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Here are some tips to help you create a good site architecture and navigation scheme. These tips, when used with keyword and link best practices, will help search engines find the content on your web pages.
Navigation
1.Be consistent and consolidate information wherever possible."Help", "FAQ",and "Instructions" can be all put into one page or one category that makes it easy for users to find that type of information. Break information up inside the category if you need to. In addition, saying "Instructions for filling out such and such form", uses the keywords of what the page is about, helping search engines find the page.
2.Use breadcrumb trails. This type of navigation literally creates a trail that users can follow back to where they came from. For example: Home > Category 1> Bucket A > Bucket B > Bucket C. Breadcrumbs are used in conjunction with regular navigation. They don't replace it. They're nearly always text links, in a smaller font. Large sites should have top-of-the-page navigation pointing to the top-level pages and category navigation on the left with breadcrumb navigation on the page itself. Footer navigation should be placed at the bottom of the page.
3.The footer of web pages is also important. It's important to give your users a quick way to the home page or key pages. The footer is a good place to put text-only links that are redundant to the top-level navigation, so your user doesn't have to scroll back up to the top of the page. Supplying this added convenience also allows another chance for you to use those important keywords, and helps users who have their graphics turned off. 4.Use keyword phrases within your main content links. These links may go to the exact same place as top-level navigation links but they're labeled with keywords related to the same topic. For example, a top-level navigation link may be labeled "Local Weather Forecasts", while a text link lower down on the page from inside a paragraph (pointing to the same page) might say "Weather for your Zip Code". Since users and search engines use both terms heavily, you're covering your bases by taking this extra measure.
5.Always use a sitemap. Search engines love to have a site map through which they can quickly and easily access your site's pages for indexing. When creating a site map for your websites, be sure to put it at the root level (not within any subfolders or directories), link to it from your home page, and name it site_map.html (or .htm, whichever extension you are using for your site). A table of contents is also helpful in some cases.
Simply create a list of links (similar to an outline format) that shows how the pages of your site are linked to from each upper tier page, and name these links using keyword-rich, but relevant, text links. Add a small paragraph about your organization, or about the subject matter of the page, at the top of the page. Keep the site map page simple, using no graphics (or very few if necessary, perhaps your organization's logo). Be sure to link to your site map or table of contents near the top of the homepage as it will be picked up by crawlers. And when submitting your site's pages to the major engines, be sure to submit the site map page as well as your home page. Labels: Advanced SEO, SEO, SEO Concepts, Useful tips for SEO
     
 General Best Practices
- Search engines prefer pages with at least 250 characters.
- Use the keywords a user will use to find your website or web pages, not the keywords you want your content to be found on. Use words on your page that resonate with your target audience and are descriptive of your site. For example, consider using the search term "car sales" rather than "vehicle auctions". Get inside the mind of the user.
- Map keywords and phrases to their implicit intent . How are the keywords related to how the visitor is trying to solve their problem? How do the keywords and phrases relate to what stage visitors are in their seeking process? What would the visitor consider a success based upon the keyword? Use these keywords to plan internal hyperlinks that provide the most relevant and persuasive content.
- On your home page, select phrases that describe the general theme of the site, but don't try to cover everything on your home page.
- For your site's internal pages, identify the most important subject of that page and pick words that are specific to that subject.
- Hint: Looking for a key phrase you want to target? Search for it in Google, MSN, and Yahoo! and see what results come up. If the results aren't relevant to your product or service, it's not a key phrase you want to target-no matter how many hits it gets!
How to Determine the Best Keywords
Look at Your Log Files. Log files can be a good way to determine what your audience is searching for and what keywords you should use to draw users to your content.
Log files:
* Capture the "exact phrase" that searchers entered. * Give insight into the number of words searchers are using. * Provide a rich source of keyword data.
Remember, log files only show the keywords that have brought users to our site. They don't show you the unsuccessful keywords that didn't bring users to your site. Target Variations of Your Keywords. Be sure you target your content to address the following:
- Variant spellings - Slang, acronyms, and abbreviations - Plurals - Synonyms
Evaluate Your Keywords. Keywords may have multiple meanings. "Accessibility" might mean "handicapped access" or "website monitoring." "Chips" may refer to the snack food or computer part.
Pay attention to keywords used alone or combined with another word. For example, "passport" by itself is likely a search for information; "passport" searched with a location is likely a search for services. Keep this in mind when choosing keywords for a page.
 Where to Put Your Keywords
Major search engines emphasize text found in:
* TITLE tag * Text in the H1 and H2 tag * In paragraphs and general text on the site * In STRONG tags: Keyword * In the file names of the web document: www.domain.com/keyword.html * ALT description attributes on image tags:  * Text placed in and around hypertext links * TITLE attributes on anchor tags: * SUMMARY attributes on tables: Labels: Advanced SEO, SEO, SEO Concepts, Useful tips for SEO
     
