A lot of people make the mistake of asking after their site is
produced "Why isn't it appearing on search engines?" If you are
serious about having your site found by people all round the world
then this needs to be taken into account at the design stage of
your website, and even when making the choice as to which domain
name to register. Once listed on search engines it is another
matter to try and get a high listing/ranking and keep your site
there.
We have compiled this information from various trusted sources,
in particular http://www.searchenginewatch.com/
and http://www.searchengineguide.com/.
The information is provided in good faith and as advice only.
Domain Names
If you are a company then it is best to have your company name
as your web address (e.g. http://www.mycompany.co.im/ or
http://www.mycompany.com/). There is more chance that people will
remember your address if it is short so bear that in mind. The
actual domain name you pick doesn't affect your ranking that much,
but if you are going to go for a longer or more descriptive domain
name then the words are best to be separated by hyphens as they
will then be recognised by the automated processes of the search
engines e.g. http://www.find-me-on-search-engines.com/ and you
should try to use your main keywords.
Keywords
This is a very important concept when trying to get found on the
Internet. You need to analyse exactly the words that best describe
what you do, referring to your advertising copy may be a good
starting point. You also need to get into the mindset of a customer
searching on the Internet, what words would they type into the
search box to try and find you?
Let us use a garage as an example, one that sells a particular
brand of car on the Isle of Man. As a consumer trying to find the
best deals I would probably type something like "car sales cheap
deals isle of man garage" or if I was interested in one brand only
"ford car isle of man". With these searches, a Ford retailer based
on the Isle of Man should be able to appear in the top ten. If I
had missed off the Isle of Man though, then the pages would be
buried beneath all the thousands of retailers in the US and across
the world. This is where you have to be realistic; a small company
on the Isle of Man is never going to be number one on the search
engine for a one word keyword like 'ford' or 'car.'
It is recommended that no more than 25 words are chosen, so in
the example given it may be wise to choose as follows; "car, sales,
garage, ford, dealer, isle, of, man, iom, deal, manx, cheap,
finance, trade, in, cashback, fiesta, escort, ka, mondeo,
focus"
Meta Tags
Behind every page of images and text you see through your
Internet browser, is the HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) code that
makes the site work. This is what the search engines read to work
out how relevant your site is to a particular keyword used in a
customer's search. At the very top of the page there are 'tags'
that cannot be seen through the browser, but are important in
classifying your site. These 'tags' are the meta title, meta
keywords and meta description tag. A good web designer will discuss
with you the main aim of your site and will ensure they code the
relevant meta tags on your behalf. One important thing to bear in
mind is that your main keywords (e.g. Isle of Man, Ford and Car)
should also be used in the title and description fields to
reinforce their importance. So a good title for this example site
may be "the best Ford car deals on the Isle of Man from Bloggs and
Co" and the longer description field could be "Are you looking for
great deals on new and used Ford cars on the Isle of Man? The
Bloggs and Co site has cheap deals on Fiestas, Mondeos, Kas and
many more."
Content
There is no magical formula or cheat to do well on a search
engine. At the end of the day it is worth bearing in mind their
objective, to provide a customer searching for something with the
most relevant pages. Therefore if you are designing a website, it
is always important to ensure that there is a lot of content, text
basically, that is relevant, well written and should naturally
contain your 'keywords' several times. It is wise to avoid
overloading with design solutions like 'frames' and 'flash' and
'javascript' as these cannot be read, and therefore the message
will not be listed. At the end of the day, whilst the World Wide
Web is increasingly graphical, most of us are searching for
information, text information, so that is still the most important
aspect of your site.
Regular Updates
The paragraph above details the importance of text, but many
sites will write pages and pages of excellent copy, but after a
year or two, if no changes are made, it will usually fall behind in
the search engine listings. Information usually does have a short
lifespan, as a customer searching a site will lose trust in
information written two years ago. A website that carries out daily
or weekly updates on their homepage, for example in the format of
latest news with a date and time stamp, will usually come out ahead
of sites that only have static information. It is worth working
into the design a section that can be updated easily when you have
new information to share.
Links
If you are trying to be the authority on a particular subject
then a customer browsing the site would expect complimentary links
to make their search easier. So in the example given, it would be
sensible to consider linking to the main Ford site, giving more
detailed technical and sales information on the models of cars,
perhaps also to preferred finance houses for customers to choose
the best deal. A list of insurance companies would be sensible too;
the list of links could go on and on e.g. fan sites, accessories,
modifications, other garages for service, parts etc. Not only is
this a useful thing for the customer, making them more likely to
use your services, it is also a recognised boost on search engines,
they will classify your site as more useful as long as the links
are relevant. Perhaps more importantly in terms of search engine
rankings is to have lots of other sites link to you, again these
have to be relevant to have any effect on the ranking e.g. the IOM
web directory, lists of Ford Dealers, other garages, car insurance
sites etc. The search engines automated processes will place more
importance on a site that is considered a good one, e.g. worth
linking to, by other high ranking sites
Search Engines
Once your website has been designed and published on the
Internet it is a relatively straight forward task to register it
with Internet Search Engines. The list that follows details the
main search engines that should be concentrated on:
| Search Engines |
|
| Google |
The most popular Internet Search Engine
|
| Bing |
Microsoft's Internet Search Engine |
| Ask |
Formerly Ask Jeeves |
| AltaVista |
Popular, well known Internet Search
Engine |
Basically these days the important sites to get listed with are
Google and Bing, in that order. I would recommend waiting until the
keywords and meta tags are inserted into the site, then at that
point go to the links for the search engines as listed above. Then
complete the short forms and see what happens. You will usually
start to appear within a couple of weeks (it just depends when the
sites next do their updates) but it can be up to 6 weeks. By then
you will be more than likely listed and should start to see traffic
from the engines. If after a few months you feel it isn't going as
well as you would like, then at that stage it may be worth thinking
about paid optimisation/placement companies, but you may be
pleasantly surprised as to what you can achieve yourself.