
(approx. 150million items).
Knowing the spiders and how they read information on a site is the technical
end of basic SEO. Spiders are designed to read site content like you
and I read a newspaper. Starting in the top left hand corner, a spider
will read site content line by line from left to right. If columns are
used (as
they are in most sites), spiders will follow the left hand column to
its conclusion before moving to central and right hand columns. If a
spider
encounters a link it can follow, it will record that link and send another
bot to copy and record data found on the document the link leads to.
The
spider will proceed through the site until it records everything it can
possible find there.
As spiders follow links and record everything in their paths, one can
safely assume that if a link to a site exists, a spider will find that
site. Webmasters and SEOs no longer need to manually or electronically
submit their sites to the major search engines. The search spiders are
perfectly capable of finding them on their own, provided a link to that
site exists
somewhere on the web. Google and Yahoo both have an uncanny ability to
judge
the topic or theme of documents they are examining, and use that ability
to judge the topical relationship of documents that are linked together.
The most valuable incoming links (and the only ones worth perusing),
come from sites that share topical themes.
Once a search spider finds your site, helping it get around is the first
priority. One of the most important basic SEO tips is to provide clear
paths for spiders to follow from “point A” to “point Z” in
your website. This is best accomplished by providing easy to follow text
links directed to the most important pages in the site at the bottom
of each document. One of these text links should lead to a text-based
sitemap, which lists and provides a text link every document in the site.
The
sitemap
can be the most basic page in the site as its purpose is more to direct
spiders than help lost site visitors though designers should keep site
visitors in mind when creating the sitemap. Here is an example of the
basic sitemap used on the StepForth site. Google also accepts more advanced, XML based
sitemaps, providing a wealth of information on their Sitemap
FAQ page.
Allowing spiders free access to the entire website is not always desirable.
Good SEOs should also know how to tell spiders that some site content
is off limits and should not be added to their database using robots.txt files.
Last week, Mike Banks Valentine of Website101 wrote a good overview on
how to write and use robots.txt files in his article, “Search Engine Spiders
Lost Without Guidance - Post This Sign!”
Offering spiders access to the areas of the site one wants them to access
is half the battle. The other half is found in the site content. Search
engines are supposed to provide their users with lists of documents that
relate to user entered keyword phrases or queries. Search engines need
to determine which of billions of documents is relevant to a small number
of
specific words. In order to do this, the search engine needs to know
your site relates to those words.
There are four basic areas, or elements, a search engine looks at when
examining a document. After the URL of a site, the first information
a search spider records is the title of the site. Next, it examines the
Description
Meta tag. Both of these elements are found in the <head> section of
the source code.
Titles should be written using the strongest keyword targets as the foundation.
StepForth’s primary keyword target is Search Engine Placement. A glance
at our index page shows that phrase is used as the first three words in
our site title. Some titles are written using two or three basic two-keyword
phrases. A key to writing a good title is to remember that human readers
will see the title as the reference link on the search engine results page.
Don’t overload your title with keyword phrases. Concentrate on the
strongest keywords that best describe the topic of the document content.
The Description Meta tag is also fairly important. Search engines tend
to use it to gather information on the topic or theme of the document.
A well written Description is phrased in two or three complete sentences
with
the strongest keyword phrases woven early into each sentence. As with
the title tag, some search engines will display the Description on the
search results pages, generally using it in whole or in part to provide
the
text
that appears under the reference link. Some search engines place minor
weight in the Keywords Meta tag however, it is not advisable to spend
a lot of
time worrying about the keywords tag.
After reading information found in the <head> section of the source
code, spiders continue on to examine site content. It is wise to remember
that spiders read the same way we do, left to right and following columns.
Good content is the most important aspect of search engine optimization.
The easiest and most basic rule of the trade is that search engine spiders
can be relied upon to read basic body text 100% of the time. By providing
a search engine spider with basic text content, SEOs offer the engines
information in the easiest format for them to read. While some search
engines can strip
text and link content from Flash files, nothing beats basic body text
when it comes to providing information to the spiders. Very good SEOs
can almost
always find a way to work basic body text into a site without compromising
the designer’s intended look, feel and functionality.
The content itself should be thematically focused. In other words, keep
it simple. Some documents cover multiple topics on each page, which is
confusing for spiders and SEOs alike. The basic SEO rule here is if you
need to express
more than one topic on a page, you need more pages. Fortunately, creating
new pages with unique topic-focused content is one of the most basic
SEO techniques, making a site simpler for both live-users and electronic
spiders.
An important caveat is to avoid duplicate content and the temptation
to construct doorway pages specifically designed for search placements.
When writing document content, try to use the strongest keyword targets
early in the copy. For example, a site selling the ubiquitous Blue Widget
might use the following as a lead-sentence; “Blue Widgets by Widget
and Co. are the strongest construction widgets available and are the
trusted widget of leading builders and contractors.”
The primary target is obviously construction applications for the blue
widget. By placing the keyword phrases “blue widgets”, “construction
widgets” and “trusted widget” along side other keywords
such as the singular words, “strongest”, “trusted” and “builders” and “contractors”,
the sentence is crafted to help the search engine see a relationship
between these words. Subsequent sentences would also have keywords and
phrases weaved
into them. One thing to keep in mind when writing basic SEO copy is that
unnecessary repetition of keywords is often considered spam by search
engines. Another thing to remember is that ultimately, the written copy
is meant
to be read by human eyes as well as search spiders. Each page or document
in the site should have its own unique content.
The last on-site element a spider examines when reading the site (and
later relating the content to user queries), is the anchor text used
in internal links. Using relevant keyword phrases in the anchor text
is a basic
SEO technique aimed at solidifying the search engine’s perception
of the relationship between documents and the words used to phrase the link.
A good example is found on towards the bottom of pages in the StepForth site. Note the use of the words “placement services”, “seo
results”, “SEO Faq” and the topic of the internal pages
these links point to.
In a nutshell, that’s pretty much it to the basics of clean, search
engine friendly SEO. The foundation of nearly every successful SEO campaign
is simplicity. The goal is to make a site easy to find, easy to follow,
and easy to read for search spiders and live-visitors, with well written
topical content and a fair number of relevant incoming links. While basic
SEO can be time consuming in the early stages, the results are almost
always worth it and set the stage for more advanced future work.
Discuss this article in the Small BUsiness Ideas forum.
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