How Web Design Can Affect
Search Engine Rankings
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Search
Engine Optimisation
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1. Size Matters.
The size of a web site can have a huge impact on
search engine rankings. Search engines love content, so
if you have only a few pages to your site and your
competitors have dozens, it's difficult to see a top page
ranking for your site. In some cases it may be difficult
to present several pages of information about your
business or products, so you may need to think about
adding free resources for visitors. It will help in
broadening the scope of your web site (which search
engines like) as well as keep visitors on your site
longer, possibly resulting in more sales.
2. Graphics-Based Web Sites
While web sites that offer the visitor a more
esthetically-pleasing experience may seem like the best
choice for someone searching for your product, they are
the most difficult to optimize. Since search engine
robots cannot read text within graphics or animation,
what they see may be just a small amount of text. And if
we learned anything from point #1, small amounts of
content will not result in top rankings. If you really
must offer the visitor a graphics-heavy or Flash web
site, consider creating an html-based side of your site
that is also available to visitors. This site will be
much easier to promote on the search engines and your new
found visitors will also have the option to jump over to
the nicer looking part of your site.
3. Dynamic Web Pages.
If most of your web site is generated by a large
database (such as a large book dealer with stock that is
changing by the minute) you may find that some of your
pages do not get indexed by major search engines. If you
look at the URL of these pages they can be extremely long
and have characters such as ?, #, &, %, or = along
with huge amounts of seemingly random numbers or letters.
Since these pages are automatically generated by the
database as needed, the search engines have a tough time
keeping them up to date and relevant for search engine
users.
One idea is to offer a search engine friendly site map
listing all your static pages just to let them know that
you do have permanent content on your site. Secondly, if
search engines see links going to and from these dynamic
pages within a good internal linking system, this may
also lead to the pages getting indexed. The link
popularity of your site may carry more weight in this
case as well, so if you can't offer as much static
content as your competition, make sure you have an
aggressive link campaign on the go.
4. Proper Use of HTML.
There is quite a
bit of sub-par web design software out there. Word
processors usually have a way to create HTML documents
which can be easily uploaded to a site via ftp. However,
in many cases the code that the search engine robots see
is mostly lines and lines of font and position
formatting, not relevant content. The more efficiently
written web sites usually achieve higher rankings. A good
choice for web design software is Macromedia Dreamweaver,
as it is an industry standard. It also makes using CSS
(Cascading Style Sheets) a breeze, which can drastically
cut down on the amount of text formatting in HTML code.
Hand-coding HTML to design sites is also a good method if
you are proficient enough.
There are some no brainers too: Web sites with abnormal
amounts of hyperlinks, bold or italicized text, improper
use of heading, alt, or comment tags can also expect to
see low rankings.
5. Choosing a Domain Name.
The golden rule to web development of any kind is to
keep your visitors in mind above all else - even search
engine optimization. When choosing a domain name, you
should pick either your business name or a brief
description of your products. Domain names can always
help with search engine optimization, as it is another
area of your web site that search engines look for
keywords. Forget about long-winded domains such as
www.number-one-best-rare-used-books-on-earth.com as no
one will ever remember it and it will be hard to print on
business cards or in ads.
If you need to change your domain name for any reason you
obviously don't want to lose existing rankings. An easy
way to do this, and one that is currently supported by
most search engines, is the 301 redirect. It allows you
to keep your existing rankings for your old domain name,
while forwarding visitors to your new web site instantly.
6. Using Frames.
Don't use frames.
Frames are a thing of the 90's (and in the Internet world
that is eons ago) and are not even supported by some
search engines. The search engines that are able to index
your site through frames still don't recommend them.
Whatever you are trying to accomplish by using frames can
usually be done with the help of PHP includes or CSS.
Some browsers are not frames-compatible, so there is the
danger of some visitors not being able to see your site
at all. Bookmarking of individual pages within a frame
becomes difficult without lengthly scripts being written.
7. Update Your
Information.
Not only does
information printed two or three years ago look badly on
your organization when it is read by a visitor, it is
also looked down upon by search engines. Web sites that
continuously update and grow their web sites usually
experience higher rankings than stagnant sites. When the
trick to SEO is offering visitors the most relevant
information, you can bet that the age of web pages is
taken into consideration by search engines. Consider
creating a section of your site devoted to news within
your organization, or have a constantly updated resources
area.
Many shortfalls of web sites can easily be attributed to
designers who just don't keep the user or search engines
in mind. Search engine algorithms are quickly improving
to try and list the most user-friendly sites higher,
given that the content and link popularity are there to
back it up. So first and foremost, know your target
market and make your web site work for them before
focusing on search engine optimization. If you build it
(properly), they will come.
About
the Author
Copyright John Metzler
of Abalone Designs, November 2004-12-09. This article may
be freely distributed if credit is given to the author.
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