Optional and automatically excluded words
Google usually returns pages that use all of the words you search for. However, if some of the words in your search don't appear on the best pages we find, we'll also consider pages that don't include them. For example, when you search for recipe for a cheese souffle, we might return recipes that don't happen to include the words "for" or "a".
Very common words (often called "stopwords"), such as "the", "and", or "of", are usually dropped from searches because they typically don't convey much information compared to the other words in a search. We might also treat words as optional if they're redundant given the other words in your search. For example, in UV sun protective swimwear, requiring "UV" to appear might exclude high quality pages, so we may exclude "UV" in compiling your results.
Even when words are treated as optional, they're still taken into account in assessing how relevant a page is to your query. For example, Google shows different results for University of Pennsylvania than we do for University in Pennsylvania. Generally, excluding common words allows us to return better search results. If one of these words is important to your search, you can precede it with a plus sign "+" to ensure that Google requires it to appear in every search result. So, for example, a search for +The Red Violin will return only results that include the word "the."
Alternate words
Google usually returns pages that use all of the words you included in your search. Sometimes, however, we'll consider other words as substitutes if we think that doing so will improve the results we show you. For example, if you search for dance marathons, Google's results might include pages that talk about a dance marathon. On the result pages, we'll highlight occurrences of both the original and alternate search terms that appear in titles and snippets.
There are several ways Google identifies alternate words:
* Stemming finds alternate forms of a word, such as singular or plural variations. * Synonyms can help someone searching for UC Berkeley law school find pages that mention Boalt law school. * Abbreviations expand search terms so that rc model airplanes might also find pages about radio control model airplanes. * Words might be combined or split so that we return pages about organic dog food when you enter organic dogfood. * Because it's often easier to type words without accents, a search for a coup d'etat might return pages that talk about a coup d'état..
Usually, the alternate words we add to your results will help your search, but we understand that in some cases you want to restrict your search to precisely the terms you enter. In that case, you can precede a word with a plus sign "+" to tell Google you're looking for that exact term. So, for example, if you search for dance +marathons, we'll only return pages that are talking about more than one.
Phrase searches
Sometimes you'll only want results that include an exact phrase. In this case, simply put quotation marks around your search terms.
"the long and winding road"
Phrase searches are particularly effective if you're searching for proper names ("George Washington"), lyrics ("the long and winding road"), or other famous phrases ("This was their finest hour").
Negative terms
If your search term has more than one meaning (bass, for example, could refer to fishing or music) you can focus your search by putting a minus sign ("-") in front of words related to the meaning you want to avoid.
For example, here's how you'd find pages about bass-heavy lakes, but not bass-heavy music:
"bass -music" Note: when you include a negative term in your search, be sure to include a space before the minus sign. Labels: Advanced SEO, SEO, SEO Concepts, Useful tips for SEO
     
Link Development Tips
Link development is essential to a successful SEO campaign. The main disadvantage is it takes time, whereas paid search advertising (in Google, Overture, Find What, etc.) results are nearly instantaneous.Link development's main advantage is dynamic, cumulative, and difficult to imitate. Many sites maintain search engine visibility and the resulting qualified traffic because of successful link development, not just based on the number of keywords on a page.
Some link development tactics we commonly use:
* Choose quality over quantity. Link quality carries more weight than quantity. Spend time getting the highest quality links pointing to your site. One of search engine spammers' biggest sales pitches is, "Get millions of links to your site." Don't fall for that arcane, useless pitch.
* Begin with Web directories. Yahoo Directory and Business.com are two reliable places for high-quality links. Both require annual submission fees. If their links don't positively affect your site's link development, don't renew.
* Harness online publicity. How-to tips, helpful articles, even useful press releases often garner links from other Web sites. Publicity is usually part of a company's overall marketing plan, so harnessing these resources for link development can be a simple task.
* Use blogs and forums wisely. Blogs and forums can call attention to useful information on your own site. * Use search engines to research link development. Look at competitors' sites to determine their link development strategy. It can help you with your own. What newspapers and media outlets do they use for online publicity? What Web directories link to their sites? No link popularity checker ("link:domain.com" in Google, "linkdomain:domain.com" in Yahoo) can substitute for doing the research yourself. Labels: Advanced SEO, SEO, SEO Concepts, Useful tips for SEO
     
