Website Traffic And Search Engine Optimization:
Links and Linking by Donovan Baldwin
This article, as the name implies, deals with search
engine optimization in general, and links in particular. In previous
articles, I have dealt with related search engine optimization topics
such as choosing the right domain name for your website and creating
the title, meta tags, and content for your website.
This article is not intended to be a definitive work
on search engine optimization, particularly as many search engines
keep changing the rules. It, and previous articles are intended,
however to give the internet marketing beginner some insight into
the subject.
Search engine optimization is not magic, and it does
tend to incorporate a few basic tenets. When followed, these steps,
methods, or actions CAN increase the visibility and ranking of a
website in a search engine's returns. It is popularly, and fairly
accurately, stated that most people will pick a site from those
listed on the first page of a search's results. However, that is
not the final spot that everyone picks from, nor is every site in
exact competition with yours nor attractive to search engines for
the same reasons, or keywords, or content as yours.
In most cases, when someone requests a search on a
word or phrase, one of the first acts of many search engines will
be to take a look at the titles of the websites it has indexed and
see if anything seems to match. It will then scan the first few
lines of text on the page to see if that search term is there, and
how often it appears. It cannot be stated that every search engine
follows this exact pattern, and, even if they do, most tend to then
refine the initial results by viewing other data.
In fact, one reason that search engine optimization
IS more an art than a science is due to the variables looked at
by each search engine and how they are weighted by that site. It
is possible to optimize a site for one search engine and injure
its ranking in another!
One way that many search engines can be induced to
raise the ranking or placement of a site is accomplished thru linking.
When speaking of "linking" most people are going to be
speaking of external links leading to the site from other websites.
I am going to include some internal linking discussion, so we will
be covering:
1. External Links
2. Internal Links
3. Sitemaps
LINKS FROM OTHER SITES:
As in many other considerations, the quality of the
links leading to your site may be of more importance than the quantity
of links. It should also be a consideration that sites that you
try to have link to your site be relevant as a willy-nilly bundle
of sites can actually lower your ranking in some search engines.
One linking tactic is to find the front runners in
searches on keywords and subjects relevant to your site. Then, you
would communicate with the site owners or webmasters in hopes of
getting them to link to your site. In some cases, a reciprocal link
may be requested, but, despite some accounts to the negative, having
a link from a valuable site will increase the value of your site,
even with the reciprocal link.
Why would someone link to YOUR site? Hopefully, your
site is relevant and of a quality that would encourage the attentions
of a webmaster hoping to elevate the value of his or her site by
providing quality information to their visitors. If you are a fishing
guide, the website of a rod and reel manufacturer may want to include
a link to your site, for example.
To take this a step further, if the first sites you
see are valuable, take a look at the sites that link to them! It
is a good chance that THEY help contribute to the rank of the first
sites you saw, and would therefore possibly be of importance to
you.
LINKS WITHIN YOUR SITE:
While not normally included in discussions of search
engine optimization, the internal links of your site can be of importance.
Once you have a visitor to your site, providing them with an easy
means of navigation can encourage them to stay and wander around.
All the search engine optimization in the world won't do much good
if they leave and go elsewhere after reading one or two sentences.
However, internal linking can be an important part
of search engine optimization, particularly when you realize that
Google and some other search engines treat each page of your site
separately. There seems to be some indication that links from other
pages within your site can be used as part of the evaluation process
of the search engine. Additionally, providing a complete listing
of site pages in a logical manner makes it easier for search engine
spiders to find, crawl, and index all the pages of your site. This
thought brings us to...
SITEMAPS:
In its simplest form, a sitemap is a logically (thank
you Mr. Spock) designed, er well...map...of the pages of the site.
It is usually a page in itself, provides links to, and sometimes
descriptions or titles of, the pages within the site. Once the search
engine has found this page, it is a piece of cake for it to crawl
and index every page on your site. If you have been doing SEO to
all your pages, you have just raised an eyebrow or two on the search
engine spider.
COMMENTS:
In all I have learned or encountered in the areas
of search engines and search engine optimization, two points seem
to come through: make sure everything you do adds quality and value
to your site, and don't count on what worked yesterday to work today.
Search engines are continually evolving to meet the needs of THEIR
customers while providing quality service and they expect the same
from you.
About the Author
Donovan Baldwin is a Dallas area writer and network
marketing professional. He is a graduate of the University of West
Florida, a member of Mensa and is retired from the U. S. Army. Learn
how to get your own domain name and create an internet business
at http://donsdomains.ws.
Back
to Articles
|