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How to Get Top Search Engine Positioning
There is a pervasive myth among web site managers
that simply submitting your web site to hundreds of search engines will increase
traffic to your site. Another myth is that simply inserting META tags in your
Web pages will also increase your traffic. Both are just not true. So what
works? Search engine positioning that is by far your best and most
affordable bet.
Consider
these statistics: Over 95% of Web users find what they are looking for by
visiting the top 6 search engines. Yahoo alone handled over 55 million searches
and page views in December 1997. Many of these searches are for the products and
services that you deal in, guaranteed! Everybody knows that even a few good
positions on even one or two important keywords or phrases can drive thousands
or hundreds of thousands of quality visitor traffic to a Web site per day.
Research has shown that people hardly ever go past the top 30 search results for
any one search. The top 10 results receive 78% more traffic than those in
position 11 to 30 do. The top 30 results get over 90% of the search traffic.
This alone explains why some sites do so well and others so disappointingly, and
why it is so critical to be ranked highly.
So
how do you position your web site at the top of search engine results? Use
information frame pages. Information frame pages, also known as entry or bridge
pages, are Web pages designed specifically to rank highly on the unique ranking
algorithms of each search engine. The two best things about using information
frame pages is that they cost far less than other promotional tools such as
banner ads, and they work better when properly designed. There are two ways to
go about creating information frames. You can either do it yourself or have
someone do it for you.
If
you decide to do it yourself, be prepared to invest a considerable amount of
time on them - beating the search engine algorithms is not an easy matter!
You should also be prepared to make a number of information frame pages. You
must make one information frame page per keyword or keyword phrase that you want
to be positioned well in. For best results, depending on your sites subject
matter, you should target 10 to 50 keywords and keyword phrases. Usually, a page
that ranks well on one engine may not rank well on other engines. Assuming that
you want to make sure that you are ranked highly on the five top engines
(AltaVista, HotBot, Lycos, Infoseek and Excite Yahoo does not accept
information frame pages), you have to make five versions of each information
frame page, each optimized for a particular engine.
Knowing
what it takes to make effective information frame pages is not hard
there are lots of good publications that now tell you exactly what the search
engines are looking for in a page that will rank highly. One of the best guides
to this is "Secrets to Achieving a Top 10 Position", a free 118 page
manual that comes free with WebPosition software (see www.positionweaver.com
for details). The hard part is in actually creating these information frames!
Basically, this is what it would involve:
First,
you have to realize that ranking criteria varies from search engine to search
engine. Most evaluate the placement of keywords or keyword phrases on various
parts of your pages based simultaneously on all these criteria:
-
Prominence
of the keyword searched how early in a page a keyword appears.
-
Frequency
of the keyword searched number of times the keyword appears. Be careful
about this. Simply repeating the keyword will not work because grammatical
structure and keyword weight also plays a role.
-
Site
Popularity a few search engines consider how popular your site is when
ranking.
-
"Weight"
of the keywords that is the ratio of keywords to all other words. Each
search engine has a threshold. If your page crosses that threshold, the engine
labels it as spam and ignores it.
-
Proximity
of keywords how close together the keywords are to each other, especially
when the item searched for is a phrase.
-
Keyword
Placement these are the locations where an engine will look for the keyword,
e.g. in the body, title, META tags, etc.
-
Grammatical
structure some engines consider grammar in their calculations. They do this
to make it harder for spammers to do their thing.
-
Synonyms
some engines look for words similar in meaning to the keyword.
As
you can see, the ranking criteria is highly dynamic, using a complex algorithm
that integrates all the above factors in various proportions and with various
maximum and minimum values. An important criteria to look deeper into is the
keyword placement criteria. These are the various places that engines look for
keywords:
-
Keywords
in the <TITLE> tag(s)
-
Keywords
in the <META NAME="DESCRIPTION">
-
Keywords
in the <META NAME="KEYWORD">
-
Keywords
in <H1> or other headline tags
-
Keywords
in the <A HREF="http://yourcompany.com/page.htm"></A> link
tags
-
Keywords
in the body copy
-
Keywords
in ALT tags
-
Keywords
in <!-- insert comments here> comments tags
-
Keywords
contained in the <INPUT TYPE="HIDDEN" NAME="HIDDEN"
VALUE="include list of keywords here"> the hidden type tag.
-
Keywords
contained in the URL or site address, e.g., http://www.keyword.com/keyword.htm
To
fully cover the process of figuring out the parameters of each criteria for each
search engine is beyond the scope of this article. If you would really like to
get into the details of this, see the free "Secrets to Achieving a Top 10
Position" 118 page manual from WebPosition (see www.positionweaver.com
for details). Put simply, there are several ways to come up with information
frame pages, depending on the resources at your disposal. What you would need to
do if you were doing this manually would be to do a search on a keyword or
phrase in a search engine. See what page ranks highest for that keyword. Make
sure that the actual page is the same one displayed in the search results and
not a redirected page. Then meticulously inspect that page and create a
information frame page that beats that page on all the above criteria, without
going too far as to cross the engines thresholds. You would, for example,
make sure that your keyword or phrase appears in all the places that it does in
the page you are studying, and it does so just a little more often, and in a
weight just a fraction of a percentage point higher. Another thing to keep in
mind is that most search engines seems to favor shorter pages, meaning that you
should try to achieve the above with a page that is slightly shorter than the
current top ranking one.
courtesy
of postitionweaver.com
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