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SEO (SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION)ARTICLES
Save Time with Generic Search Engine Pages!
Save Time with Generic Search Engine Pages!
By Robin Nobles
A few years ago, it was a common practice to
create separate pages for each search engine
for each important keyword phrase, then use
a robots.txt file to keep other engines out
of the engine-specific pages. However, most
of us have now changed our philosophy. After
all, that "old" strategy was extremely
time consuming!
We can save an enormous amount of time and energy
if we create a "generic" page to begin
with. Why go to the trouble to create engine-specific
pages when a generic page will work just as
well? So, let's talk about how to work with
generic pages effectively, and then how to take
those generic pages and make them engine specific,
if needed.
Important Note
As any of my Search
Engine Workshop students will tell you,
I believe very strongly in focus, focus, focus.
So, when working with your generic pages, you'll
want to create one page focused on one keyword
phrase only. Don't bring in other keyword phrases
on the same page. FOCUS!
My Search
Engine Workshop students will also tell
you that I believe each page of your site should
be:
- of value to your users; and,
- of value to the search engines.
If a page isn't of value to both, the page is
junk and needs to be deleted from your site.
Creating Generic Pages . . .
To create a generic page, you simply optimize
a page in a very general manner, using META
tags, heading tags, link text, good quality
content, and so forth. Some of the engines don't
consider META tags, and that's okay. Using them
won't hurt your rankings for those engines.
Target your audience by using Wordtracker
to find the best keywords focused on the information
your target audience is actually looking for
when they go online.
Remember: people use the Internet to look for
information. Provide that information, and you're
strengthening your Web site and online presence.
WebPosition
Gold users, be sure to run your page through
Page Critic , choosing the HotBot search engine.
HotBot receives primary search results from
Inktomi, which still considers META tags when
determining relevancy. So, it's a good engine
to use when creating generic pages.
You've now got a generic page, and you're ready
to see how it ranks across the major engines.
Once you've created your generic page, submit
it to the engines by using pay inclusion or
letting the engines find links to the page from
other pages. I don't recommend "free add
URL" submissions, and there's no real reason
to use submission software, except for some
of the less important engines.
Once the page has had time to settle, check
your rankings. Watch your rankings for a month
or two, because depending on which submission
method you've chosen, it can take a while for
your rankings to settle.
Then, look for holes in your strategy. Is your
page doing well across the board? In many cases,
by using HotBot and creating a "generic"
page, you'll find that the same page stands
an excellent chance at ranking well across almost
all of the major engines.
If your page is doing well in some of the engines
but not others, that's the time to begin creating
engine-specific pages.
How to Create Engine-Specific Pages . . .
Take your generic page and run it through the
major engines in WebPosition
Gold's Page Critic where you aren't getting
top rankings. Make changes based on Critic's
recommendations for each engine, and save each
page in a slightly different manner. Be sure
to make a note of which page was optimized for
each of the engines.
Try to stay away from making it so obvious that
you have engine-specific pages. For example,
you may not want to name your pages:
name-your-pages-AV.html (for AltaVista), or
name-your-pages-FST.html (for Fast)
What about Duplicate Content?
Let's say your generic page ranks well with
Google and the Inktomi-influenced engines, but
it's not ranking well with Teoma or Fast/Lycos.
If you create engine-specific pages for Teoma
and Fast, you'll now have three almost identical
pages, which the engines won't like.
Remember that the golden rule when working with
content is that the content must be of value
to both the search engines and the users. Having
duplicate content is not of value to the search
engines (or the users). They certainly don't
want several versions of the same content cluttering
up their indices.
To keep from getting in trouble with duplicate
content, you'll need to create a robots.txt
file and allow certain engines to have access
to certain pages, yet keep them out of other
pages. In other words, you'll direct the engines
to whichever pages you want each engine to visit
by using a robots.txt file.
Robots.txt Files
Create a text file with Window's NotePad, NoteTab
Pro, or any other editor that can save ASCII
.txt files. Use the following syntax:
- User-agent: (PutSpiderNameHere)
- Disallow:/(PutFileNameHere)
The "user-agent" portion lets you
specify which engines you want to keep out,
and the "disallow" portion lets you
specify directories or file names.
For example, to tell AltaVista's spider, Scooter,
not to index a couple of pages, create a robots.txt
file as follows:
- User-agent: Scooter
- Disallow:/name-your-pages.html
- Disallow:/keyword-phrase.html
By creating a robots.txt file using this information,
we're keeping AltaVista out of our pages created
specifically for Fast and Teoma. You'll want
to do the same for each of the other engines.
Then, you'll want to create entries for Fast
and Teoma that will keep them out of the original
generic page.
That way, none of the engines will see duplicate
content, and they'll only see the pages created
specifically for them. Save the page as robots.txt,
then upload the file to the root directory of
your Web site. The "root directory"
is where your index.html (or htm) page is located.
This is a very simple example of a robots.txt
file, but they can get quite complex. One little
mistake can cause an engine to find a page that
you don't want found. Plus, you have to know
the names of each engine's "user agent,"
or spider. That's why I recommend using a software
program that creates the file and does the work
for you.
A Software Solution for Creating Robots.txt
Files . . .
An excellent software program for creating robots.txt
files is Robot Manager Pro. You can even download
a free trial version of the software, which
will create robots.txt files as well as analyze
the first 100 spider visits from your log files.
http://www.websitemanagementtools.com/robot.html
One of my favorite features of Robot Manager
Pro is its spider analysis feature. The software
will analyze spider visits to your site, and
it will let you know how far down into your
site a spider has visited, which pages it picked
up, whether the pay inclusion spiders are re-indexing
on their designated time schedule, and more.
Like Wordtracker
and WebPosition
Gold, this is a "must have" software
program for me personally.
In Conclusion
We all live in a very busy world, and we don't
need to make more work for ourselves. Therefore,
it makes sense to start with a generic page
and see what kind of results we get. Then, if
we don't get the rankings we want with the page,
we can then create engine-specific pages by
running the same page back through Web Position
Gold's Page Critic for the other engines. You'll
be surprised at how well your generic pages
will do, and with the extra time you'll save,
you can create more high performance pages for
your site and continue to increase your traffic!
Good luck!
Robin
Nobles is the Director of Training for the Academy
of Web Specialists, where she has taught several
thousand students in her online
search engine marketing courses during the
past several years. She is also the content
provider for GRSeo
(Search Engine Optimizer) software. Her
latest books, Web
Site Analysis and Reporting and Streetwise
Maximize Web Site Traffic, can be ordered
through Amazon. For onsite training by Robin
Nobles and John Alexander, visit Search
Engine Workshops.
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