Press Release Village

January 25, 2006

BigDaddy Means Big Changes at Google

Filed under: Internet - Websites - SEO — admin @ 3:42 pm
BigDaddy Means Big Changes at Google
Jan 25, 2006 11:19 AM , By Brian Quinton

One of the most popular forms of exercise among many search engine optimizers—both the third-party firms that do it for others and the advertisers who spiff up their own Web pages for better natural search rankings—is a periodic workout called “chasing the algorithm”. The race begins when Google or Yahoo! updates some portion of the software that determines how they look at Web pages and decide which are most relevant and valuable to a searcher. The engine makes that change; Web operators see their rankings rise or fall as a result; and they, or their outside search engine optimization (SEO) firm, scramble to get back the old rank by providing the new elements the search engine now needs. 

After a few months, the engines make another change, and it’s off to the races again.


Well, optimizers on Google are lacing up their running shoes for another race. Only this one promises to be more a marathon than the usual sprint. Google is testing a new data center infrastructure, a feat much bigger and comprehensive than an algorithm change. Dubbed “Big Daddy” both in the search marketing blogs and forums and by the friendly folks at Google, this new data center—still in shakedown mode—will reportedly add new ground-level capabilities into the Google search function and drive those powers deep into all the algorithms with which Google searches, studies and indexes the Web.

First, a bit of big-picture talk. Google’s examination of the Web relies on a global network of data centers with different IP addresses. These decentralized servers speed the job of sending specialized Google services to users in different regions; they also share the workload of spidering the Web and comparing those discoveries to Web pages that are already in Google’s index.
The new BigDaddy data center contains new code for examining and sorting the Web, and once it has been tested fully, will become the default source for Web results, according to Google’s chief search engineer Matt Cutts. In a January 4 post on his blog, Cutts said that might happen in early February or March of this year.

But what is BigDaddy intended to do? According to Rob Sullivan, head organic search strategist at search marketing firm Enquiro, “If an algorithm update is like putting new tires on a car or installing a new stereo system, this BigDaddy is like putting in a whole new motor. They’re totally revamping how Google works and resolving some long-standing issues with getting sites indexed properly.”

One of those issues is “canonicalization”. That’s a fancy Google word for instructing a search engine how to decide which of a series of related URLs is the proper one to insert into the Google index. Say your Web site has a number of different home page URLs, including “stuff.com”, “www.stuff.com”,
www.stuff.com/index.html” and “stuff.com/home.asp”. This can come about because Web servers are often set up to accept aliases for Web pages, and to know that a request for “stuff.com” means someone’s looking for “www.stuff.com”. That’s a concession to users who get tired of getting error messages when they don’t type in “www”.

The problem is that while these URLs may pull up the same page content, they’re technically four different pages. That could skew the page count Google gets for the Web site, so that a site with 1000 pages and two aliases per page might look twice its real size to Google.
It’s also possible that those aliases could inadvertently contain different content or different incoming links. In that case the Google index, which looks at the value of the content and the quality of the links, could give those four pages different rankings.

Finally, a Google search that turns up multiple entries for what is essentially the same content makes the results page that much less valuable to users. Better to select one of the URLs as the most representative and make room for other results.

“If you want to go to the Seattle Seahawks page on the NFL Web site, you’ll get this long, horrendous URL,” Sullivan says. “But the site also has another URL that’s just ‘Seattle Seahawks’. It pulls the content from the first page and just displays it under a prettier URL. So Google wants to be able to say that second page is the one people really want, and they’ll attribute all the traffic, links and value to the shorter URL.”
BigDaddy is also intended to provide a solution to another long-standing Google problem: that of illicit redirects, known as “302 redirects”. Nefarious Webmasters can “hijack” a page by replacing the pages that should come up in a search with a virtual page that masquerades under the URL for the correct page. The searcher sees the correct result, but when clicked on, the listing can redirect the searcher to any page the hijacker wants—including adult content or false storefronts set up to capture personal information. If a Web site suffers enough hijackings, Google will consider all the pages contaminated and drop it from the index.

