Posts Tagged ‘search engine optimization’

Useful Search Engine Optimization Guide

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

While it’s simpleĀ  to build a website, but do you know how to make it a search engine friendly website? Search Engine Optimization is an inevitable topic to make a successful website. I will share some tips and tricks that I used for my site, and others that i have worked on which is proven working and very useful.

1. Understand the Way Search Engines Crawl Your Website

“Crawler-based search engines are those that use automated software agents (called crawlers) that visit a Web site, read the information on the actual site, read the site’s meta tags and also follow the links that the site connects to performing indexing on all linked Web sites as well. The crawler returns all that information back to a central depository, where the data is indexed. The crawler will periodically return to the sites to check for any information that has changed. The frequency with which this happens is determined by the administrators of the search engine. “Webopedia

SEO is a long term website maintenance, we need to check the keyword density frequently and the structure of the website to ensure it’s “SEO optimized”. Luckily, there are a lot of tools that will make our life much more easier:

2. Use Search Engine Friendly URL

Do not miss this, it’s very important. URL is one of the ways to include your content keywords. “Even if you can’t get your keywords into your domain name, you can put them into your URLs. Search engines read the URLs and assign value to the text they find there.” – about.com

We can rewrite dynamic URL by using Mod Rewrite. The following websites teach show us how to do it:

Use Google Analytics

I found myself checking Google Analytic Stat daily. I love it because it has all the data I need to analyse web traffic. It has 4 majors section:

  • Visitors
  • Traffic Sources
  • Content
  • Goals

In every section, it has comprehensive statistic, data, drill down report and the level of details are impressive. Afterall, it’s FREE! This tool is highly recommended.

There’s more than the 3 items which is listed above come back soon as I will add more.

Where Google Stands on the "Keywords" Meta Tag

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

Google does not use the “keywords” meta tag in its web search ranking. Google’s Matt Cutts explains this in a Webmaster Central video. This is not breaking news, by any means, but there are a lot of people out there that still put a lot of stock into this.

In fact, Cutts mentions that people have sued each other for meta tag keyword theft, when really this is just a waste of everybody’s time, because they don’t even play a role in the ranking of sites on Google. Have you been under the impression that the keywords meta tag was important to ranking in Google?

“About a decade ago, search engines judged pages only on the content of web pages, not any so-called “off-page” factors such as the links pointing to a web page,” says Cutts. “In those days, keyword meta tags quickly became an area where someone could stuff often-irrelevant keywords without typical visitors ever seeing those keywords. Because the keywords meta tag was so often abused, many years ago Google began disregarding the keywords meta tag.”

Just because Google ignores the “keywords” meta tag, that doesn’t mean it ignores all meta tags. In fact, there are several that the search engine definitely uses. For one, Google sometimes uses the “description” meta tag as the text for search results snippets. But even then, the “description” meta tag isn’t used to influence ranking.

description-meta

Google also recognizes the “google,” “robots,” “verify-v1,” “content type,” and “refresh” meta tags. Information about how Google understands these can be found at this page in the Webmaster Tools help center.

“It’s possible that Google could use this information in the future, but it’s unlikely,” Cutts says of the “keywords” meta tag. “Google has ignored the keywords meta tag for years and currently we see no need to change that policy.”

So the moral of the story is, if a competitor is jacking your keywords, and using them in their own “keywords” meta tag, this will have no effect whatsoever in how they rank in Google when compared to your site. Cutts says other search engines might use the information, but Google doesn’t.

Google does note that its enterprise Search Appliance has the ability to match meta tags, but this is of course separate from Google web search.

As I have said before, these videos and other tips Google frequently gives out are worth paying attention to for any webmaster looking to rank well. Whether they’re talking about duplicate content, meta tags, or paid links, they’re all aimed at telling webmasters how it is, and clarifying any misconceptions to the contrary. Whether you agree with Google’s methods in all cases or not, the tips are for your benefit.

Like it or not, Google controls what people find on the web when they search. The company’s huge market share is just something that is. There is always the possibility that could change in the future, but at this point, it looks like webmasters are not going to be able to ignore Google for a long time, if they hope to be found on the web by searchers.

We realizeĀ (and Google surely does too) that many well-seasoned marketers already know that Google ignores the “keywords” meta tag, but webmasters are born everyday, and not all of them have been so heavily seasoned to this point, and that’s why Google puts this information out there. There is always misinformationĀ (particularly when it comes to search), and sometimes the record just has to be set straight. Who better to do that than Google itself?