More and more, search engines are cracking down on the use of
techniques they consider inappropriate for gaining top rankings
in their indexes. No doubt many techniques in this special report
are now or will be targeted sooner or later. Interestingly,
CNET Central, the computer network and first Web site supported
with its own television show, just completed an article that
details what search engines returned the most relevant search
results.
Infoseek used to be well known as the web site marketer's
favorite search engine because a page could be indexed in
minutes – though they now take up to two weeks. In the past,
this instant indexing meant that anyone with a good understanding
of search engine optimization techniques could quickly move
their pages into top positions on Infoseek. As a result, most
pages at the top of Infoseek's search results are there because
someone like you or me figured out a way to get those pages
there.
CNET recruited a team of evaluators to conduct a series of keyword
searches and then rank each engine by how well the search results
matched the intent of their queries. Infoseek placed second.
Nonetheless, search engines have declared a silent war against
those of us working on their behalf to ensure that good Web
sites make it into top positions. Those indexes that are most
difficult to master seem to return most irrelevant documents.
Because the search engines are working to penalize the small
minority of spammers who inappropriately submit dozens of
pages and present off-topic material, legitimate operators
must be careful that we don't get clipped in one of these
stings. Penalties can be draconian and can include having
your domain name, your IP address and even pages registered
under your internic handle banned from a particular search
engine.
In extreme cases, we've heard of search engines checking domain
registrations with internic for owner's names and addresses.
With this information they can prevent known spammers from
registering new domains and getting back into their index.
We received an e-mail from someone recently claiming that
AltaVista was blocking submissions of all of his URLs, even
new ones he registered.
He suspected that AltaVista had captured his nic handle information
and was blocking any new URLs he registered under it, though
we could not confirm this practice. You do not want to suffer
such a fate. There is no reason you should if you observe
these guidelines:
1. Never use keywords in your META tags that do not apply to
your site's content.
Tip: Let's say you have a travel service business. The
single keyword "travel" will probably be very hard to be positioned
well on. To attract the visitors you want, you may want to create
good content related to your business in order to attract the
right type of visitors. For example, if you sell vacation cruises
to the Caribbean, make a page all about "Parasailing in the
Caribbean."
Give them all the information they'd want to know about the
sport, the pros and cons, then show them how to get there on
one of your vacation plans! However, good content is the KEY.
Your page must really get the prospect excited about going parasailing
before they're going to start thinking seriously about buying
a ticket.
2. Avoid repeating the same keyword dozens of times in a row
on your page or in your META tags. Increasingly, search engines
are penalizing and even banning web sites for employing this
technique. List a keyword one to seven times, no more. Any
more than that and you're entering the "danger zone."
3. Do not create too many doorway pages. It's good to create
multiple doorway pages that each target different sets of keywords
or topics related to your site, but DO NOT BE EXCESSIVE! Search
engines now watch for multiple submissions that appear the same
or very similar. Try a couple of variations, submit them, then
wait and see how you rank.
Tip: It's important to review your web site and check
your rankings for many keywords that appear in the text that
makes up the different pages of your web site. Often you'll
find that your Web site did not rank well for one important
keyword, but it may rank very well on some other keyword or
phrase found on the page!
Search engines don't really care if you resubmit a page after
making changes. In fact, they encourage it.
The easiest way to get in trouble is to have three, four or
more of your pages all appear together in the matches for a
single keyword search. One of your competitors will likely report
you. This could get you banned from that search engine.
4. Avoid submitting too many pages at once. If you have 100
pages you need indexed, first review the rules of the particular
search engine to make certain the search engine will index this
number. We suggest you play it safe and break up your submissions.
Submit half one day and half the next avoiding any undocumented
limits a search engine may have whereby they simply ignore your
pages after a certain number of submissions. Also be wary of
automated site submission tools that submit too many pages simultaneously.
5. Avoid submitting the same page twice on the same day. Generally
search engines will simply ignore a second submission. You can,
however, rename the page and resubmit it, but again, don't abuse
the system. Keep page variations to a minimum, follow up, and
if you don't rank well for your keywords, then redesign the
page and submit it again. Consider it doorway page recycling.
6. Following up by checking your rank for many keywords in 10
search engines sounds like a lot of work. It is. Some people
tell us they spend 30 hours a week checking their rank for their
important keywords.
7. After you've been in business awhile, you'll learn that to
succeed, you need a competitive advantage. Use technology and
knowledge to do more in less time. This is how the smaller or
newer companies can often compete against the big boys. However,
don't sacrifice your ethics to achieve your goals.
Using Princess Diana's name on your web site to bring traffic
is patently offensive. It's deception in every application
whether the keyword concerns a sensitive current event or
simply a high-interest keyword. Most importantly, it won't
translate into revenue, only aggravated visitors. And even
if you make a buck or two, it will be on your conscience.
Making money on the web is not that hard. This report makes
it even easier. Now go make lots of money and report back
and tell us how you did it!
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