“302 redirects are a big hole in the system,” Sullivan says. “People are using 302 redirects to hijack content and pages and many other things. By fixing this, Google will be eliminating a lot of problems.”

Of course, how BigDaddy will fix these issues is a closely held secret. As with many other questions surrounding the compiling and ranking of its index, Google refuses to be specific for fear that too much information will only teach the bad guys how to get around the system.
And there’s something else new about BigDaddy. While search optimizers often know where to find a Google testing data center and have usually tried to go there to see how the pages they’re working on are being searched and indexed, those IP addresses change often, even in a day.
But for BigDaddy, Google’s thrown open the doors. In early January, Cutts published a pair of IP addresses (66.249.93.104 and 64.233.179.104, for those who want a look) and actively called for feedback from Webmasters about problems and issues they perceived with the new system and its indexing.

Some of these changes will bring Google’s indexing technology up to par with its competitors; for example, Yahoo! and MSN have been handling 302 redirects for a year or more, although perhaps not as effectively as BigDaddy will eventually do. But other aspects of BigDaddy will help position Google to measure up to the search requirements of the future in some interesting ways, Sullivan says.

“This will lay the groundwork for more advanced algorithms, larger databases, and being able to index different types of content more effectively,” he says. For example, Google has also begun using a search crawler built on a Mozilla browser. The new search bot is more flexible, seems faster and can read non-text content more readily; that should mean that in time, it will be able to read links within images and even within Flash video, matter that gets ignored by bots that can’t speak Javascript.

“As Web technology develops and we get richer and more interactive Web sites, [the search engines] can’t just stick with just indexing hyperlinks and text,” Sullivan says. “They’re going to have to do everything.”

January 22, 2006

How To Keep Your Website Fresh With RSS

Filed under: Internet - Websites - SEO — admin @ 4:08 pm
How To Keep Your Website Fresh With RSS

By Jason OConnor (c) 2006,
Oak Web Works, LLC

One of the biggest reasons people visit websites is to get information. If you can regularly provide fresh, quality content on your website you can expect to be rewarded by visitors and return visitors. What’s more, you will be rewarded by the search engines. I recommend that you add new and original content to your site as often as possible, ideally once a day.Regularly adding fresh and original content: 

  • Keeps your site visitors coming back
  • Continually adds value to your website
  • Makes people more comfortable buying from your site
  • Establishes yourself as an authority in your industry
  • Greatly helps your site rank higher in search engines

All of the above factors translate into revenue.

We all know how hard adding original and fresh content is, especially if you’re the business owner. You have to be original, creative, organized, thoughtful and motivated, and above all, able to write. So what’s a website owner or business owner supposed to do? RSS may be the answer.

What Is RSS?

Here’s the Wikipedia definition of RSS:

RSS is a family of web feed formats specified in XML (a generic specification for data formats) and used for Web syndication. RSS delivers its information as an XML file called an “RSS feed”, “webfeed”, “RSS stream”, or “RSS channel”. These RSS feeds provide a way for users to passively receive newly released content (such as text, web pages, sound files, or other media); this might be the full content itself or just a link to it, possibly with a summary or other metadata (data describing the content).

RSS feeds are operated by many news web sites, weblogs, schools, and podcasters.

“RSS” can stand for any of the following phrases:

  • Really Simple Syndication (RSS 2.0)
  • Rich Site Summary (RSS 0.91, RSS 1.0)
  • RDF Site Summary (RSS 0.9 and 1.0)

Want to see an example of RSS in action? Go to the Oak Web Works, LLC homepage, and look at the bottom of the right-hand column under the title ‘Latest Tech News’. This is actually two RSS feeds from other websites.

Our company homepage was very static. It didn’t change very much since the services we offer stay basically the same. Why should any visitors come back if every time they come to our site, the content is exactly the same? They don’t have much of a reason.

Interestingly, that’s the way search engine spiders were programmed to “think” as well. Spiders are programs written for search engines to regularly surf the Web and record what’s there. That recording goes into the search engine’s databases ready to be accessed by the next searcher. This process is called indexing.

