Posts Tagged ‘Sitemap’
Create Site Map and Google XML Map
Monday, July 14th, 2008Every website needs a Sitemap big or small. Sitemap should be linked to from every page on your site. A site map will help users and search engine robots find all the important pages on your site with just two clicks. This is especially helpful if your site has a hard-to-crawl navigation menu like java script or images based navigation. For WordPress blogs I recommend downloading this free sitemap generator plugin. You can see example on my sitemap page.
Smaller sites can use second navigation bar in the footer that will act as a small mini site map. This is nothing more than all your important pages as links in the footer.
By submitting a XML Sitemap to a search engine, you are making easier for that engine’s crawlers to crawl and index pages of your site. As Google describes it in this article
“Sitemaps are particularly beneficial when users can’t reach all areas of a website through a browseable interface.”
For regular websites there are many free online xml sitemap generators, just Google it but for your WordPress blog you can use this free Google XML sitemap generator plugin as it will also create Robots.txt file which is the next Free SEO Tip.
Seo:Doorway Pages
Tuesday, July 1st, 2008Using doorway pages or a doorway page system is the lazy man’s way of building a website. A doorway page system involves the use of hidden text and graphic links, creation of a bunch of doorway pages all separately optimized for different keywords, and a hidden site map that links to all of the doorway pages.
The doorway pages themselves are filled with optimized text and function primarily to get visitors to go to your other pages on your website. One of the problems with this hidden doorway system is that it smacks of trickery. The doorway pages don’t provide real content to the visitors, but provide a means to navigate to the other pages on your site.
If this were a legitimate system of navigation, why hide the text and graphic links, the site map and the doorway pages in the first place?
Here is one way to create a system of hidden doorway pages. First, you research relevant but relatively low ranking keywords for your site that don’t have much competition. Second, you create a bunch of these doorway pages that are optimized for these keywords. Third, you build a sitemap containing links to all of these hidden doorway pages. The doorway pages are not directly linked to your homepage or any other of your main pages. The sitemap, however, does contain links to all pages on your site including your homepage and main pages AND your hidden doorway pages.
This hidden sitemap, once completed, is the only page you link directly to your homepage. You do this with a hidden text or graphic link. Creating a hidden graphic link is easy. You simply create a .jpg or .gif file that has the same color as the background of your home page. Search robots cannot distinguish colors inside a pixel-based file. You link this graphic to your sitemap and you are done. The only telltale signs that this exists is in your source code and if you happen to run your cursor over the area it will change to the hand.
Creating a text link is a bit trickier since some search engines will penalize sitesthat have link text color that is too close to the background color (especially if it is the same as the background color).
Some sources suggest you create your pages with a white background (color code #FFFFFF) and that you create your hidden link text with an almost white color #EDFAE6 that is almost invisible to the eye and will not get your penalized with the search engines.
Now, instead of creating a tricky, hidden doorway page system filled with no real content for your visitors, why not make your homepage and other main pages your doorway pages? Instead of picking a bunch of low-ranking keywords and optimizing your pages for these keywords, why not pick the highest-ranking relevant keywords for your business and optimizing all or most of your pages towards these keywords?
With this method, the trick is to create content-rich, keyword-optimized pages that serve the dual purpose of informing your visitors and serving relevant information to the search engines. This is not the lazy man’s approach since this method takes quite a bit of skill and expertise in writing these pages with both purposes in mind.
The benefit of making all of your pages content-rich doorway pages and not hidden doorway pages is threefold. First, you avoid the ethical gray area of the hidden doorway page approach. Second, you pick the highest-ranking relevant keywords, build your website around these words, and make these pages content rich for your visitors and keyword rich for the search engines which keep visitors interested in your site (and buying your products) and when they rank well with the search engine will bring in more traffic than the lesser ranked, hidden pages. Third, when you develop content-rich doorway pages you don’t run the risk of the search engines finding your ethically questionable hidden doorway page system, realizing this is what is going on, and penalizing your site, burying it deep within the rankings of the search engine.
