Designing a Search Engine Friendly Website
There
are many factors that hinder search engines from ranking Websites for many keywords.
When web development companies create Websites, often they do not create Websites
for the search engines. Usually, they design sites strictly for Internet users.
Ultimately, the Internet users are the people who are going to purchase
your products and services, not the search engines. This is typically where the
problem initially lies, because online visitors will not be able to find your
Website if it is not constructed with both the visitors and the search engines
in mind. Just because you may have spent thousands of dollars to have a beautifully
designed Website, does not mean it will automatically generate lots of online
visitors and become profitable.
In other words, a search engine friendly
Website is first and foremost user-friendly, designed and written for your human
visitors first (primary audience). Then the site can be tweaked so that is can
be easily indexed by the search engines (secondary audience). The phrase "search
engine friendly Website” means that the Website programmer is following the rules
set forth by the search engines, in order for high keyword rankings to be achieved.
Here
are a few highly effective strategies for designing a search engine friendly Website:
1.
Keep HTML code and the Website simple and easy to navigate.
Try to create
Websites that are basic .html or .htm page files, without using any type of JavaScript
or other dynamic design styles. Javascript creates a lot of code between the header
tags, pushing down the text that search engines would crawl first. Placing the
script code in an external file reduces the code to just one line.
2.
Reduce image sizes.
Too many images or very large images on your Web
page will slow down the loading time of your Website. Make sure your images have
a resolution of 72dpi. You can also slice large images into smaller pieces with
your graphics editor.
3. Allow search engine spiders to find important
Web pages from any page.
Place text links of your main Web pages at
the bottom of each of your Web pages, so spiders can find your inside pages. Create
a Site Map page with all of your Web pages listed on one page, and link to it
from your homepage. You can also create a Google Sitemap .xml file using the Google
Sitemaps program, so Google’s crawlers can find all of your Web pages easier.
4.
Try not to use cookies on your Website.
Allow search bots to crawl your
sites without session IDs or arguments that track their path through the site.
These techniques are useful for tracking individual user behavior, but the access
pattern of bots is entirely different. Using these techniques may result in your
Website not being indexed at all. Another thing that will stop search engines
from finding the sub pages of your site is requiring cookies. Sure cookies and/or
session ids may be necessary to track visitor activity, but you can make an exception
for search engines. Search engine crawlers do not like cookies. Don't require
them to accept them or they will simply leave.
5. Do not use frames anywhere
on your Website.
This is an HTML tag created that allows designers to
display two or more Web pages at the same time. The perception is that frames
can improve Website navigation, but they are browser-dependant and do not create
search engine friendly Websites. Most search engines do not index framed pages.
Frames only allow search engine crawlers to see 1 Webpage, when there is actually
20 Web pages on a site.
6. Do not place your Website entirely in flash.
Search
engines cannot “read” Websites built as Flash movies. They cannot read text in
a movie file, and also only recognize a 20-page Website for example as only 1
Web page. It is best to create separate HTML page files for your photos, graphics
and content, in order to have a search engine friendly Website.
7. Write
content on each Web page.
Write a summary paragraph of at least 250
- 500 words of text for the top of each web page. Weave your keywords within this
text being careful not have them so close together that your copy reads strange
for your visitors. Aim to please the search engines as well as your Website visitors.
8.
Do not create doorway pages.
Doorway, or gateway pages, means a "fake"
Web page is created to rank well for a selected keyword term and redirects Website
visitors to another, "actual" page on a company’s Website. Doorway pages are those
generated automatically from a template and is considered spam and penalized by
the majority of search engines.
Source: Free
Articles from ArticlesFactory.com
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Wendy
Suto is president and CEO of Search Circus, Inc., an organic
Website
marketing firm in Cleveland, Ohio. She keeps pace with the latest optimization,
link building and article submission tactics. As a certified search engine optimization
consultant, she teaches SEO classes throughout Cleveland, Ohio.
wendy@searchcircus.com