Sitemaps and hypertext links are "food" for search engine
robots. We will look at the value of text links for optimal
spidering, and the importance of using a sitemap in order to
help search engine robots reach your website's deeper pages.
Hypertext Links Search engine robots are not terribly
sophisticated. They cannot click a button, submit a form, pull
down a menu, or perform any other type of online "user
interaction" that might be used by a human visitor. Robots are
able to index the text on a page and click through hypertext
links. For this reason, adding navigational text links to your
web pages (often located at the bottom of the page) provides the
search engine robots with another means to click through the
links of your web pages when it cannot access these other types
of navigation.
No matter how great your JavaScript menu system is, the search
engine robots cannot use it. They can follow "plain old"
hyperlinks, and that's about it. Since the ability to move
around on your site is vital to the robots' successful indexing
of your content, you want to make it as easy as possible for
them to visit all of your pages. Use of text links at the bottom
of your pages, while hardly cutting-edge, is one of the best
ways to make sure that the search engine robots can move around
on your site. Be sure to include links to your site's principal
pages on all the pages in your site. Always remember to put a
link to your sitemap page here too.
Sitemaps A sitemap page is a supercharged version of the
bottom-of-the-page hypertext links. The sitemap provides "food"
for a hungry search engine robot. A sitemap page will at very
least have links to all of the major pages on your site.
Depending on the size of your site, it may actually link to all
of your pages. This means that once the robot gets to the
sitemap page, it can visit every page on your entire site.
Having all of the content of your site included in the search
engine database is a good thing: you are much more likely to
come-up in the search engine results when somebody is performing
a search related to your topic.
A good sitemap will:
Provide text links to at least the most important pages on your
site; depending on the size of the site, it may have links to
every page
Give a short explanation of each page on your site, to inform
your visitors about your website
Give your visitors the information they need when lost in your
website, and show them how to reach the page they are looking
for
Provide a pathway for the search engine robots to follow in
order to reach your most important pages
Provide important keyword phrases in the sitemap text and
hypertext links that help the automated search engine robot
"understand" what the page is about
Help search engine robots find static landing pages that then
link to dynamically generated pages they may not otherwise find
Even if your website is small, add a sitemap for your visitors
and for the search engine robots.
To make your sitemap most attractive to the search engine robots
and your human visitors, be sure to include descriptive text
along with the page URLs and links. Use your keywords in that
text, including appropriate content for each of the pages to
which you link. Be careful not to overuse your keyword phrases,
though, or you may be penalized in the rankings. Remember that
this is a map that will be used by both search engine robots and
your human visitors. If the content of the page makes sense to
the people who visit your site, chances are it will make sense
to the visiting robots as well.
When you make it easy for your visitors to navigate your site,
they will find what they are looking for. When you make it easy
to search engine robots to move around on your site, you
increase your chances of being favorably listed in their search
results.
About the author:
Daria Goetsch is the founder and Search Engine Marketing
Consultant for Search Innovation (www.searchinnovation.com), a
Search Engine Promotion company serving small businesses.
Besides running her own company, Daria is an associate of
WebMama.com, an Internet web marketing strategies company. She
has specialized in search engine optimization since 1998,
including three years as the Search Engine Specialist for
O'Reilly & Associates, a technical book publishing company.