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Internet marketing advice-Search Engines |
Search Engine Basics
Love them, hate them or fear them, the major
search engines are some of the most powerful tools at our
disposal. When it stopped publishing the number on 2005,
Google had over 8 billion pages indexed in its database. It
would simply not be possible to navigate the internet at that
size without a comprehensive and accurate search tool.
How do they work? Every search engine works
slightly differently, but they have a basic structure in
common. They have maintain a large store of information on all
the websites that they find. They store some images of the
pages themselves and they classify the site in terms of the
type of information that it contains and a measure of how
useful the page would be for someone searching for information
on a certain topic. This store of information is called the
index.
The index is fed information from the web
using a software tool which has several names. You will see
references to a web crawler, spider, or webbot and they all
mean essentially the same thing. This is a tool that moves
across the web, visiting web pages and reading their content
in order to populate the search engine index. If you have a
site that is not in a search engine index there are several
ways of getting the webbot to visit. You can go to the search
engine and manually enter your web address and request a
crawl. This is not always an effective way of getting a visit.
The other way is to build links with existing sites. When the
webbot next visits the existing site they will follow the link
to your site and discover it.
There are in fact several parts to webbots.
The Googlebot has two main components. Freshbot is the part of
the crawler that finds new sites. Another component, Deepbot
will then revisit the new site and do a more in depth analysis
of the site. Don't be surprised if only a small part of your
site is initially listed in the index. A deeper crawl will
find the rest of your pages along as you have structures your
site correctly.
If you have information on your site that
you do not wish the search engine to index, it is relatively
straight-forward to indicate to the webbot where you want them
not to look. Your web master can add a command to your HTML to
keep them away from sensitive data. Of course search engines
do not guess passwords, so that is another way of keeping them
out.
When you are building your site, you must
consider how your pages look to webbots in the same way that
you do for your human visitors. Bots cannot cannot read images
for example, so any data in an image will be missed by them.
Many sites use Java to generate menus. The bot will miss all
the links in that menu because it is an image, not text.
Similarly, drop-down menus are very useful for humans, but are
invisible to bots. The crawler will navigate your site using
the links that it finds. Having a clear structure is an
important part of web design for this reason. If you really
want to avoid any linking problems, you can present the search
engine with an XML file called a sitemap, which will guide ir
around your site.
Crawlers have none of the human abilities to read a page
and quickly determine what it is about, and if it is useful.
Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is concerned with presenting
pages, so that it is clear to the crawler what the page is
about and that it is worth ranking well in the index. This is
done by a thorough understanding of how the webbots read pages
and also an up-to-date picture of what specific search engines
are looking for when they are analysing the quality of the
content on a site. As with any new and rapidly changing
technology where there are fortunes to be made and lost, SEO
attracts some of the best and some of the worst people
involved in the internet. Be wary of anyone who cannot show
you a clear track record, and avoid anyone who offers you a
guarantee of a top ranking in a short time.
This article was written by Mark McCormack from Markmedia, a
B2B marketing consultancy. Mark has over 20 years experience
in all aspects of marketing. His website is
www.markmedia.org.uk. This article is copyright and all
rights are reserved.
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