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Hints and Tips
One of the most confounding mysteries of the universe is why your website
isn't in the search engines. There may be a number of reasons. Here is a
checklist of things to consider:
Is Your Website New?
New websites may not appear in search engines for months. Adding to the
confusion is when a website appears in the search engines and then
disappears for a while. This is because between updates, some search engines
like Google use what's called a 'fresh bot'. This is a spider that scans the
Internet for new content and temporarily places it in the search engine
index. This new information is generally tossed out prior to a complete
search engine update.
Contrary to popular belief, submitting your site to search engines will not
speed up the process. Services that tout search engine submission are
selling snake oil. Search engines automatically scan web servers for
content, so no amount of submission will get your site in quicker.
Is Your Website "Crawlable"?
Many search engines require basic image links and/or hyperlinked text to
move around your website.
If a website has a different means of navigation, such as Macromedia Flash,
the search engine may not be able to get past the first page. If that's the
case, there won't be much for it to scan and place in its index.
Search engines are looking for real text. This real text is what is stored
in the search engine index and is also what drives your search engine
positioning. Websites made using Flash that do not have real text or links
to follow simply appear as an image to the search engine spider. You and I
may be able to read the text on the site, but the search engine cannot. It's
a bit confusing, but to tell the difference between real text and image
text, take your mouse and try and highlight the text as if you're doing a
copy and paste in a word processor. If you can highlight it, it's real text
and the search engine can read and index it.
Likewise, websites that have a splash page, which is generally a nice
looking intro page with an image of people smiling and looking incredibly
content and successful, are terrible for search engines. There generally
isn't enough real text on the home page for the search engine to index.
Make sure your site has a basic navigation system that is crawlable and that
your home page has sufficient content for the search engine to index.
Is Your Website Nested?
Make sure your website is not in a framed structure.
In order to generate better search results, the search engines have cracked
down on techniques such as building hundreds of 'doorway' pages within a
website that are each optimized for a specific set of search terms. These
doorway pages would then appear in the search engines.
Search engines now generally require that each page within a site be linked
to from the home page or at least no more than one or two layers away. In
other words, if you have a practice page, it is okay to have the practice
page linked to from the home page and then to have links to your various
practice areas from the practice page.
It would not be okay to have pages that are not linked to from any other
page within the website, however. These are called 'orphan pages' and are
assumed to be doorways.
Is Your Website Basic?
Be honest, is your website terrible? Search engines care about content. I've
seen many sites that have one or two sentences on the home page with salesy
language, a dry recitation on the biography page and a practice page with
nothing more than a list of matters handled.
Search engines aren't smart, they can't judge a good site from a bad site.
However, they are looking for some basic things, like word count. If nothing
else, load your site up with content and make sure it's related to your
practice areas. The more you say, the more interesting your site looks to
the search engines.
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