For example, Google will send out a spider to your site and index a lot of it, but not always all of it. It determines how often to revisit and index your site by how often you update it. If you update it every day, then it will visit much more often than if you rarely update it. Engines also consider the homepage to be the most important page, so it’s good to update it even more often than the rest of your site.

Again, if you struggle with adding fresh content, then RSS may be the answer. We didn’t write the headlines under ‘Latest Tech News’ on our homepage. Instead, the RSS feed automatically grabbed it from another site that had created them. Once we set the feed up, we don’t have to do anything more, and our homepage has regularly updated content. Every time those headlines change, it updates its feed, which is then updated on any other websites displaying that feed, as well as ours.

RSS feeds can be more than news headlines. They can be lists of any kind. They can be press releases, articles, blog entries, product releases, or almost any other grouping of changing or growing data.

How Do I Set An RSS Feed Up?

There are a number of ways in which you can display an RSS feed on your website. You can use JavaScrípt or various other scripting languages. Unfortunately, RSS that uses JavaScrípt is not seen at all by search engines when they come and index your site, so don’t use JavaScrípt.

Instead, use a scrípt that can be handled by your Web server besides JavaScrípt. Ask your hostíng company or IT people what platform your Web server uses and what software or modules are loaded onto the machine. This will determine what scripting language you can use for your RSS.

Chëck if your Web server has PHP capabilities. If so, then there are hundreds of scripts written in PHP that you can use for free that properly display RSS feeds that are recognized by search engines. There are RSS scripts written in ASP.NET, Perl and numerous other languages, so you have a wide variety to choose from.

For the Oak Web Works, LLC homepage we used an ASP scrípt called RSStoHTML.

Which one would you choose? After you’ve determined which languages your Web server supports, conduct a search such as ‘PHP scrípt for displaying RSS feeds in html’ or ‘ASP and RSS’, for example. Try a few and see which ones run on your server. If one runs on your server properly, and you chëck this by simply seeing if it displays RSS feeds on your Web page, then use that one.

When you download the scrípt, look at the code and find where to add an RSS feed URL. There should be a dummy one in there already, so just replace that one with the RSS feed you want to use. Here’s what a typical RSS feed URL looks like:
http://nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/userland/Technology.xml
The URL’s often end in ‘.rss’ as well.

After we inserted the RSS feed URL into the scrípt, we wanted to display the feed in HTML on our homepage. To do this we added the following bit of code into the spot on our homepage html code where we wanted it to display:

<!–#include virtual=”RSS2HTML-tech-news-home.asp”–>

Keep in mind that this is for a Windows Web server. The way in which you include it on a website powered by a UNIX Web server will be a little different. If you’re not sure, ask your hostíng company. Where can I find feeds that are relevant to my website’s content?

First you can try these:

You can also do a search for your topic and RSS feeds. For example, search for “RSS feeds and pets’, or ‘football and RSS feeds’, or ‘small business news feeds’. Finally, you can go to specific websites that are related to your industry and look for a small, orange, rectangular icon that says ‘RSS’ or ‘XML’. Click on that and you’ll get a feed URL to enter into your RSS feed scrípt.

Remember, always be sure to include feeds that are relevant to your website’s content. Once you get the hang of the concept, RSS can be a lot of fun, and it definitely keeps your website fresh and updated, just what search engines like, and more importantly, what website visitors like.

About The Author
Jason OConnor is President of Oak Web Works, LLC, an e-strategy firm. Reach him at joconnor888@hotmail.com.

 

January 9, 2006

7 Characteristics of a Great Webpage

Filed under: Internet - Websites - SEO — admin @ 4:13 pm
7 Characteristics of a Great Webpage
By Titus Hoskins (c) 2006

What makes for a great webpage?Wouldn’t you like to know the main ingredients for creating a superior webpage? What basic elements you must have if you want a solidly designed webpage? A webpage that will stand out and be noticed by your visitors. One that will keep those visitors returning to your site, again and again. An effective webpage that is 95% better than most of the other pages on the Net. 

