Design your web site to get registered with search engines

Written by Jeff Gilman


The truth is there are only a few positions atrepparttar top of a list of search engine results and getting torepparttar 121183 top is not easy, guaranteed, or dependable. With one exception – pay for it – but more on that later. Let me explain how search engines work because meeting their expectations is whatrepparttar 121184 really important stuff is all about.

First, there are 4 major players inrepparttar 121185 answer-a-search biz. Microsoft has about 24 million unique users, Yahoo and AOL each with about 20 million, and Google with about 10 million. Throw in Netscape and you reach about 100 million people. Allrepparttar 121186 other engines are just chump change. If you can get properly placed on these engines you are in front of most potential customers and can look forward to an early retirement. Knowing what these engines look for isrepparttar 121187 key to getting registered and found.

These engines get their listings in a couple of different ways. You may submit your site directly to them, you may pay them for an enhanced listing, and/or you may pay for a third party service that pays for, or is paid for, space onrepparttar 121188 engine’s result listings. The below table explainsrepparttar 121189 various services and fees fromrepparttar 121190 big engines.

Content Management at Selected Engines

Free Listings Provided By Enhanced Listing for Fee Provided By Third Party Listings Come From Microsoft

www.msn.com Commercial sites may be submitted at no charge for inclusion inrepparttar 121191 Web Pages section of MSN Search. Sites inrepparttar 121192 Web Pages section will be ranked below sites that are submitted viarepparttar 121193 paid submission service and will not be included inrepparttar 121194 MSN directory. There is no guarantee of acceptance or turnaround time for these submissions. Listings provided by Look Smart Same as enhanced

Yahoo

www.yahoo.com

Yahoo! does not charge for any listings inrepparttar 121195 Yahoo! Directory. Yahoo! only charges for expedited reviews of web sites submitted for inclusion.

Yahoo! Express (expedited review) is part of a suite of services that Yahoo! created to service small business needs. Sponsor Matches are paid listings provided by Overture Services, Inc.

AOL

www.aol.com AOL Search is a hierarchical Web directory, organized by subject. All user-submitted Web content is maintained byrepparttar 121196 Open Directory Project (http://www.dmoz.org). The Open Directory Project is run by a staff of volunteer editors who choose to evaluate and classify Web sites in one or more categories. The editor exercisesrepparttar 121197 option of choosing to add a site, moving sites between categories and creating new sites. Google Open Directory Project Google

www.google.com Onlyrepparttar 121198 top-level page from a host is necessary; you do not need to submit each individual page. The crawler, Googlebot, will be able to findrepparttar 121199 rest. Google updates its index on a regular basis, so updated or outdated link submissions are not necessary. Dead links will 'fade out' of our index on our next crawl when we update our entire index. Google None Netscape

www.netscape. com AOL Search is a hierarchical Web directory, organized by subject. All user-submitted Web content is maintained byrepparttar 121200 Open Directory Project (http://www.dmoz.org). [Same as AOL] AOL AOL

When your URL comes torepparttar 121201 attention of one of these engines they will come and visit you. Yahoo sends live paid people. Open Directory uses volunteers. Others use web crawlers or spiders to crawl around your web site and this is important because spiders arerepparttar 121202 other way you get registered – automatically and without having to ask for it. It is perfectly possible to get a listing merely because your URL is on a site visited by a spider. This, byrepparttar 121203 way, is one ofrepparttar 121204 reasons you want links to you on other sites. Regardless of how they visit you, all engines are all seeking to classify you. Whether you like being labeled or not, they must label you in a meaningful fashion.

The volunteers, spiders, flunkies, and even paid submitters do this with descriptions and key words contained on your site. And they find these key words and descriptions in two places – meta tags and text onrepparttar 121205 web pages themselves. So you need to have both.

Meta tags (meta is Greek for denoting position – which is probably fair because this sounds like Greek to most people) are computer codes buried inrepparttar 121206 HTML text of a web page. They aren’t visible on a web page but can often be seen by viewingrepparttar 121207 source code of a web page. To see source code, click on a web page – notrepparttar 121208 graphic stuff but some text or a blank area – withrepparttar 121209 right hand mouse button and select View Source. The tags are atrepparttar 121210 top ofrepparttar 121211 page and look like this:

Create A News-List Instead of A Newsletter

Written by The Creative Affiliate-Karen Vesgaard


You have permission to publish this article electronically or in print, free of charge, as long asrepparttar bylines are included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be appreciated. mailto:TheCreativeAffiliate@oregoncoast.com

=======================================

A"Get Creative" Article Written and Published by Karen onrepparttar 121182 Oregoncoast Copyright (c)2002 by Karen Vesgaard The Creative Affiliate

=======================================

"Create A News-List Instead of a Newsletter"

--------------------------------

"You Need To Publish A Newsletter if You're Going To Be Successful!"

Gee..where have I heard that before?

So, what'srepparttar 121183 purpose of editing and publishing a newsletter? Well, we all knowrepparttar 121184 answer to that by now also.

You need to have a mailing list of opt-in subscribers in order to promote and sell your product or service.

Let's look at that idea from another perspective..

=>You need to offer something of value in exchange for a potential customers E-mail address.

Inrepparttar 121185 case of a newsletter you are offering information that your readers can use throughrepparttar 121186 articles you include,repparttar 121187 tips and ideas you're passing on, and in some casesrepparttar 121188 free ads you offer to your subscribers.

What about those excellent resources and tools you've uncovered? In some cases you've just run across a nifty new tool, or maybe you've researched something specific that you could use, and now can pass it on to your readers.

So, let's look at this again.

=>You need to offer something of value in exchange for a potential customers E-mail address.

**The Value you Offer in exchange for that E-mail address does Not have to be inrepparttar 121189 form of a Newsletter.

Instead..how about a News-List?

1) Put together a weekly list of allrepparttar 121190 new free catalogues you can order online.

2) Do you spend alot of time searching through allrepparttar 121191 auction sites for antique watches and jewlery? Collectrepparttar 121192 newest additions and offer a weekly current listing.

3) Can't decide from week to week what affiiiate programs to join, so you spend countless hours searching through fifty or sixty affiliate directories looking for justrepparttar 121193 right ones for Childrens Toys? Offer a weekly update of New Childrens Affiliate Progams.

4) Collect "30 Minute Meals" recipes and collect them into a "Weekly Planner" includingrepparttar 121194 grocery list for all.

Cont'd on page 2 ==>
 
ImproveHomeLife.com © 2005
Terms of Use