Posts Tagged ‘Ranking’

SEO:Search Engine Submission Tips - Google, Yahoo, MSN and Teoma

Monday, June 30th, 2008

The top 4 search engines are as follows:

1. Google.com - The best of the best, what can we say about Google that others haven’t :-) Read our detailed review of Google with tips on submission and ranking.
2. Yahoo.com - Yahoo is getting better and better! Their Yahoo Directory is also very popular.
3. MSN.com - Microsoft’s attempt to get a piece of the search engine pie. They are also catching up fast.
4. Teoma.com - A search engine to look out for. Their results do seem to vary considerably from the above.

In order to not be repetitive in our advice we recommend you read our article on Google Submission, Ranking and Tips. You should be able to do well on all the other search engines too, though ranking and time period for updations may vary.

Search Engine Placement & Positioning: Ranking Well

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

Terms such as “search engine placement,” “search engine positioning” and “search engine ranking” refer to a site actually doing well for particular terms or for a range of terms at search engines. This is the ultimate goal for many people — to get that “top ten” ranking for a particular keyword or search terms.

Using SEO to Boost your Website’s Search Engine Ranking

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Most website owners know that organic search engine results are the best way to get visitors to their site. Organic search engine results are the websites that come up when a user searches on one of the major search engines such as Google, MSN, or Yahoo. Internet users trust these search results much more than paid advertising and a large percentage of most website’s traffic comes from this source. This is why it is important to know how to get your website ranked high in search engines.

Search engine optimization is the process through which web site owners improve their chances of being ranked high in organic search engine listings. There are many ways to do this, including the use of content and keywords on the site, properly using meta tags, and building links. Theses are just a few of the ways that you can help your website rank high, and if you are serious about getting on the first page of listings, here are some more search engine optimization tips.

One of the most important things you can do to optimize your website is to add quality keyword rich content. Most people think of articles when they think of content, and while articles are a great way to add keywords and value to your site, content can also include descriptions, headings, and alternate image tags. You can include relevant keywords in all of these areas that will help to boost your search engine ranking. Just make sure that you use keywords in the proper context.

Another way to boost your search engine ranking is to create links on your site to other related sites and to build a network of links from other sites to your site. Links help to boost your search engine rankings because the programs or spiders that search engines use to index sites will come across these links and they will add value to your site.

An often overlooked way to boost search engine rankings is meta tags. While meta tags are not as important today as they were during the internet’s early years, using meta tags properly will help to boost your search engine rankings. Meta tags are part of your website’s html code and appear at the top of each page in the header tag. You can include keywords in the meta tags that will help to get your site ranked higher. Be sure to use keywords specific to each individual page as you fill them in for your entire site.

On Site SEO Techniques

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

1. Keyword Rich Content - identify a few keywords for your article that you’re hoping will get indexed highly by Google. Don’t pick too many but consider the questions

* How do I want people to find this post in Search Engines?
* What will they type into Google if they want information on the topic you’re writing?
* How would I find information on this topic in the Search Engines?
* What results come up when I do plug these keywords into Google?
* What other keywords are other sites using?

The answer to these questions will give you a hint as to what words you’ll want to see repeated throughout your article a number of times.

These keywords will need to be the most common words used in your article. Use them in some or all of the following ways:

* Keywords in post and page titles (read my post on using keywords in titles)
* Keywords in URL of page (blog herald wrote on this a while back)
* Keywords in outbound links (read this article on the pros and cons of outbound links)
* Keywords in bold tags (try do it at least once)
* Keywords in heading tags (there is debate over exactly how to use them but it’s generally accepted that h1 tags are important and that h2, h3, h4 etc tags also have an impact. Having said that I’ve seen some pages rank very well in search engines without using heading tags. There are many tutorials online about heading tags - here’s one.)
* Keywords in image alt tags (here’s how)
* Keywords in the general throughout the text of your post - but especially early on in the first few sentences
* Keywords in meta tags (they seem to be less valuable these days but many still believe they are useful with some search engines - here’s a Guide to meta tags)

Of course you can go over the top with keywords in posts and let it destroy your content - but if it fits with what you’ve written tweak it to include the words you are targeting a couple of extra times. Most SEO experts recommend getting your keyword density up to between 5-20% - I think 20% is probably bordering on massacring your content.

One last word of warning and disclaimer on keyword rich content (because I can just hear the comments on this post already) - don’t sacrifice your readers experience of your site just for the sake of SEO. Yes keyword density can be important in climbing the search engine rankings - but more important is that your content and design are user friendly and helpful to readers. There is nothing worse than a site that is stuffed with keywords - these sites come off as cheap, nasty and spammy - don’t fall for the temptation.

