The search engine environment continues to evolve rapidly,
easily outpacing the ability of consumers and SEO practitioners
to quickly adapt to the new landscape. With the ascension of
Inktomi to the level of importance that until recently was held
solely by Google, SEO practitioners need to rethink several
strategies, tactics and, perhaps even the ethics of technique.
Assuming this debate will unfold over the coming months, how
does an "ethical SEO firm" work to optimize websites for two
remarkably unique search engines without falling back on
old-fashioned spammy tactics of leader-pages or portal-sites?
Recently, another SEO unrelated to StepForth told me that he was
starting to re-optimize his websites to meet what he thought
were Inktomi's standards as a way of beating his competition to
what looks to be the new main driver. That shouldn't be
necessary if you are careful and follow all the "best practices"
developed over the years.
The answer to our puzzle is less than obvious but it lies in the
typical behaviors of the two search tools. While there are a
number of similarities between the two engines, most notably in
behaviors of their spiders, there are also significant
differences in the way each engine treats websites. For the most
part, Google and Inktomi place the greatest weight on radically
different site elements when determining eventual site
placement. For Google, strong and relevant link-popularity is
still one of the most important factors in achieving strong
placements. For Inktomi, titles, meta tags and text are the most
important factors in getting good rankings. Both engines
consider the number and arrangement of keywords, incoming links,
and the anchor text used in links (though Google puts far more
weight on anchor text than Inktomi tends to). That seems to be
where the similarities end and, the point where SEO tactics need
revision. Once Inktomi is adopted as Yahoo's main listing
provider, both Google and Inktomi will drive relativity similar
levels of search engine traffic. Each will be as important as
the other with the caveat that Inktomi powers two of the big
three while Google will only power itself.
2004 - The Year of the Spider-Monkey The first important factor
to think about is how does each spider work?
Entry to Inktomi Does Not Mean Full-Indexing Getting your site
spidered by Inktomi's bot "Slurp" is essential. Like
"Google-bot", "Slurp" will follow every link it comes across,
reading and recording all information. A major difference
between Google and Inktomi is that, when Google spiders a new
site, there is a good chance of getting placements for an
internal page without paying for that specific page to appear in
the index. As far as we can tell, that inexpensive rule of thumb
does not apply to Inktomi. While it is entirely possible to get
entire sites indexed by Inktomi, we have yet to determine if
Inktomi will allow all pages within a site to achieve placements
without paying for these sites to appear in the search engine
returns pages, (SERPs). Remember, Inktomi is a paid-inclusion
service which charges webmasters an admission fee based on the
number of pages in a site they wish to have spidered. From the
information we have gathered, Slurp will follow each link in a
site and, if provided a clear path, will spider every page in
the site but, pages within that site that are paid-for during
the submission will be spidered far more frequently and will
appear in the indexes months before non-paid pages. We noted
this when examining how many pages Inktomi lists from newer
clients versus how many from old clients. We have noticed the
older the site, the more pages appear in Inktomi's database and
on SERPs on search engines using the Inktomi database. (This is
assuming the webmaster only paid for inclusion of their INDEX
page) Based on Inktomi's pricing, an average sized site of 50
pages could cost up to $1289 per year to have each page added to
the paid-inclusion database so it is safer then not to assume
that most small-business webmasters won't want to pay that much.
Google's Gonna Get You Google-bot is like the Borg in Star Trek.
If you exist on the web and have a link coming to your site from
another site in Google's index, Google-bot will find you and
assimilate all your information. As the best known and most
prolific spider on the web, Google-bot and its cousin Fresh-bot
visit sites extremely frequently. This means that most websites
with effective links will get into Google's database without
needing to manually submit the site. As Google currently does
not have a paid-inclusion model, every page in a site can be
expected to appear somewhere on Google produced SERPs. By
providing a way of finding each page in the site (effective
internal links), website designers should see their sites
appearing in Google's database within two months of publishing.
We Now Serve Two Masters; Google and Inktomi OK, that said, how
to optimize for both without risking placements at one over the
other. The basic answer is to give each of them what they want.
For almost a year, much of the SEO industry focused on linking
strategies in order to please Google's PageRank. Such heavy
reliance on linking is likely one of the reasons Google
re-ordered its algorithm in November. Relevant incoming links
are still be extremely important but can no longer be considered
the "clincher" strategy for our clients. Getting back to the
basics of site optimization and remembering the lessons learned
over the past 12-months should produce Top10 placements. SEOs
and webmasters should spend a lot of time thinking about titles,
tags and text as well as thinking about linking strategies (both
internal and external). Keyword arrangement and densities are
back on the table and need to be examined by SEOs and their
clients as the new backbone of effective site optimization.
While the addition of a text-based sitemap has always been
considered an SEO Best Practice, it should now be considered an
essential practice. The same goes for unique titles and tags on
each page of a site. Another essential practice SEOs will have
to start harping on is to only work with sites that have unique,
original content. I am willing to bet that within 12-months,
Inktomi introduces a rule against duplicate content as a means
of controlling both the SEO industry and the affiliate marketing
industry. Sites with duplicate content are either mirrors,
portals or affiliates, none of which should be necessary for the
hard-working SEO. While there are exceptional circumstances
where duplicate content is needed, more often than not
dupe-content is a waste of bandwidth and will impede a SEO
campaign more than it would help.
The last tip for this article is, don't be afraid to pass higher
costs on to the clients because if your client wants those
placements soon, paid-inclusion of internal pages will be
expected. When one really examines the costs of paid inclusion
it is not terribly different than other advertising costs, with
one major exception. Most paid-advertising is regionally based
(or is prohibitively expensive for smaller businesses). Search
engine advertising is, by nature, international exposure and
that is worth paying for.
About the author:
Jim Hedger is the SEO Manager of StepForth Search Engine
Placement Inc. Based in Victoria, BC, Canada, StepForth is the
result of the consolidation of BraveArt Website Management,
Promotion Experts, and Phoenix Creative Works, and has provided
professional search engine placement and management services
since 1997. http://www.stepforth.com/ Tel - 250-385-1190 Toll
Free - 877-385-5526 Fax - 250-385-1198