Search Engine Friendly Pages
There is no point in building a website unless there are visitors coming in. A major source of traffic for most sites on the Internet is search engines like Google, Yahoo!, MSN, Altavista and so on. Hence, by designing a search engine friendly site, you will be able to rank easily in search engines and obtain more visitors.
Major search engines use programs called crawlers or robots to index websites to list on their search result pages. They follow links to a page, reads the content of the page and record it in their own database, pulling up the listing as people search for it.
If you want to make your site indexed easily, you should avoid using frames on your website. Frames will only confuse search engine robots and they might even abandon your site because of that. Moreover, frames make it difficult for users to bookmark a specific page on your site without using long, complicated scripts.
Do not present important information in Flash movies or in images. Search engine robots can only read text on your source code so if you present important words in Flash movies and images rather than textual form, your search engine ranking will be affected dramatically.
Use meta tags accordingly on each and every page of your site so that search engine robots know at first glance what that particular page is about and whether or not to index it. By using meta tags, you are making the search engine robot’s job easier so they will crawl and index your site more frequently.
Stop using wrong HTML tags like to style your page. Use CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) instead because they are more effective and efficient. By using CSS, you can eliminate redundant HTML tags and make your pages much lighter and faster to load.
How Does Google Decide Where Your Website Ranks
Author : Anna Johnson
Ask most search engine optimization (SEO) experts and they’ll tell you that Google is hardly transparent when it comes to how it decides where to rank your website in its search engine for a given keyword or keyphrase. But they’ll also likely tell you that, despite its secrecy, Google has left clues.
Indeed, not too long ago, Google gave out some of its clues when explaining the three principles underlying Google’s search engine technology. These principles related to understanding search engine users, understanding search queries, and understanding web pages.
Indeed, the main aim of Google’s search engine is supposedly to list search engine results based on what information search engine users truly want. In turn, Google’s technology is aimed at understanding users’ intent - not just what they seem to want based on a simplistic interpretation of their search queries.
To this end, Google’s search technology takes into account the search engine user’s location, and also offers personalization technologies to enable a user to generate search engine results pages (SERPs) based on their web history, as well as cross language information retrieval to deliver translations of SERPs not in the user’s native language.
When it comes to search queries, Google seeks to clarify and understand exactly what these are by offering such tools as alternate spelling, synonyms, and concept analysis of the search terms.
Google’s goal in relation to understanding webpages, meanwhile, is to determine the salient concepts conveyed by the content, as well as to distinguish between the more and less important words on the page, and also take into account, for example, the freshness of the information on the page.
Okay, so Google’s search engine aims to understand users, search queries and webpages. But does any of this really tell us anything new? Well, Google has certainly reinforced the notion that its primary goal is to deliver relevant results. But, these revelations hardly explain how and why Google’s algorithms produce the particular order of results on its SERPs.
Without knowing the true concepts behind Google’s ranking technology, we are still left with these and the other clues Google has left - most notably the clues left by doing applying certain optimization techniques and seeing the results. Still, the overall message is loud and clear: just as Google aims to deliver results based on what search engine users are truly looking for, so too does it behoove Internet marketers to target keywords based on a high degree of relevance between their website content and such keyword queries.
Anna Johnson publishes Internet marketing newsletter, Kikabink News. Go here to get a FREE subscription to Kikabink News as well as a FREE copy of Anna’s ebook, Killer Internet Marketing Tips, plus four FREE killer 60+ minute audio interviews with top Internet marketers: Killer Internet marketing tips

