Follow these simple design features when creating your next webpage and you will have the answer:

1. Good Keywords

The nucleus. The conception. Good keywords are the very first building blocks you must consider before your webpage even becomes a dim notion in your head. Picking the right keyword or keyword phrase is the ultimate factor that will determine the success or failure of your webpage. You must do major research on the keyword or keyword phrases that will be the focal point and drawing card for your webpage.

You must get this right. It is vital. It is the single most important element of a webpage. You can use keyword research software and sites such as GoodKeywords, Wordtracker.com, Nichebot.com, or superior keyword research software such as Brad Callen’s Keyword Elite.

Regardless of what process you favor, you must choose your keywords very carefully. You must chëck the competition for your chosen keywords or phrase. You must chëck the number of searches made each month for your keyword. You must also chëck the keyword density of your page to see if it will register in the search engines. You may have to adjust or fine-tune your keyword density at a later date.

Make sure you place your keyword in the title of your page. Place it in the first Headline on the page and many marketers also place their keyword or phrase in the url. For example: www.yourdomain.com/keyword.html This will help the search engines and surfers to find your page quicker.

2. Simple Design

Keep it simple. You must keep your webpage simple and direct. Keep it professional. Make sure it is readable and clear to all your visitors. Do a spell chëck. Do a grammar chëck. You may also want to chëck how your webpage looks in all types of browsers (www.anybrowser.com). Better safe than sorry.

Keep your visitors in mind at all times when designing your webpage. Keep it on topic, keep it related to your keywords. Most marketing studies show that’s it’s best not to confuse your visitors with too many options. If you’re selling a product or products, limit the number on each page to one product if you can.

If you have a comparison page, limit the number to three or four. Studies also show that if you present too many options or products, the conversion rate goes down, not up. Keep all your products related. If you have a page on laptops, don’t start discussing the benefits of owning a SUV.

Keep your sentences short and the number of words on a page down to 200 to 300. Many sites break up longer articles into multi-pages, this will be of some inconvenience for your visitors but you will have more room for advertising – your call.

3. Optimized

Let’s face it, the average webpage will get most of its traffíc from the search engines, mainly Google, although MSN and Yahoo are also worth considering. Optimize your page for Google. Use a simple hierarchy, keep your pages no more than three clicks away from the main page. Linking all your pages to your index page is a good practice, always do this. The search engines will find your page faster if it is linked directly from the main index page of your site.

Using blogging software/structure that comes with such free blogging software as WordPress will optimize your pages for you. Blogging systems have a linking hierarchy (categories, archives, etc.) that are very search engine friendly. It’s almost impossible not to optimize your pages if you’re using a blogging system. Plus, you have an RSS feed that will syndicate your content and place it into the search engines very quickly.

Chëck factors such as Mega Tags, title description and content. Use a robots text file for the search engine robots.

If you’re new to building webpages, you may want to chëck out Google’s Webpage Creator, you can create your pages and have it hosted free by Google and they will be indexed immediately in Google. Big Plus!

4. Easy Navigation

A great webpage will have easy and simple navigation. Link your page to and from your main index page if you can. Make sure you link to it from your sitemap page. Many webmasters put all the main links on their site at the top or the bottom of all their webpages, so that a visitor can freely move around and find what they’re looking for. Keep your visitors’ comfort level in mind at all times.

Double chëck to see all links on your webpage work! You may be surprised how many don’t work, especially if you link out to other sites. The search engines don’t like broken links, neither will your visitors.

Also double chëck to see if all images on your page display properly. Nothing will bring down the quality of your page faster than images that don’t load.

5. Fresh Content

A great webpage will always have fresh content. Make sure you update your webpage often. Our world’s technology changes rapidly, make sure your material is current and still revelant.

Remember, 9 times out of 10, the only reason a visitor is on your page is for information. Make sure you deliver. Make sure that information is recent and accurate. Besides, there is nothing like fresh content to keep your visitors interested and coming back for more.