Now, you may ask, why not create a content-rich doorway page system AND a hidden doorway page system? You can, but you run the previously-mentioned risks plus when you develop a hidden system, you are taking time away from developing the rest of your website that could go into other, more productive areas such as rewriting your pages in respect to content and keywords or developing new pages. Remember, not all pages have to do well in the search engines. Some of your pages are just for your visitors to enjoy like Flash or Shockwave game pages, streaming audio or video or a product picture page with very little text on it.
In order to get visitors to come to your site, you may also want to work on your reciprocal linking with other sites, buy or trade traffic with other sites, develop your own newsletter, buy or trade for advertising in other sites’ relevant newsletters and other marketing methods to bring visitors to your site. Doorway pages may have been the “in” thing a couple of years ago, but now they have gone out of fashion. But if you keep your site focused and direct your energy in productive marketing methods, you site will see significant gains in traffic. At this point it will be up to you to find ways to convert your visitors into customers and reap the profits from your efforts.
Building and using a Sitemap
Monday, June 30th, 2008The purpose of a sitemap is to enable search engines to index all the pages on a site being optimzed. Some search engines like Google recommend that you include a sitemap to speed up the indexing process reduce the risk of pages being skipped.
A sitemap can help more pages be listed, because not all search engines will go more than 2-3 link levels deep.
A secondary, but useful purpose of a sitemap is to assist visitors in finding their way around the site. Building a sitemap is a tedious chore and many sitemaps are neglected and go out-of-date as a result. So, after many hours of intense searching; we have found a wonderful solution.
Top 5 Search Engine Optimization Tips
Saturday, June 28th, 2008You may have heard many times about the ways you can optimize your site for search engines. Optimizing your site can allow the search engines to extract the important information from your page, making your site appear for more relevant search queries. Search engines may also better rank your page, so it appears at higher positions within results pages.
I have compiled a list of the best 5 ways (in my opinion) to optimize your site for the search engines:
1. Put keywords in your title. Try to place keywords relevant to your site in your page title. This will give the search engines a better idea of what your site is about, and also allows searchers to quickly determine whether your site is relevant to them.
2. Use Headings. Using headings in your webpage gives some structure to your page, and makes searching the page for relevant information quick. Try to place some relevant keywords in the headings, which give a clue to what the paragraphs below it are about.
3. Use alt=”" in images. As images can’t be understood by search engines, you should provide an alternative textual description of the image. You can do this using the alt attribute of the HTML image tag. Here’s an example:
<img src=”dog.jpg” alt=”Dog jumping into the air” />
4. Use META tags. You should use META tags within your page, to describe what the document is about, as well as provide relevant keywords and define a language.
5. Use a sitemap. Create a sitemap to show all the pages of your site. I recommend you add your sitemap to Google’s Sitemap service, or Yahoo’s service.
SEO : Install a sitemap.xml for Google
Thursday, June 26th, 2008Though you may feel like it is impossible to get listed high in Google’s search engine result page, believe it or not that isn’t Google’s intention. They simply want to insure that their viewers get the most relevant results possible. In fact, they’ve even created a program just for webmasters to help insure that your pages get cached in their index as quickly as possible. They call the program Google Sitemaps. In this tool, you’ll also find a great new linking tool to help discover who is linking to your website.
For Google, these two pieces in the top 10 SEO tips would be to read the tutorial entitled How Do I Create a Sitemap File and to create your own. To view the one on this page, website simply right-click this SEO Tips Sitemap.xml file and save it to your desktop. Open the file with a text editor such as Notepad.
Effective 11/06, Google, Yahoo!, and MSN will be using one standard for sitemaps. Below is a snippet of the standard code as listed at Sitemaps.org. Optional fields are lastmod, changefreq, and priority.
<?xml version=”1.0″ encoding=”UTF-8″?>
<urlset xmlns=”http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9″>
<url>
<loc>http://www.example.com/</loc>
<lastmod>2005-01-01</lastmod>
<changefreq>monthly</changefreq>
<priority>0.8</priority>
</url>
</urlset>
Sitemap Standardisation
Thursday, June 19th, 2008This week Google, MSN and Yahoo agreed on a sitemap standard. Updating sitemaps may not be such a pain in the future. Google and Yahoo have already implemented the standard, with Microsoft following by 2007.