Your web site may look beautiful to your eyes, but what about to
the "eyes" of a search engine? If you can understand how a
search engine "sees" your site, than you can design the site or
make the necessary changes so that your site will get a higher
ranking in search results.
The first thing to consider is that search engines do not see
pictures or other graphics. If you have rendered some very
important text (loaded with keywords) as an image, a beautiful
multi-colored gif for example, the search engine will not index
these keywords. There are some wizard-oriented web creation
tools that may automatically change your text into a gif or jpg
image. It may look like text to you, but not to a search engine.
Thus, you have to weigh the relative importance of good images
against the need to give the search engine something to chew on,
some "spider food". Usually a balance has to be struck. At one
extreme are pages that contain only images. For example if you
have an entry page with a beautiful image of the ocean and a
beautiful sunset with one word saying Enter. It may be dramatic
looking, but it is not very interesting for a search engine.
Similarly sites that are only Flash images, don't give anything
for the search engine's "spider" (robotic gathering tool) to
gobble up and put into the index. If you want to use Flash,
consider making a hybrid page, one that has some elements, such
as informative text, of normal HTML and a section in Flash. Keep
this in mind and make sure that your important concepts and
keywords do appear on your pages in a text format.
However as pictures and graphics are very important, there is
something that can be done to optimize them for search engine
recognition. You can put an alt tag or alternative text on each
image. The search engines will read this text and index the
words you have entered. Thus if you have your company's logo at
the top of the page Acme Widgets, you can write and alternative
text: "Acme Widgets, California's first producer of Electronic
Widgets". Put your mouse over the A1-Optimization logo at the
top of this page and you can see the alt text which I used for
this image. Search engines will see this tag and the tag will
also appear when your web visitors put their mouse on the image.
Whenever you have an image, take the opportunity to put an
alternative text tag. But remember that, although the
alternative text tag is indeed indexed by the search engines, it
is not given as much importance as other text elements.
If you really have some important text that you want emphasized
then use the heading tags, h1, h2, h3, h4 etc, and make use of
bold text. These heading tags and text rendered in bold font are
given more importance by search engines than other text because
headings are thought to indicate the main concepts of your page.
The heading tags may not look as nice as a gif image, but if
they contain important keywords then whatever you think you may
lose in beauty by discarding them, will be returned to you in
better ranking positions in Internet searches for your important
keywords.
The second thing to do is to Put your important text near the
top of the page. Suppose you have put your company's logo (Acme
Widgets) at the top of the page, as a gif or jpg image.
Underneath it you might put some text reading: "California's
first producer of Electronic Widgets". If California and
Electronic Widgets are important keywords for you then you have
started off your page very well. In fact, some search engines
use the first paragraph or phrase as the description that is
shown in search results. So if the first paragraph or first
phrase really says a lot and is attractive it may entice someone
to visit your page. (Getting a top result in a search engine is
one thing, but remember someone has to think that your page is
interesting enough to visit if they are going to click on it,
and the description shown by the search engine may be the
deciding factor determining whether they click through to your
page or to your competitor's page)
But, what is the top of the page? It seems obvious but search
engines do not see or rather, read pages in the same way that
our eye sees the page. Recently I built a web site for someone
and then looked at the first search engine results for that
site. I saw the words "Choose your language" as the description.
(The search engine took a phrase from the navigation bar on the
left hand side of the page, where surfers were invited to choose
which language version of the site they wanted to see). This
happened because search engines have to go through the table
structure of the site. In order to align the different elements
(text and pictures) of a site, designers often divide the page
into tables. If a site is divided into two vertical tables, one
for the left hand navigation and one for the body. The spider
will first read everything in the table on the left before going
to the table on the right. I corrected this problem by putting a
pithy, keyword laden descriptive phrase in the left hand column
just above the navigation elements. So, make sure that your
important phrases are in places where the spider will see them
before they reach other less important phrases. If the table
structure on your page is not giving the right picture to the
spider, then you should make the necessary modifications to
correct the problem.
© Copyright 2002, Donald Nelson, all rights reserved.
About the author:
Donald Nelson is a web developer, editor and social worker. He
has been promoting web sites since 1995 and now runs
A1-Optimization (http://www.a1-optimization.com) a company that
provides low-cost search engine optimization and submission
services. He can be reached at support@a1-optimization.com