6. Bookmarkable

A great webpage will always be bookmarkable. Your visitor will want to bookmark your page and return to it for more information. Make sure you make it easy for your visitor to bookmark your page. Use a bookmark scrípt. Make sure you have a favicon, this is a small logo you place on your site and it will be automatically picked up and displayed in your visitor’s bookmarks, drawing attention to your page. Consider a bookmark and favicon like bread crumbs, all leading the visitor back to your page.

7. Cool

Every great webpage should have a WOW factor! Try to make your page stand out from the crowd. Try to make it unique, try to make it cool. Just remember, a simple professional webpage with valuable information is always cool. And remember there is nothing like a little good ‘word of mouth’ to get some traffíc drawing PR for your page. Great buzz about your webpage is worth its worth in gold.

So the next time you’re designing a webpage, go all out and try to create your webpage with all of the characteristics listed above. Start with your keywords, keep it simple, proof-read and test for coding errors, create good navigation and optimize for the search engines, make sure you provide valuable fresh content and information. Last but not least, try your hardest to make your webpage memorable and bookmarkable. Make it a professional webpage that will be superior to the majority of other pages on the web.

Aim high and you will reap the rewards.

About The Author
The author runs a modest Internet Marketing web site where you will find helpful online guides on RSS/Blogging, SEO, Building Profitable Websites, Affilíate Programs, List Building, Laptops, Internet Fax and quite a few Free Marketing Tools: http://www.bizwaremagic.com
This article may be freely distributed if this resource box stays attached.

 

Effective SEO Through Good Code Structure

Filed under: Internet - Websites - SEO — admin @ 4:12 pm

Effective SEO Through Good Code Structure
By Adriana Iordan (c) 2006

For a successful Search Engine Optimization strategy, take into consideration that search engines look at content and also at the structure of the markup. They emphasize the importance of text content, page titles, keywords rich text, meta descriptions and information architecture. A website where quality of content and code prevails will rank higher in the major search engines.

There are many Search Engine Optimization tactics, but try to find the best combination and don’t sacrifice the usability and performance of your website. Here is some basic information about improving your source code from an SEO perspective:

Avoid Classical 404 Error Pages

The 404 – File Not Found – page is presented to the user by the server as an error page. The user gets this message directly from the server of the website he is trying to visit. This error page is supposed to appear only when the server cannot find the requested location and is unsure of its status.

In the vast majority of cases, the 404 error emerges for pages that were moved or even deleted or the layout of the site or page information changed.

Many hostíng companies offer a 404 redirect page. This means that when a user enters the URL of any page of your domain, and that page does not exist or can no longer be found, you can automatically redirect the user to a specified page – usually your home page or your sitemap.

Pay special attention when you decide to delete certain pages. Remember to redirect them to a main page of your site using the 301 (Moved Permanently) HTTP response code.

You can greatly improve the user friendliness of your website by creating a custom 404 page.


  • Present a message of apology for the inconvenience;
  • Try to ease the user’s way back to your site. Introduce error messages and include evident links to the home page, sitemap, and contact page;
  • Offer assistance and encourage the user to continue to search for the information he needs on your site. You could even include a search box right on the error page;
  • Keep the same design for the error page as for the rest of the website.

See: http://www.avangate.com/4040404404

But remember that the best strategy for a 404 error page is to prevent it from coming up altogether, as many customers might be left with the impression that the whole website does not exist and not just the specific page they were trying to access.

Keep Away From Orphan Pages

An orphan page is a page that is not linked to another one and thus cannot be found by spiders. To avoid having orphan pages on your website, chëck regularly that all your pages are linked to each other.

Search engines consider sites with orphan pages to be unprofessional, and not worthy of getting a high rank. This kind of website is under construction or is the result of a poor design process. If your pages aren’t linked properly search engines won’t index them and will consider them irrelevant for the search.