 The building blocks of organic (free) search engine optimization include: 1. Make good use of keywords. For users to find your web pages on your own site's search engine and in commercial search engines like Google, pages must contain keyword phrases that match the phrases your user’s type into search boxes. 2. Have effective site architecture. You can develop a good site architecture that will help users easily understand the structure of your site, navigate the content, and succeed using your search engine. A few, simple navigation and coding tips can help you do that. 3.Have a process for indexing your site (using robots. text files).  4. Ensure quality links and link popularity. The last basic of successful search engine optimization is link popularity. That's the number and quality of links that point to your website. Link quality (links from popular, highly trafficked, or respected sites) carries far more weight than link quantity. Labels: Advanced SEO, SEO, SEO guidelines, Useful tips for SEO
     
     
What is It?
Search engine robots will check a special plain text file in the root of each server called robots.txt before indexing a site. Robots.txt implements the Robots Exclusion Protocol, which allows you as a web manager, to define what parts of your site are off-limits to search engine crawlers. For example, Web managers can disallow access to the Common Gateway Interface (CGI), or private and temporary directories, because they don’t want pages in those areas indexed.
Here is some general information about robots.txt files.
Robots.txt File
The robots exclusion standard or robots.txt protocol is a convention to prevent cooperating web spiders and other web robots from accessing all or part of a website. The information specifying the parts that should not be accessed is specified in a file called robots.txt in the top-level directory of the website. The robots.txt file is made up of two parts, the User-agent and the Disallow. The User-agent specifies which robots to allow or disallow and the Disallow specifies which directories robots can or cannot crawl. The robots.txt is a gentleman's agreement and some crawlers, such as Google, may ignore the robots.txt file that disallows all crawling.
Example of a recommended robots.txt files blocking crawling of the cgi-bin, scripts, and images directories:
User-agent: * Disallow: /cgi-bin/ Disallow: /scripts/ Disallow: /images/
Why It's Important
The USASearch.gov team has received several emails from federal webmasters informing us that their websites are not being crawled by USA.gov (formerly FirstGov.gov). We have found that most of these sites have disallowed searchbots from crawling their websites. In order for your content to be included in the USASearch.gov, or any search engine, you must allow search engines to crawl your site. USASearch.gov uses the MSN Search index to provide its core results. At the very least, federal webmasters should allow MSNBot to crawl their sites so they can be included in search results for USA.gov, the official web portal of the U.S. government.
In addition, OMB's Memorandum, M-06-02, Improving Public Access to and Dissemination of Government Information and Using the Federal Enterprise Architecture Data Reference Model says: "when disseminating information to the public-at-large, publish your information directly to the Internet. This procedure exposes information to freely available and other search functions and adequately organizes and categorizes your information."
This memorandum assumes that your robots.txt file is allowing search engines to crawl your site. If you are disallowing search engine crawlers, you are not exposing information to search engines, and therefore not complying with this guidance.
Best Practices
*Include the robots.txt file in your server's root directory. This is standard web management practice. If you have robots.txt files in various subdirectories of your site, it will block crawling of that subdirectory and any directory below.
*Search your server for stray robots.txt files and delete any robots.txt file below the root directory.
Meta-Tag Robots Exclusion
Review your pages to make sure you are not using robots exclusion in your Meta tags if you intend for those pages to be publicly disseminated. For those who are not familiar with Meta Tag Robots Exclusion, HTML meta tags can be used to exclude robots according to the contents of a web page. Again, this is purely advisory, and also relies on the cooperation of the robot programs. Labels: SEO guidelines, SEO Indexing, Useful tips for SEO
     
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