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Best Practices For Dominating Search Engines

  • Writer: Amir Towns
    Amir Towns
  • Apr 25, 2023
  • 4 min read

It is possible to achieve Page 1 listings on search engines


without ever submitting your website. If you follow the five


best practices for dominating the search engines that are


described in the two parts of this article, then you will


have a good chance of a high listing, although you will have


to adapt the information to suit your own particular website.


The first part, this one, explains the importance of website


design and the use of keywords. The second part will discuss


contextual relevance to the topic, commonly called LSI, the


importance of links to your website and the fact that you


cannot allow your website to remain static. You must keep


updating it.


Before you can apply search engine optimization to your site,


you must understand how search engines view it. Let's discuss


Google, as being representative of a true search engine


rather than a website directory. It is the most used search


engine, and also the one that appears to set the standards


for search and listing criteria.


Google does not list websites, OK? Get that understood right


now. Google lists web pages. Theoretically, ten of your web


pages could monopolize the first page for any particular


search term. This is important because it means that you


should make every single page of your website as attractive


to search engines as possible. However let's consider your


home page as being representative of your website and the


page that Google finds first.


WEBSITE DESIGN IS CRUCIAL


So what are these magical five best practices? The first is


the design of your website. When the search engines check out


your site, they use algorithms, or mathematical formulae,


that apply statistical rules to what they find. These are


commonly called 'crawlers' or 'spiders'. I will use the term


'spiders'. When you design your site, you must make it easy


for spiders to crawl around it.


Spiders are slaves, and follow instructions to the letter.


If you tell it to go to point A, it will go to point A. It


won't wonder if that's the best thing to do - it will go


right there. If it lands at point A and you tell it to go to


point B, it will do that as well. Now, think what that


means. If point A is another page on your website, and point


B is a page on somebody else's website, where does the spider


end up? That's right, you've got it!


When a spider lands on your web page, it does so at the top


left of the first column in the first table. It then crawls


along from left to right until it reaches the end of the


column, then goes to the next column and so on. It then goes


to any nested tables, again from left to right and so on.


Using that information, you can draw a spider's web using


your HTML: spiders are monolingual - they only read HTML,


not Java or Flash or any other script.


Using the information above you should be able to work out a


path on your website that will lead spiders to where you want


them to go. The easier a spider can scuttle round your site


the more pleased it will be with it. However, as hinted


above, don't lead it off your site: it might just stay there!


There are ways to lock certain doors to spiders but that is


for Part 2.


KEYWORDS ARE SPIDER FOOD - DON'T GET THEM FAT!


Do you remember when you were told to use a keyword density


of 1% - 3% on each page? Well forget it! That's nonsense.


First of all let's look at what a keyword is. Have you ever


used Google, or any other search engine, to find some


information? Of course you have ! Did you do what I do, and


think of the best wording you can use in the box to describe


what you want and wonder if these were the best words to use?


You probably did, and like me either got what you wanted or


had to type in something else. Do you know what? Each of the


search terms you used was a 'keyword'. That's right, a


keyword can be a phrase as well as a single word. A keyword,


in fact, is any term that a Google user enters into the


search box hoping to get the information they need.


Therefore, when you are adding keywords to your web pages,


you are adding words or phrases that you hope others are


using to find the information you have on that web page.


Remember that Google lists every web page separately.


What this means is that to maximize the traffic to your web


pages you have to figure out what keywords Google users will


use to find your website. There are tools to help you do


that, such as the free Google Keyword Tool and Digital Point


Keyword Tool, and the paid for Wordtracker. Check them out


and decide what suits you best. Keyword research is a big


subject, far too big for this article, but that is a rough


idea of what is involved.


Use your keyword in your title and heading, once in the first


100 characters in the main body text, and once in the last


paragraph. No more, though you can add it once every 500


words. And that's it.




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