8 Ways to Build a Really Bad Web Site for Search Engines
Some web sites receive hundreds or thousands of unique visitors a
day, whilst others only get a handful or none. The reason is often
because the web designers or Webmaster has built the site in one
�really bad way' or other. This can end up hindering the potential
success of the web site. If you want to make sure your site is not a
�traffic flop' then here are some simple rules to follow. Bad Move 1: Build the site using a frameset.
Framesets
may save designers time but are bad news for search engines. They can
struggle to follow links into the web site or read text on the page
unless you use a no frames tag effectively. In addition to this, if an
engine does keep a cache of a site with frames it will often pick up
the individual frames/ pages and not the complete frameset. The
downside of this is that you may lose your navigation for many of your
pages, which is likely to turn visitors off. Whilst one or two partial
fixes to framesets are out there, it's still no wonder that many web
site promoters still cry �Please No Frames�. For more information on
why framesets can cause problems visit http://www.html-faq.com/htmlframes/
Bad Move 2: Build the site purely in flash.
Flash
intros and web sites can be visually stunning, but at the same time
they can be rather limiting when it comes to search engines. If your
main site is all one flash site it will typically play in just one html
page. Some search engines simply can't read Flash and so your web site
to them is just one relatively empty HTML page. If your competitors web
site has 15 or 20 pages in HTML talking about their good sand services
then they will have a big advantage on you. If you must have a Flash
site for graphical reasons then it would be wise to budget for a
separate HTML web site to have along side the Flash so your site
content can be read and indexed by search engines. Bad Move 3: Decide that graphics are more important than words
Be
careful. As great as some images can be, try not to let designers
convince you that you don't need copy on your web site or that a few
lines is enough. Only very occasionally is there ever an excuse to fill
your web site with graphics at the expense of text. If the graphics
look great, then match them with great copy. Sales copy is important to
tell your audience why your goods and services are important. Search
engines also like to index plenty of useful copy too. 250-500 words is
a sensible starting guide for most pages or ½ of the amount you would
place in a brochure. Text copy is important and will always be so make
sure web site has some! Bad Move 4: Leaving out the Meta tags
This is
a bad move as Meta Tags are important to search engines. Clear and
concise title tags should be written for every page reflecting what it
contains. Avoid writing things like �Home' or �welcome' as it's fairly
meaningless. If you page is selling blue widgets then get �blue
widgets' in the title and keep the title to 10 words or less. In addition to this create a well-written objective Meta
description for each page, and list your Meta Keywords. These keywords
should also reflect the content on your web page. Leaving these 3
things out, or doing them badly can be disastrous. The impact of Meta
tags on rankings may vary from engine to engine, but without them your
pages could be ignored. Most HTML editors allow you to easily insert
Meta Tags into your web page and it only takes a few moments to add to
a page. So there are no excuses. Make sure you have good Title tags,
Meta Description and Meta Keyword tags on your pages today! Bad Move 5: Use lots of JavaScript
Search
engines have a few problems understanding JavaScript in pages. At the
best of time they struggle with it, at worst they may even ignore it.
On its own, it can be an unreliable way to make web site navigation. If
you must use JavaScript for your navigation make sure you have some
alternative ways to get to pages by using HTML text links at the bottom
of the page. If you have a large amount of JavaScript think about
linking to it as a separate JavaScript file. Bad Move 6: Don't have sites linking to yours
Unless
you want your web site hidden from the outside world you want to be
found right? Well search engines ideally find a new web site by
following a link from another site. This happens when people link to
you and this kind of underpins the Internet. By having sites link to
you search engine crawlers will find your web site and you never need
to submit your web site to the likes of Google. It is still the case
that web sites that rank highly on Google and Yahoo for relatively
competitive key phrases often have scores if not hundreds of web sites
linking to them Google help to explain the importance of linking here http://www.google.com/technology/ . So �think links� and be sure to get your site listed in some quality web directories as part of the process.
Bad Move 7: Focus on submitting your web site to thousands of search engines and forget the ones that matter
Now
and then you will see some companies attempting to promote this idea -
often by using Bad Move 8! It is true that there are thousands of
search engines but the highest volume of traffic comes from less than
10 major search engines. The logic of �If I get one hit a day off each
of the 1000 mini search engines I'll get a 1000 visitors a day�
unfortunately in practice does not ring true. It is a fact that a huge
volume of search engine traffic comes from a small handful of search
engine: most notably the Google, Yahoo and Msn. Bad Move 8: Using unsolicited/ Spam email This
may seem obvious that this is not the best way to promote your business
but is always worth stating. If you're in any doubt simply ask
yourself: �Do I like getting Spam emails?� It's common sense to avoid
using techniques that annoy people or damage your brand. Using
unsolicited email campaigns could result in complaints and at worst
your ISP could ban you. If you want a successful email campaign it is
advisable to target genuine opted in newsletter subscribers and to
always offer an opt-out button in every email.
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