Get your site noticed without spamming
by Reid GoldsboroughIf you have a Web site, you want people to find it. If it helps you sell services or products, the life of your business may depend on whether your site shows up in the first screen potential customers conduct searches through Google and other engines.
Web designers always are looking for an edge here, and an entire market has grown up to aid their efforts, sometimes dubbed “search engine marketing (SEM),” or “search engine optimization (SEO).”
There are bona-fide, useful techniques and there are others that search sites consider cheating.
They will penalize you for what they call “search engine marketing spam.” Knowing the difference can mean success or failure of your site.
In general, you should code your site to benefit your customers, clients or community, said P.J. Fusco, a SEM specialist for a health and beauty Web company.
“Anything you put on a Web site solely to increase the site’s visibility runs the risk of being considered a spam tactic,” Fusco explained.
The easiest legitimate technique, often overlooked, is properly coding your site’s title, meta description and headings. The following HTML tips can help those comfortable with coding their own site.
A title is different from a headline that may show up in bold typeface as the first piece of text on a page. Instead, it shows up at the top of viewers’ browsers between the browser’s logo and the browser’s name. You do not have to include a title when coding your page, but you should.
You create a title in the <HEAD> section of a Web page, placing it between <TITLE> and </TITLE>. Instead of using a title such as “Welcome to OurWebSite.com!” which will do nothing for your search results, use two or three keyword phrases, consisting of one to three words, separated by a hyphen, that clearly spell out what your site is all about.
Choose keyword phrases that you think Web searchers will most likely type when looking for a site such as yours. It helps if you also use the keyword phrases in the text of the page itself.
A meta description is another optional, but recommended, element. You also create it in the <HEAD> section, and it should follow the title. Describe your site or business in a sentence or two, such as this:
<META NAME="Description" CONTENT="The [specific] industry’s most innovative company in providing [specific] solutions to [specific] customers.">
It also can help if the headings and subheadings of your site use keyword phrases that Web searchers might use when doing a Web search.
The most effective way to improve your site’s search results is to get other sites to link to yours, with the more popular the site (the more sites that link to it), the better. Submitting your site to search sites, getting listed in directories and exchanging links with related sites all help.
It can be tricky knowing the difference between acceptable search engine marketing tactics and spam. Though the major search sites provide some guidance at their sites, they do not provide much detail because doing so would reveal the secrets of their search algorithms, said Fusco.
But there are some more egregious things you should never do. Don’t engage in “keyword flooding,” sometimes called “keyword stuffing.” This can involve loading your site’s title with a dozen or more keyword phrases or your site’s page with a multitude of keyword phrases at the bottom of the page. Trying to hide this by using white text on a white background does not work.
Search sites treat all this as spam and will penalize a site by lowering it in their rankings.
Also, in trying to increase the number of sites that link to yours, avoid “link farms,” which are Web sites that are not bona fide directories but rather schemes solely designed to increase your site’s rankings. Search sites will also penalize you for this.
Sometimes it makes sense to hire a SEM specialist to improve your search engine rankings, particularly with business sites. Google, for one, factors in more than 100 different HTML, design and off-page factors in ranking sites. Testing different combinations can often help your results.
Sites where you can to look for a SEM specialist include SEMPO at www.sempo.org, www.seoconsultants.com, www.spider-food.net, www.searchenginewatch.com and www.seochat.com.
Reid Goldsborough author of “Straight Talk About the Information Superhighway.” He can be reached at reidgold@netaxs.com.
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