More Best Practices For Search Engine Domination
More Best Practices For
Search Engine Domination
In Part 1 of this article,
detailing the five best practices for domination of the search engines, we
discussed website design and the use of keywords. In this part, we will
look at three more, one of which is related to search engine optimization and
the use of HTML tags, and the other two are ways of improving your link
popularity.
Meta Tags and Heading
Tags
Some claim that search engines,
especially Google, no longer regard meta tags as being important. In fact
nobody really knows what Google thinks is important, and there is evidence that
some meta tags are still used by spiders in the assessment of the relevance of
your website to specific search terms or keywords used by search engine
users. The meta tags that you should use on every page of your site are
the description and the keyword meta tags.
Your description meta tag should provide
a good description of your website, and contain your main keywords. This will
likely not be seen by anybody, only the search engines, but it might be used to
assess the relevance of your site in indexing with respect to specific search
terms being used.
The other meta tag that search engines
still use is the keyword meta tag. This should contain a list of keywords
used on the page. If you don’t use it, don’t add it to the meta tag. Also,
don’t use the same word too many times, since it will be regarded as keyword
stuffing. After meta tags, you should look at your titles and how they are
presented to search engines spiders.
Ideally, the title should be the keyword
for each page. Do not use the same title for every page. It is the
title of your web page that should be here, not your website. This
provides search engines with an indication of the topic of your page. The title
itself should be within <H1> tags. This tells the search engine that these
words are the most important on the page. They should also be the first
text that the spiders come across on your page, since Google also gives special
emphasis to the first text it finds.
Any secondary titles you might have on
each page should be contained within <H2> tags. These titles should
also contain keywords that you are using on your page and that are contained in
your keyword meta tag.
Linking
Strategy
The more links you have leading back to
your web pages from other websites, the more influential the search engines will
calculate your web pages to be for the topics concerned. Many people use a
reciprocal linking strategy, whereby two websites agree to show each other's
links. This can be self defeating, since search engines such as Google can
regard a link away from your site as weakening yours, and so cancels out the
benefit of the back link.
The crucial aspect of who benefits from
this arrangement comes for the relative page ranking. The page rank of a
web page can be found on the green bar on the Google toolbar, This is an
indication of the link popularity of the page you are viewing. If you are
linked with a web page with a higher page rank than yours, then you might get
the benefit of the deal. However, in general terms, the more links you
have back to your site the better.
If you carry out a Google search for
keywords that relate to yours, you should be able to find some websites with
high page ranking that are not direct competitors. Write asking for a link to
your site from theirs, explaining the benefits to their customers/visitors of
you doing so. One of four things will happen. They will not reply,
they will refuse , they will agree or they will agree on condition that you
provide a similar link back to them.
The usual reply is the first or the
last, but it costs you nothing to try, and you can get a lot of good links back
to your website by doing this. If the page rank is high even a reciprocal
link will be of benefit to your site's page rank and search engine listing.
Some website directories offer software
on a free or a subscription basis that automatically handles reciprocal link
requests. The paid versions generally set up a link directory on your
website then provide you with offers of reciprocal links that you can either
agree to or refuse. If you agree they can automatically add the link to
your directory. With free versions you have to add the link yourself.
These are very useful if you are selective.
Article
Marketing
Links are much more valuable if they are
one way, without you reciprocating. This is where the benefits of article
marketing become huge. When you write articles and submit them to article
directories, you get a one way link back from each directory your article is
published on. Not only that, but if readers deem your article worthy of
being copied to their website as content, then your web page also gets a link
back from there. The link you get is to the page for which you provided
the URL in your 'bio' or 'author’s resource page'.
Although article marketing is a good way
of achieving back links, they are not targeted to specific websites that could
benefit you. What are really of benefit are either sites that relate to
yours, from which your links could provide you with traffic focused on your
niche, or high page rank sites that will provide you with high value links and
that is where you have to resort to personal requests.
If you apply all of the advice provided
in these recommended best practices for dominating the search engines you should
give your listing a big boost, and if done properly you have a very good chance
of achieving a Page One position.
Kimberly Clay
is a successful Internet business consultant providing assistance for budding entrepreneurs
interested in establishing a business or building wealth from online income. She
invites you to explore GetMyWealthNow.com for
expert information on developing an online enterprise and making money
online.