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Search Engine
Optimization -
Search engines certainly are a very important aspect
of building a website, however many people are in the
dark when it comes to knowing how the search engines
work, and how to gain the best ranking in the categories
your customers will be searching for. Because search
engines provide such a challenge, Imagimedia uses a
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Submission specialist
to perform this function for our interested clients.
The following article should give you a little perspective
when discussing search engines and ranking. A warning:
using SEO specialists are moderately expensive. You
can expect to pay from $700 to $5,000 depending upon
the size of your site and the submission and maintance
schedule you choose. for some sites however, the cost
may be justifiable or even a necessity.
Cooking
the search engine books - (Click on the title to
the left to read the original article.)
By Sarah Parkes
Published: November 5 2001 17:24GMT | Last Updated:
November 5 2001 17:26GMT
Next time you perform a routine web search, look carefully
at your top 10 results. Most users still naively believe
their search engine of choice has simply trawled the
web for the best possible matches.
But the chances are that several of the sites listed
high in the rankings will have paid for the privilege,
either through a straight pay-for-placement listing,
or, more subtly, through use of a search engine optimization
(SEO) specialist.
While still a relatively new stock-in-trade, the web's
increasing commercial clout, combined with belated recognition
of the search engine as the online world's most critical
tool, are together making SEO one of the fastest growing
new niches in the internet economy.
A glance at the figures explains why. A medium-sized
company might spend tens of thousands of pounds developing
and maintaining a professionally-designed site filled
with useful content and maybe even online sales capability.
But studies reveal that the vast majority of commercial
sites actually damage their own chances of being found
by the Big Six search engines - Yahoo, Google, MSN,
AOL, Lycos and AltaVista - through a simple lack of
understanding of what the search engine "spiders"
that trawl the web are looking for.
Popular animated gizmos based on products like JavaScript
or Flash, for example, are to all intents and purposes
invisible to search engine crawlers. So are Active Server
Pages, JavaServer pages, elements contained within frames,
and pages that enforce acceptance of cookies - the hidden
files sent by web servers to individual PCs that are
used by websites to identify users. Yet a study recently
commissioned by iProspect, a US-based SEO pioneer, shows
that 97 per cent of websites belonging to Fortune 100
companies routinely employ one or more of these technologies.
Even more surprising, 50 per cent of the keywords nominated
by the companies as online "signposts" to
their sites failed to win that company a significant
ranking on the major engines.
With around 80 per cent of the web's estimated 430m
users routinely relying on one of the top search engines
to find the information they want, that is a lot of
lost leads for any company intent on taking its web
presence seriously. "An
extraordinary number of multi-million dollar sites are
literally dead on arrival for the major engines,"
says Frederick Marckini, iProspect's chief executive
and the author of three best-selling books on search
engine positioning. "To effectively optimise your
site, it is important to understand that search engines
essentially do two basic things: index text and follow
links. If your site doesn't contain these, you've just
made yourself invisible," he says.
Virtually alone in the field when it was founded back
in 1996, iProspect has built a solid business raising
the online profile of clients such as 3M, Sharp Electronics
and John Deere. Now, the company is being joined by
a growing band of SEO
specialists around the world eager to exploit what many
believe to be not only one of the internet's best opportunities,
but a must-have service for just about any company.
In Europe, the market already boasts a handful of dedicated
SEO professionals, including Sticky Eyes, NetBooster,
Search Engineers and Web Gravity, along with an increasing
number of tech-savvy PR and advertising agencies, such
as
Brodeur Worldwide, which has recently added SEO to its
list of client services. All agree that the key to achieving
high search rankings lies in the effective use of meta-data
(invisible tags contained within a site's HTML script
that provide
information on content), along with a thorough understanding
of the real-life words and phrases surfers actually
use to find information, and simplicity of coding and
design.
Surprisingly, perhaps, for such a tech-centric environment,
many companies also favour a human element. Leeds-based
Sticky Eyes, for example, has a team of 18 dedicated
journalists "sleuthing" the sites belonging
to clients such as Ferrari, Pedigree Dogfood and Dunlop,
ensuring pages are kept as relevant and visible as possible.
While founder Paul Sowerby admits it is a labour-intensive
process, he guarantees clients a top 10 ranking in the
eight biggest engines, or their money back. "With
some engines changing their algorithm every 10 days
or so, the human element is vital to delivering an assured
outcome. It also helps us match a client site's performance
against its top five competitors and identify new marketing
opportunities," he says.
Search Engineers, established in 1997 as the UK's first
SEO specialist, relies on much the same business model,
with a on-site editorial team and a "no placement,
no payment" policy. Simon Cleaver, chief executive,
is also quick to point out that to be effective, SEO
should be viewed as a process, not a project. "Each
spider looks for different things - key words, external
links, number of hits - so it is important to constantly
tailor sites to cater for each engine's preferences.
To supplement this, we manually resubmit all client
sites to the engines at least once a month and rectify
any position slippage," he says. The company currently
services around 5,000 sites, including big names such
as Railtrack and Virgin Travel Stores.
While net libertarians have traditionally argued that
SEO unfairly skews search results in favour of companies,
rather than users, there is a general consensus nowadays
that ethical SEO can actually help customers find the
services they want, delivering the kind of one-to-one
marketing and service the internet has always promised.
"In reality, there's little difference between
the online world and the world of bricks and mortar,"
says Michael O'Connell, head of online communications
strategies with Brodeur Worldwide. "One shop may
pay for a prominent listing in the Yellow
Pages, another may not. Both can be found, but one has
an advantage - an advantage they paid for - in attracting
customers."
Users will also be relieved to hear that unscrupulous
practices that attempt to "trick" search engines
through techniques such as excessive keyword repetition,
spamming (continual automated resubmission of sites),
or cloaking, which uses invisible "gateway"
pages to attract the attention of search engines while
redirecting unsuspecting users to a site often unrelated
to the original search criteria, are roundly denounced
by the professionals.
Henrik Hansen, director of marketing for enterprise
search with Inktomi, which provides the search database
that powers engines such as MSN, AOL, Lycos and Freeserve,
says his company's engineers actively work to combat
unethical behaviour through increasingly sophisticated
anti-spamming algorithms and regular human intervention
by a team of editors, who check search results for accuracy
and relevance.
Danny Sullivan, a well-known search specialist and
editor of online publication SearchEngineWatch.com,
says cloaking also has the potential to degrade the
quality of the web by choking it with reams of irrelevant
pages designed only to get picked up by the engines.
"Using techniques that try to trick the engines
into doing what you want is not where companies should
be putting their web development effort," he says.
"Properly done, SEO can be highly effective, generating
qualified traffic for site
owners, improving search engine accuracy and delivering
relevant, useful information to users."
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