2. Themed sites - One of the growing theories of SEO is that you are more likely to rank well if you have a substantial amount of pages on a similar theme. ie a niche topic blog will probably rank higher than a general one that covers many topics. Build a blog with over 200 pages of content on the same theme and you’ll increase your chances of ranking well as SEs will see you as an authority on the topic. The take home advice here is to keep to some kind of a topic/niche/theme for your blog. It is also probably another argument for categories and tagging posts that relate together strongly.

3. Site Design - Search Engines like well laid out, well coded and easily to navigate sites. Make sure your pages validate (I need to work more on this) and that they are viewable on all major browsers. Search Engines don’t tend to like too much Flash, Frames or Java Script in your site - keep it simple and clean and their robots will index your site a lot faster and more accurately. Also try to keep your blog free from dead links (a challenge for those of us with older blogs with big archives).

4. Interlink your Site - The way Search Engines index your blog is to send little robot crawlers to your site to track what you’ve written and follow the links. Make it easier for them to get around your blog by using internal linking wisely. Most SEO experts recommend that you provide some sort of Site Map that means every page on your blog is just a link or two away from every other one. One way to do this for bloggers is to make sure that your category pages are in your sidebars as I do in this blog. Also make sure every page links back to your main page and any other important pages on your site. If you’re writing on a topic you’ve previously written about consider linking to what you’ve written before or use a ‘other relevant posts’ feature at the base of your article. You’ll see in my menus at the top of the page a number of my key categories and articles. One of the impacts of having them highlighted in this way is that they have become some of the most highly ranked pages on ProBlogger simply because they are linked to from every page of this blog.

5. Update regularly - The more you update your blog the more often Search Engines will send their crawlers to your site to index it. This will mean your new articles could appear in the index within days or even hours rather than weeks. This is a natural benefit of blogging - make the most of it!

6. Outbound Links - There is debate over how SEs treat outbound links from your blog. I’m in the camp who believe that relevant outbound links enhance your site’s ranking in search engines. I always link out to quality relevant sites that I think my readers will find useful and have a little anecdotal evidence that seems to support the theory that this is healthy for the way SEs index you (check out Waynes article on the topic for more info). Linking to sites outside your own blog does mean you end up sending traffic away from your blog so you need to count the cost of such a strategy. Note that you should always try to link to reputable and relevant sites to your own page. Also keep in mind that too many outbound could have detrimental impact upon your blog. Like in most things in SEO - moderation is the key.

7. Choose your domain name wisely - there are numerous factors to keep in mind when selecting a domain name. For one you might like to include your keyword in it if possible. Secondly you should do a little research to see if someone else has previously used the domain. This could have both positive and negative impact. If it was a quality site with inbound links you might reap some benefits but if it was a banned spam site you could still be banned from Google for a long time. One service you might want to use to check expired domains is Way Back Machine at Archive.org.

8. Register your Domain for a Lengthy Period - a recent patent by Google indicates that it now looks at the length of your domain’s registration in ranking it. It does this because many spam sites have short registrations and a longer one indicates that you’re building a site with substance and are in it for the long haul.

9. One topic per post - the more tightly focused the theme of a page the better when Search Engines come to rank it. Sometimes you might find yourself writing long posts that end up covering a number of different topics. They might relate loosely but if search engine ranking is what you’re after it could be better to break up your post into smaller more focused pieces.

10. Write optimal length posts - there is some thought going around the Search Engine Optimization community that pages that are too short can get passed over for high rankings. I try to keep posts at least 250 words. Of course there are some posts on my blogs that are shorter, but if I’m writing a post that I want to rank well I try to give it some meatiness in terms of length. On the other hand don’t make it too long either - because in doing so you make it difficult to keep your keyword density up and could end up with a less tightly focused page. Research also shows that longer articles can have a pretty steep drop off rate in readers after the text gets below the ‘fold’ or to the end of the first screen of article .

11. Avoid Duplicate content - Google warns publishers in its guidelines about having the same content on multiple pages. This goes for both multiple pages that you own but also pages that others own. This is because a tactic of spammers is often to reproduce content on many pages and/or to steel content from other sites. There is some debate over what duplicate content does and doesn’t include (for instance many bloggers use ‘free articles’ as content on their blogs - these articles often appear on hundreds and even thousands of other sites around the web and to me could be seen as duplicate content) - my advice is to be very careful about how many places your content appears. I do republish occasional posts (or parts of them) but try not to do this too much and attempt to add elements that are unique on each occasion that the posts are republished).