Pay attention to the fact that some search engines don’t correctly index websites that use HTML frames. When spiders crawl through your internal pages, they index each individual page and display them as orphan pages in search results. Most frame designs include a content frame and a navigation frame.

Visitors require both frames to navigate through the site. Create a JavaScrípt to chëck if the page is loading correctly, and load the frameset. In this way, users won’t be able to open pages outside the frame. This is a very easy way of losing clients.

Use 301 Redirect Pages

To avoid displaying a 404 error page, set up a 301 redirect page. The code 301 means “moved permanently” and it’s the easiest way to preserve your search engine rankings for that page.

There are two ways of generating proper 301 redirect pages. If your site is hosted on a Linux or Unix server create a .htaccess file to add the redirect to your server’s web root.

The .htaccess file contains specific instructions for certain requests, including security, redirection issues and how to handle certain errors. If it is hosted on a Windows or IIS server then the 301 redirect can be set up in the Administrator’s section of the server software or through the DNS (Domain Name Server) zone.

Make a habit of reviewing the log files which contain data sent by your server. Search engine spiders often make critical decisions based on what your server tells them through the server’s headers.

Pay attention, an improper 301 redirect can cause you big problems, since your website might fail and users won’t be able to visit your pages. Setting up a correct “301 redirect” assures that you’ll stay high in search rankings.

Create a Sitemap

A sitemap is a web page that lists all the pages on your website. They are intended both for users – to find easier the information they need, and for search engines to index pages.

Your sitemap link should be right on your home page. In this way spiders are sent directly to the place where all your content information is gathered. Sitemaps can improve SEO, however, be advised that they only take into consideration a limited number of links to those pages.

To make sure that spiders chëck your whole site and have more chances to get indexed, it would be a good idea to use a sitemap generator. You can use ROR sitemaps that are readable by all search engines.

ROR is a sitemap tool that uses XML feeds to describe your website. ROR sitemaps allow search engines to match text search with structured information, thus obtaining more relevance for your site. This kind of sitemap helps search engines to better understand your website content – products, services, images, articles, etc. By creating a file with product names, descriptions, prices, images, availability, affilíate programs, and any other relevant information customers can find you easier.

Don’t Overuse Dynamic Pages

Dynamic web pages include dynamic content – images, text, etc – which change without the page being reloaded. Client-side languages like JavaScrípt and ActiveX are usually used to create these types of web pages.

Search engines don’t rank dynamic pages with many parameters well. If you choose not to turn your dynamic URLs into static ones, at least put the most important parameters in your URLs first and try to limit dynamic parameters to no more than two.

Spiders can’t read the text rendered as graphics. Any text that you want the spiders to read and index should be written out as text. At the very least, put any text that appears in graphics into the images’ ALT attribute.

A slightly better alternative is to write your text in Flash, but remember to have a “Skip this intro…” link that takes visitors (and spiders) to the text-rich content of your site. Don’t neglect this information if you want to optimize your search engine strategy.

Put .CSS and JavaScrípt into External Files

For a search engine, improperly formatted code will have a negative impact on your rankings. Since search engines read only a certain amount of information on a web page, you should try to increase the text content to HTML tag ratio.

If you have too much HTML code, the text content won’t be seen entirely. For reducing HTML code, utilize hand coding using external .css files and Javascrípt.

Make Sure You Have Well Formatted [X]HTML

Try to fix as many of the HTML errors as possible. Although the search engines don’t rank websites that have standard compliant code better they tend to “read” them easier. Use the W3 HTML Validator to chëck the validity of your code.

For a successful Search Engine Optimization strategy, take into account all of the aspects presented here. It takes time, effort and patience to achieve a higher rank in the main search engines. The idea is to have a long term strategy that makes your website stay on top for an extended period of time.
About The Author
Adriana Iordan is a Web Marketing Specialist at Avangate B.V.. She has in depth knowledge of internet marketing services and website analysis applied to the software industry and e-commerce development. Avangate is an eCommerce platform for electronic software distribution incorporating an easy to use and secure online payment system plus additional marketing and salës tools.

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