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Feature Article |
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How to Boost Your Search Engine Ranking,
Part III |
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In the previous two articles, we explained
how to perform the Keyword Analysis and
Website Modification steps of search engine
optimization. |
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Now we're going to tackle the third step,
Search Engine Submission. |
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Show Me the Money |
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Gone - long gone - are the days when you
could simply "submit your site" to to the
big search engines. |
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Today, search engines need to show a profit,
and most of the major engines expect to be
paid for their listings. Google is the
exception, and will index and list your
pages for free. (Google makes its money from
pay-per-click advertising on the Google
site.) |
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Paid listings can be expensive. To submit a
single URL to all of the major engines will
cost you in the neighborhood of $500!
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To reduce costs, I suggest you visit each of
the paid search engines (and those
that repackage them under a different
brand). Rank them based on your their likely
appeal to your website audience, and only
submit to those you think will deliver. |
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Choose Your Partners |
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Here are the search engines and directories
I suggest you evaluate: |
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Engine |
Fee |
Renewal |
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Open
Directory Project (DMOZ) |
free |
n/a |
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Yahoo! Express
Directory |
$299
annual fee |
annual |
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Google |
free |
n/a |
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Inktomi
via
PositionTech |
$39 1st
URL; $25 each additional |
annual |
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FAST/Alltheweb
via
PositionTech |
$34 1st
URL; $15 each additional |
annual |
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AskJeeves
via
PositionTech |
$30 1st
URL; $18 each additional |
annual |
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Altavista via
InfoSpider |
$39 1st
URL; $29 2nd – 10th URL, $19
thereafter |
6 months |
|
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For a complete view of search engines and
how some "package up" the search results and
directories of others, see the
search engine relationship chart on the
WebmasterWorld site. |
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Are You Missing Links? |
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The DMOZ and Yahoo directories are relevant
because some search engines (notably Google)
also evaluate incoming links to your pages
when calculating your search engine rank. |
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If the external "linked from" pages and your
"linked to" pages have similar keywords,
then your pages will get a boost in search
engine rank - for those keywords. The size
of the boost depends on the existing page
rank of the external pages. |
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Because Google and other search engines see
the DMOZ and Yahoo directories as
"important" for the topics they list, links
from them to your site will boost your rank
for the keywords associated with both your
"category" and the actual text of your
listings. |
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The Waiting Game |
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After you submit, you can expect results
from the paid listing within 48 hours. This
makes it easy to check the results, and to
"tune" your keyword density or rethink your
keyword choices. |
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For Google submissions, you must wait
patiently until the next Google indexing
(the "Google dance"). These occur roughly
every 30 days. For an informal listing of
recent Google dances, see the
Google Update History, also on the
WebmasterWorld site. |
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For DMOZ submissions, you just have to wait
and see. There is no requirement that they
list you, so you may need to try more than
one submission to get listed. But don't give
up - this directory is worth it. Several
search services base their directories on
DMOZ. |
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We'll, that wraps up this brief introduction
to search engine optimization. There's a lot
more to discuss, particularly with respect
to your "incoming link strategy". |
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Please join us in the
Search Engine Optimization forum with
your questions, comments and suggestions. |
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- John Gaffney
J. Gaffney Associates, Inc. |
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Did You
Know...
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… you can copy entire pages from one site to
another using MyStuff? |
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Have you ever wanted to take a page from a
website you’ve made and use it in another?
Using MyStuff makes it easy. Here’s how. |
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Open your page in WebStudio. Choose
SelectAll from the Edit menu. Choose Copy
from the Edit menu. This puts all of the
objects on the page onto the clipboard. |
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Next, click on the MyStuff tab in the
WebStudio galleries. Move the mouse over one
of the thumbnails in the gallery and right
click the mouse button. Choose Paste from
the resulting menu. This places the page’s
objects in the MyStuff gallery. You can drag
and drop that page’s object on to any other
page you want now that it is in the MyStuff
gallery. |
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To add that page’s objects to another site,
close the currently open site, and open the
site you want to add the page to. Create a
new page by clicking Add Page on the
PageList. |
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Then drag and drop the objects from the
MyStuff gallery onto the new page. All of
the objects will be added to the page. Note
that they are all selected for you so you
can move them to your preferred location on
the page. |
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Note that any background you have on your
original page won’t be copied to the new
page. You’ll have to do that manually. |
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A Little Known Tip |
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A side effect of clicking on one of the
items in the MyStuff gallery, or just about
any other gallery, is that the object or
objects in that gallery item are immediately
placed on the WebStudio clipboard. So, if
you simply clicked on the objects in the tip
above, instead of dragging and dropping
them, you’d have all of those objects on the
clipboard. |
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Here’s where it gets interesting, especially
when moving pages. |
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Once you’ve clicked on the objects in the
gallery and they are on the clipboard, you
can choose the PasteInPlace command to put
the objects back on to the page in the exact
positions they were copied from.
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That’s it! |
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Paste In Place |
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We’ve had many people ask what the
PasteInPlace command is for. This command
pastes whatever is on the clipboard back
into the location it was copied or cut from.
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Users of WebStudio 1.0 and 2.0 may remember
that WebStudio would paste everything back
in the same position it was copied/cut from.
With WebStudio 3 we took the industry
standard approach of offsetting pasted
objects from their original location.
|
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The reason for this is so there is a visual
clue that something has happened. We then
added the Paste In Place command to enable
you to take objects or groups of objects and
paste them into the identical place on other
pages in your site. |
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HTML
Corner
|
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Creating Email Links |
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Adding a link that brings up a person’s
email with your “To:” address already in it
is simple. |
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You’ll use the MyLinks list in the Links
Gallery as described in this month’s Tips
and Techniques article. |
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The difference between adding a “normal”
link and an email link is the link you
enter. |
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To make an email link, all you do is prefix
the person’s email address with "mailto:".
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So, if your email address was george@webstudio.com,
the link to add to the MyLinks dialog is
this: |
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mailto:george@webstudio.com |
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Enter that into the MyLinks dialog and then
drag and drop it onto any text or object as
described in Tips and Techniques and you’ll
have email links! |
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