12. Ping - services like Pingomatic (there are numerous others too) will ping a variety of websites for you to notify them that you’ve updated. In doing so you’ll also be letting search engines know that you’ve updated which will trigger their robots to come visit your blog. I’d also suggest pinging Google’s blog search tool.

13. Submit your RSS to MyYahoo - submitting your RSS feed to MyYahoo seems to help with getting indexed on Yahoo. Read more about this at Getting Yahoo Traffic for your Blog. Some also think that doing the same thing to Google’s Personalised pages could have a similar impact.

14. Quantities of Content - I always get into trouble when I write about having lots of content - but I think its true that bigger sites tend to rank better than smaller sites - whilst it is possible to rank highly with a small site - it’s probably not the norm.. Search Engines will see your site as more comprehensive the more content you have. You also better your odds of being found in Search Engines if you have more pages. By no means am I saying just to put up random junk content - be careful about this - rather work at building a comprehensive and large site over time.

15. Submit to Search Engines - You can do all the best onsite SEO strategies in the world and still get no where because the Search Engines have not found you to start with. Each search engine has a way of letting it know about your site - submit your URL to be included in the index. Please note that this takes time and perhaps a quicker and more effective way is to get linked to by a site already indexed by the search engine. I’ve written a post about his previously at how to get indexed by Google.

You might also like to tryout some of the services around that offer to submit your sites to search engines for you - I’d be wary of paying for this sort of service though. I never have and seem to do ok.

Again I will reinforce - the above techniques come out of my own experience and from the things I’ve learnt from others. I am not an SEO expert but find that if you keep the above in mind you can do reasonably well. Don’t become obsessed by SEO - if you do you run the risk of forgetting about your reader, forgetting to write quality content and you could find yourself getting into some dodgy SEO tactics that could get you banned from the Search Engines You’re trying to get listed in.

I’ll finish here by adding that SEO can take time - so be patient. After 2.5 years of blogging I’ve managed to build my blogs page ranks and SERPs but it did not happen over night. Sometimes it seems that no matter what you do nothing works - it may be that the words you’re wanting to target are actually a heavily targeted segment of the internet (consider changing your approach) - or it may just be that there is some unknowable glitch with the SE you are targeting - its a fickle game and one that I’d recommend you don’t rely on alone. So yes work on your SEO but also consider the many other methods around to find readers for your blog. You might like to read my Finding Readers for your Blog Series as a starting point.

Hands on Cpanel 11

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

I have had the opportunity to use Cpanel 11 from September, and my ranking of the Linux/Apache hosting control panel is quite high. I had to wait this long on the advice of my server management company, to upgrade to the most stable version of Cpanel 11.

The first and most striking impression is the new looks. The entire user interface of Cpanel has been overhauled and its now much more visually-appealing. The icons that link to the main controls have also been re-arranged into more relevant groups and same goes with a new Notice panel that displays on the top left corner of the Cpanel first screen. The Notice panel displays vital warnings about the hosting account in red, and also carries News from the web host or server administrator.

Some controls hitherto placed a few clicks into the panel have been brought to the homepage making such controls more accessible. Even better, cPanel shortcuts have been introduced. These links can be added to your desktop or your browser’s bookmarks toolbar. They are an easy way to access your cPanel.

What makes the several panels better is that they can actually be moved to suit the preference of the user. All a user has to do is drag-and-drop. The overall theme of Cpanel can be changed as well. Thats not new, but whats new are the several other more visually-appealing themes that have been added.

For a new Cpanel user, there are free Video Tutorials that would guide them through all the basics of using Cpanel 11. Similar videos have been made available before now by other companies, for a fee. Not to forget the “Getting Started Wizard”, a 7-page basic guide that takes new Cpanel users through the rudiments of setting-up their new hosting account.

The Cpanel interface loads faster as well. In some cases, processes are carried-out using AJAX thus the entire page needs not be re-loaded, to complete a process. Some back-end processes now run faster as well. Example? SpamAssasin. It now requires less server resources.

These are a few amongst the several CPanel improvements that make an upgrade a must. What has been your experience with using Cpanel 11? Share your thoughts here and now.

Anchor Text, How Important is it Anyway?

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

What is Anchor Text?

Anchor text is the hyper-linked text that allows the user to move around web sites.

