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An SEO Checklist
Search engine optimization is on every
webmaster's mind these days. Achieving a favorable ranking for the right
keywords can mean a steady stream of targeted traffic to your site, and
all for free - that's hard to beat. The key to high search engine
rankings is structuring your website correctly, including plenty of
content that is relevant to your keywords, and making sure your website
is spider-friendly. You can use this checklist to make sure all of your
Web pages can be found, indexed and ranked correctly:
Your website is themed. Your site deals with an identifiable theme which
is obvious from the text on the home page and reinforced by all the
other pages on your site. In other words, all the individual Web pages
relate to each other and deal with various aspects of some central
theme. The text on your home page should state clearly what that theme
is and what your website is about, and the other pages should reinforce
that.
Your Web pages have enough high quality, relevant content. Spiders come
to your website looking for content. If a page doesn't have much
content, or the content doesn't appear closely related to the page's
title and your website's theme, the page probably won't be indexed or if
it is indexed it won't rank well. Search engines love quality content
and lots of it - content is what Web searchers are looking for and
search engines try to provide.
Your website's navigational structure is relatively flat. You don't want
important pages to be too "deep" within your website, meaning it takes
several clicks to get there from the home page. Search engines typically
index the home page first, then gradually index other pages on a site
over time. Many spiders are programmed to only go three layers deep - if
some of your important content is buried deeper than that, it may never
be found and indexed at all.
You've created a unique "Title" tag for each page. The title is one of
the most important aspects of any Web page from an SEO standpoint,
especially for Google (which is the most important search engine to
optimize for). Don't use a generic title for all your pages, use the
keywords your targeting for that page and keep it brief but descriptive.
You use the "Description" meta tag. Contains a highly descriptive
sentence about the content and purpose of your page, and contains your
most important keyword phrase early in the sentence. Not all of the
search engines will display this "canned" description when they list the
page in search results, but many of them will, so it's worth getting it
right.
You use the "Keywords" meta tag. As with the meta tag description, not
every search engine will use the keywords meta tag. But some will use it
and none will penalize you for having it. Also, having a short list of
the keywords you're targeting will help you write appropriate content
for each page. The keyword tage should contain your targeted keyword
phrase and common variations, common misspellings and related terms.
Make sure your keywords relate closely to the page content and tie into
the overall theme of your site.
Your keywords are included in the visible page content, preferably high
up on the page. You have to achieve a balance here - you want to include
keyword phrases (and variations) a number of times within your text, but
not so many times that you appear to be guilty of "keyword stuffing".
The trick is to work the keywords into the text so that it reads as
naturally as possible for your site visitors. Remember, you can
incorporate keywords into any Web page element that is potentially
viewable by site visitors - header text, link text and titles, table
captions, the "Alt" attribute of the image tag, the "title" attribute of
the link tag, etc.
Every page of your website can be reached by search engine spiders. This
is critical - if your pages can't be found, they can't be indexed and
included in search results, let alone rank well. Search engines use
spiders to explore your website and index the pages, so every page must
be accessible by following text links. If pages require a password to
view, are generated by a script in response to a query, or have a long
and complicated URL, spiders may not be able to read them. You need to
have simple text links to the pages you want indexed.
You've included a site map. Unless your site is very small, it's a good
idea to create a site map with text links that you link to the site map
from your home page. In addition to a link, include descriptive text for
containing the relevant keywords for each page.
You link to your most important pages from other pages on your site.
Internal links help determine page rank since they show which pages of
your site are most important. The more links you have to have to a page,
relative to other pages on your site, the more importance search engines
will assign to it.
You use keywords in your link text. When you create a text link to
another page on your site, use that page's targeted keywords as the text
for the link (inside the anchor tags that create the link). Make it as
descriptive as possible. For example, a link that says "Premium
Customized Widgets" is much better than one that says simply "Product
Page", and indicates to search engine spiders what that linked page is
about.
Your site doesn't use frames. If possible, don't use frames on any page
you want to get indexed by search engines. If you feel you simply must
use frames for a page, then also make use of the "noframes" HTML tags to
provide alternative text that spiders can read (and make that text
descriptive rather than just a notice that "This site uses frames etc.
etc.").
You don't use automatic page redirects. Don't make any pages
automatically redirect the visitor to another page (the exception is a
page you've deleted for good - in which case you should use a "301
redirect", a permanent redirect which is acceptable to search engines).
Your important content is in plain text and not contained in images.
Search engine spiders can't "read" content in JPEG, GIF, or PNG files.
If you really feel that using an image rather than text is crucial to
your design, at least put the same text in the image's "Alt" tag (or in
the "title" tag if you're using the image as a hyperlink).
Your important content is not contained in Flash files. Flash is a
wonderful technology, but unfortunately spiders don't have the required
"plugin" to view Flash files. As a result, Flash content is mostly
inaccessible to search engine spiders. Some can find and follow
hyperlinks within the Flash file, but unless those links lead to pages
with readable HTML content this won't help you much. Don't create
all-Flash pages for any content you want to get indexed - instead, put
that content in the HTML portion of the page.
Links and keywords are not hidden inside JavaScript code. If your links
use JavaScript to direct the user to the appropriate page (for instance,
a drop-down list) or important content is contained within JavaScript
code (when it's displayed dynamically using DHTML, for instance) search
engine spiders won't be able to "see" it. You can, however, use the "noscript"
HTML tags to provide an alternative that can be read by spiders.
You've optimized every important page of your website individually.
Don't stop at your home page. Take the trouble to optimize any page
which has a reasonable chance of being indexed by the major search
engines, targeting appropriate keywords for each. If you face a lot of
competition it may be nearly impossible to get a top ranking for your
home page, but you can still get a lot of search engine traffic to your
site from other pages which are focused on very specific keyword
phrases.
You didn't duplicate content. Each page of your site should have unique
content that distinguishes it from every other page on your site.
Duplicating content or having pages that are only slightly different
might be seen as "search engine spamming" (trying to manipulate search
engine results).
You provide linking instructions for those who want to link to your
site. Somewhere on your site state your policies about other people
linking to your site and provide the wording you'd like them to use in
their link. You want to encourage other people to link to your site,
preferably using link text and a description that reflect the keywords
for that page. For their convenience provide the ready-made HTML code
for the link - not everyone will use it, but most often they will use
your preferred text as a courtesy as long as it is truly descriptive of
your site and doesn't contain "marketing hype".
You provide linking instructions for those who want to link to your
site. Somewhere on your site state your policies about other people
linking to your site and provide the wording you'd like them to use in
their link. You want to encourage other people to link to your site,
preferably using link text and a description that reflect the keywords
for that page. For their convenience provide the ready-made HTML code
for the link - not everyone will use it, but many will use your
preferred text as a courtesy as long as it doesn't contain "marketing
hype".
Important hyperlinks are plain text links and not image links or image
maps. Text links are better from an SEO standpoint than image links, as
spiders can't read text from an image file. If you feel you really must
use a graphic as a link, at least include a text description which
(including the relevant keywords) by using the "title" attribute of the
link tag.
Your website is free of coding errors and broken links. HTML coding
errors and non-working links can keep search engine spiders from
correctly reading and indexing your pages. For that reason, it's a good
idea to use a Web page validation utility to check your HTML code to
make sure it's error-free.
Jane McLain is a Web developer and SEO specialist and the webmaster of
EClaunchsite.com, an online resource center for netrepreneurs with tools
and information to help you plan, build, launch and grow your
e-business.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/
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