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By: Ken McKay, Fri Aug 4th, 2006
The object of search engines is to give their visitors a list of web pages relevant to the search words, in the order of relevance to the search words. So what do they want from websites?
Relevance to a search:
In the HTML coding, the title tag is
In the HTML coding, the heading tag is
In the HTML coding, such a link could be Whodickies. If "Whodickies" are important enough to have a link to them, they are very relevant to a visitor's search for whodickies.
Key words near the top and the bottom of the text are important. Certainly many search results show the beginning and end of pages.
The intensity of key words in relation to the total words in a page tells a search engine if there is spamming. Experience has shown that if the key words in a search make up more than 10% of the total web page the page is marked down. Some experts say 5%.
The more inside pages linking back to the home page the more relevant the home page appears to the search engine. A website with 30 pages must seem to have more information than one with 3 pages.
A website with links from 20 other websites seems more popular than one with links from only 2 other websites. The quality of such links has a bearing. e.g. Links from other websites which display your key words are better that links from websites without those words.
Many websites publish articles on many subjects. Check the formats acceptable. Compose your article, then submit it.
Why do different search engines give different rankings to the same website? Each search engine may give a different weight to each of the factors above.
Why would a website lose or gain ranking position, without any change? Search engines change their secret algorithms (formula of factor weighting) from time to time. Other websites may enter the lists, change, or leave the lists.
Remember that the main reason for putting up a website it to be found by search engines, so do all you can to be friendly to them.
More information on of websites can be found at platypus websites - www.platywebs.com.au
About the author: Ken McKay has developed commercial websites since 1999. (Yeah - last century!)