Anchor Text Relevancy

From a search engine stand point it is important that the anchor text be relevant to the information that it points to. If it is it can improve your ranking in the search engines. So for example if your web site is dedicated to selling exercise videos and the page that you are going to point to has numerous articles on exercise videos then you have a high relevancy.

To achieve even higher relevancy make sure that the integrity of the document that your pointing to has been marked up with those same anchor text phrases. I.E. The page title of the page you are going to is called “exercise videos” and your anchor text is the same.

What Not To Do:

It is a common mistake to see people use “click here” in anchor text. In doing this you are loosing many possible users. Instead use descriptive anchor text phrases that are relevant to the subject matter.

How is Your Site Doing in Yahoo?

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

Last week Yahoo! announced that they have been making changes on their indexing and ranking algorithms warning everyone to keep a close eye on the effects on their own site’s rankings. It’s been more than a week and I wonder if you have noticed any changes in your site’s ranking in Yahoo. I realised that I haven’t checked with Gary how we’ve been doing.

Note too that if you have a client with paid directories or if you submit to paid directories don’t forget on these directories’ status with Google because there have been reports of manual penalisation of paid directories around September last year. I wonder what this year holds in terms of search engines weeding out sites that they deem are not that desirable.

Impact on Google PageRank

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

1. Frequent content updates don’t improve Page Rank automatically. Content is not part of the PR       calculation.

2. High Page Rank doesn’t mean high search ranking.

3. DMOZ and Yahoo! Listings don’t improve Page Rank automatically.

4. .edu and .gov-sites don’t improve Page Rank automatically.

5. Sub-directories don’t necessarily have a lower Page Rank than root-directories.

6. Wikipedia links don’t improve PageRank automatically (update: but pages which extract       information from Wikipedia might improve PageRank).

7. Links marked with nofollow-attribute don’t contribute to Google PageRank.

8. Efficient internal onsite linking has an impact on PageRank.

9. Related high ranked web-sites count stronger. But: “a page with high PageRank may actually       pass you less if it has more links, because it’s spread too thin.”

10. Links from and to high quality related sites have an impact on Page Rank.

11. Multiple votes to one link from the same page cost as much as a single vote.

Page Ranking Concept

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Friends recently I apeared for a exam on information retrieval that contains a unit on page
ranking.And many bloggers are interested in knowing thier page rank.How much popular is
their blog or site over the net.Do anyone think of this that how this is calculated by
google.

Let me tell you some think about this.I dont know about this topic much butas far as our books tell me I get to know some things and I am today going to share them
with you all.

Firstly what if some page rank is high,it means if your page rank is high and its somehow
related to some users query,then results displyed to him contains the your page at the top
slot if none of the other page retreived have highr page rank than yours and followed by
others.If some page get good rank it is displayed on the first results of user queries,this
means that page get higher probability of higher number of visitors per day.
Might be their are more factors google considers but this page rank concept depends on two
major factors(according to our syllabus).

1)Relevance ranking by hyperlinks.
2)Relevance ranking by text.

Now you must be wonderring what they mean.Dont worry,I’ll explain them in details.
Hyperlinks-People you all know they are actually the page URL’s pointed to your page from
others blog or sites.Soppose if your page or blog is hyperlinked by many pages over
WWW,then you got a better page rank.People may exploit this using linking each others blog
and they used to.That’s why people make a concept of blogroll in their blogsthat contains the link of other blogs and simmilarly their blog link poited by other blogs.

Also search engine rankers consider that from which page your page is hyperlinked,since its
also important that if one get hyperlinked from a page of higher ranking then its given
more weightage.

Text-This the the actual text one have in his/her blog or site.And ranking from text is calculated by the weightage of the keywords of page text.(keywords-special words used in your article,not common words).Now a seo used to calculate the weightage of that word in your page using the concept of relavance ranking by text.It calculates the number of occurances of that keyword in some page and total number of other words.And use these two parameters to get the actual page rank depending on these factors.So a page with a keyword orientage get a better page rank
in few days.

This is the one reason most of the SEO’s recommends to have more number of posts to get a
higher page rank.So more number of keywords are enrolled on your page helps you to get a
higher page rank.

So the total ranking of a page depends upon these two factors and calculated on combining
these two factors.

To check your page rank,their are many page ranking tools available on net,use them to get to know about your blogs page rank.

If anyone have more information related to this please share.I know only this much,but I
want to know more their might be other factors that google considers in page ranking.
Any quieries related to this are invited.