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01 February 2007, 10:49
First 6 common mistakes of the webmaster's
This article lists all 6 parts of our "6 common mistakes that prevent your
This article lists all 6 parts of our "6 common mistakes that prevent your
Web site from showing up on search engines" series in a single article.
First 6 common mistakes that prevent your Web site
from showing up on search engines
Many webmasters have the problem that their Web site is not listed in search
engines at all. There can be a variety of reasons that your Web site doesn't
show up on search engines.
Reason №1: You are using frames.
Many search engines have problems with frames. They often only index the
frameset page and not the individual frames that contain the actual content.
Unfortunately, the frameset page usually doesn't have META tags, title and
enough content (text) to obtain a listing on a search engine.
The best solution to this problem would be to avoid frames. Usability guru
counts frames as one of the top ten mistakes in Web design:
If you really must use frames, consider the following points:
1. Add a description of your Web site in the <noframes> area so that search
engines can index that text. There you should also add a link to the homepage.
2. When a search engine indexes a frame page outside of the frameset, the
visitor can be left stranded and unable to link into your site. So your
individual frame pages should always contain a link back into your site.
3. Add some JavaScript to force frame pages into the frameset. This prevents
visitors from inadvertently accessing an orphaned Web page. You can use the
following JavaScript snippet:
---
if (top.location.href == self.location) {
top.location.href = "URL of your frame file";
}
----
Reason №2: You are using a lot of pictures on your Web site but very
little text
Search engines need text to index your Web site. They cannot know what's
written on your GIF or JPEG images. If you use a lot of images on your Web site,
you should also create some Web pages that have a lot of text.
Some Web site promotion consultants will tell you to create so-called doorway
pages. A doorway page is a Web page that contains plain text and a link to your
main Web page. On that doorway page, you should describe the content of your Web
site in many sentences that contain many keywords that are important for your
Web site.
However, some search engines only lists Web pages if at least one remote Web
page is linking to it. In that case, a doorway page will not work. Don't use
doorway pages for search engine spamming! Only use doorways that have something
to do with the content of your Web pages.
Note that many search engines already ignore doorway pages. For that reason,
try to give your real Web site as much content (text) as possible. Fresh,
continuously updated content is one of the best ways to ensure that your
visitors will return again and again.
Here are 2 tips for building and distributing your content:
1. Build one page of quality content per day. Write timely, topical articles
with about 250-500 words. And find the core set of keywords for your topic area.
Those are your subject starters.
2. Stay abreast of developments in your sector. If the big site "ABC" is
coming out with product "XYZ" in autumn, then write about the product or the
product sector in general and have it ready in June so that search engines can
index it early. For example, all the Nintendo GameCube sites you can find in
Google today - those have been submitted 3-4 months ago.
Reason №3: The submitted Web page is only a redirection.
If the Web page you submit contains a redirection to another Web site, most
search engines will skip your Web site completely. Do not submit a redirection
Web page.
Many webmasters tried to cheat search engines with redirection pages in the
past. The search engines companies discovered that and they decided to totally
skip Web pages with redirections.
Submit a real Web page that contains the product description visible to the
reader.
Sometimes, you have old Web pages listed on search engines and you want them
to redirect to the new Web site. There are several ways to do it:
1. You can implement a server side redirect on the old Web page, using the
301 Moved Permanently error message. This will redirect users to the new Web
site, but also tells the search engines that this page has moved permanently.
Some search engines will drop the page from their index, and some will
eventually replace the old page with the new one without hurting your rankings.
2. You can use the META Refresh tag on the old Web page, for example <META
HTTP-EQUIV=Refresh CONTENT="5; URL=http://www.stakh.com"> tells the browser to
load www.stakh.com 5 seconds after the current document has finished loading.
However, some old Web browsers don't support that tag, and some search engines
penalize pages that use a refresh of a few seconds or less.
3. Instead of the META Refresh tag, you can also use JavaScript to load a new
document:
<SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript">
<!--
location.replace("http://www.yournewsite.com");
-->
</SCRIPT>
Note that some search engines also don't like that kind of redirection.
4. You can also delete the old Web page and create a custom 404 error page.
This ensures that visitors will be redirected to the new site if they click on a
broken link or enter an incorrect URL. The 404 error page should contain a link
to your home page and to the primary sections of your Web site.
To move to a new Web site and to keep your old search engine rankings, I
recommend using method 1.
Reason №4: You have submitted your Web site too often.
If you submit your Web site more often than once a month, most search engines
will consider that spamming and they will skip your site.
Spamming does not work with search engines. Most likely, it will backfire to
you. More and more search engines are able to detect spam attempts and penalize
or ban your page from their listings.
Sites that spam search engines degrade the value of search engine listings.
As the problem grows, these sites may face the same backlash that spam mail
generates. The content of most Web pages ought to be enough for search engines
to determine relevancy without webmasters having to resort to repeating keywords
for no reason other than to try and "beat" other Web pages. The stakes will
simply keep rising, and users will also begin to hate sites that undertake these
measures.
Submit your Web site to search engines and wait for 4 weeks. Then search for
the URL of your site. If the search engine cannot find your site, submit your
URL again.
Reason №5: You overuse keywords on your Web site.
Many search engines fear to be spammed if you overuse keywords on your Web
site. Do not repeat your keywords too often in your meta tags or in the body of
your Web pages.
Nobody knows the magic number for the search engines but a paragraph such as
the one below is not a good idea:
"E-books are great. I love e-books. I've read hundreds of ebooks. You can
learn much from e-books. On my Web site you can find tons of free e-books. When
you subscribe to my newsletter on e-books, you get two additional free e-books."
Some years ago, you may have obtained a top ranking for the keyword "ebooks",
but today the search engines will quickly ignore such nonsense and probably
write it off as "spamming". It could even cause the engine spider to skip your
Web site completely.
Unfortunately, search engines do not indicate on their help pages the maximum
allowed number of repetitions. Some webmasters suspect this to be three, some
say six. There's no way of knowing until you are penalised.
Reason №6: Text in the background color of the web
"Color can kill your ranking!" Some Web designers, in order to get high
rankings in the search engines, try to make their Web pages as keyword-rich as
possible. They try to spam search engines by repeating keywords in the same
color as the background color to make the text invisible to browsers and search
engine spiders.
However, almost all search engines already know that trick. They will
penalize or even blacklist your Web page if they determine that your page is
trying to unfairly misrepresent its actual content. This tactic is commonly
referred to as "spamming the search engines" or "spamdexing".
Unfortunately, the problem is that the search engines may end up penalizing
Web sites which did not intend to use the hidden text trick. For example,
suppose you have a Web page with a black background and a table in that page
with a white background. Now suppose that you've added some black text in that
table. This text will be visible to your human visitors, so in fact, the text
isn't hidden. However, the
search engines can interpret this to be hidden text because they overlook the
table background color.
I recommend going through all your Web pages and make sure that you haven't
inadvertently made any such mistake.
And, by the way, search engines also catch on using a slightly different
color than the background color to hide words, so don't use that trick.
Copyright © 2003 Stakh SEO News ST-K
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