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Search Engine
Marketing 101 What Search Engines See When
They Visit Your Web Site
By Robin Nobles
If you have a Web site, have you ever wondered what a
search engine sees when it visits your site to add the site to its index? Do you
know that it doesn't see the beautiful graphics or the fancy Web design? Do you
know that it only sees the source code, or the "skeleton" of your Web site?
Do you realize that knowing this little tidbit of
information and doing something about it can make a huge difference in your
search engine rankings and, ultimately, the success of your online business?
One very important thing that you need to remember is:
search engines like simplicity. The simpler your Web site is, the easier it is
for the engine to determine what your Web site is about. And, if the search
engine can determine exactly what your Web site is about, you have a better
chance at top rankings under the keyword phrases that are important for your
online business.
Let's look at this concept in
action with a page I recently created for one of my online businesses:
Search Engine Workshops.
As you can see, it's a very plain, simple page that was
not created to be the "main" or "home" page of a Web site. Rather, it was
created to pull in traffic through the keyword phrase, "search engine seminars."
What I really want you to see is the source code of the
page. So, when viewing the page, click on View on the top menu bar, then Source
or Source Code.
The most important part of a Web page is what appears at
the very top of the page. Why? Because a search engine starts at the top of the
page and begins moving down as it indexes.
So, what appears in the <head> section of your
Web page is very important, because the <head> section is at the top of
the page.
Let's look at the <head> section of the source
code:
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Search Engine Seminars--your path to success on the Web!</TITLE>
<META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="search engine seminars,
conferences, workshops, CONFERENCES, WORKSHOPS, Conferences,
Workshops">
<META NAME="description" CONTENT="Have you considered attending
a search engine seminar to learn how to take a struggling Web
site and bring it to the top of the rankings?">
</HEAD>
There are only three tags in the <head> section of this
Web page: the title tag, the keyword META tag, and the description META tag.
Because the title tag is in the <head> section, and because of the
importance that most engines place on the tag, it is considered one of the most
important tags on your page, so it should always be the first tag in the
<head> section.
Notice that in the title and keyword META tag, the
important keyword phrase (search engine seminars) appears as the first words in
the tag. In the description META tag, the keyword phrase is still toward the
beginning of the tag, as opposed to the end.
In other words, where you place your keyword phrase in
the tags and content of your page is important. If you place your keyword phrase
toward the beginning of all of your important tags and toward the beginning of
the contents, you're "proving" to the engines that the page is really about that
particular topic.
I've mentioned one reason why the title tag is
important, but there's another reason too. The title tag is important
because it almost always appears as the title of the site in the search engine
results. Your description META tag may appear in the search engine results as
well and is considered important by some of the engines. So, when you create
your title and description tags, remember two things: put your keyword phrase
toward the beginning of the tags, and make the tags captivating and designed to
pull in traffic.
Think of it this way. If your site is #10 in the search
engine rankings, but if the sites above yours haven't gone to the trouble to
create appealing titles and descriptions, a search engine user may skip over
those sites to visit yours.
Now, let's go back to the source code. Look for this
tag, which isn't far from the <body> tag:
<IMG SRC="images/banner3.jpg"
ALT="search engine seminars, search
engine conferences, search engine workshops" WIDTH="220"
HEIGHT="100">
This is the image, or graphics, tag for the Search
Engine Workshops banner that appears at the very top of the page. Notice that
the engine doesn't "see" the graphic itself. It sees the name of the graphic
(banner3.jpg), and it sees the ALT text that describes the image. It sees
the width and height of the graphic. But, it doesn't see the graphic itself. So,
the engine doesn't know that the graphic says, "Search Engine Workshops."
Next, look for this tag, which directly follows the
image tag:
<H1 ALIGN="center"><FONT
FACE="Arial">Search Engine
Seminars</FONT></H1>
An <H1> tag is a heading tag, and heading tags
are very important to a Web page. Try to put a heading tag at the very top of
your page, if at all possible, and use your important keyword phrase in that
heading tag. When you look back at my actual Web page, do you see the words
"Search Engine Seminars" right under the graphic? That's the heading tag.
About The Author
Robin Nobles, Director of Training,
Academy of Web
Specialists, has trained several thousand people in her online search engine
marketing training programs. Visit the Academy's
training site to
learn more. She also teaches 3-day hands-on search engine marketing workshops in
locations across the globe with
Search Engine
Workshops. Copyright 2002 Robin Nobles. All rights reserved.
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