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Search Engine Optimisation - Hints & TipsTop 5 reasons for poor rankings or failure to be listed in a search engine or directory: This format is renowned for causing problems with the automated search engines - some cannot read framed pages at all, or follow links within them (so your other pages do not get indexed). This is because framed pages are still indexed independently of each other, which can result in, for example, visitors arriving at pages without navigation frames or branding, leaving them unable to work out where they are or how to explore the site. Usability issues like this will affect both click-through and link popularity, thereby directly affecting search engine rankings. Don't panic though - there are work-arounds which don't involve re-designing the entire site! 2. The pages are dynamically generated Most automated search engines at the moment cannot read these pages, although it is likely that in the near future this will change as their technology becomes more sophisticated. In the meantime, this is a lot of information about your company or products which isn't being indexed, and cannot be found by your visitors on a search engine! There are technical work-arounds which enable pages to be produced as static rather than dynamic pages, but this can often add unnecessarily to the complexity of the design and update process. A better solution might be to create 'landing' pages, which are static search-engine-friendly pages linked to and from your main site, and optimised as entry points from the search engines for specific keywords/phrases. 3. Poor keyword focus. Keywords and phrases are an important factor in how search engines (and directories) rank web site results, because they indicate a site's relevance to a particular search term. Search engines look at the position, frequency and context of keywords, on the page itself as well as in the META tags, to gauge relevance - and the more competing keywords there are on your page, the less relevant it is likely to be. Note too that search engines look for the closest match to a search term when ranking, and that people nowadays tend to type in phrases rather than single words to find what they are looking for - therefore the secret to success will be in identifying what search terms your customers are actually using, and then optimising your web pages for these. (See the resources section on this site for tools to help you do this.) 4. Flash, Java and Javascript That's not to say that a site can't combine Flash and non-Flash content - just make sure that the search engines can see plenty of non-Flash, fully optimised content too (and YES, that absolutely applies to the index page - if your site opens with a gorgeous Flash intro but nothing else on the page, the search engines will ignore it altogether, and directory editors will probably leave before the animation's finished). Don't be tempted to use cloaking software, redirection scripts or META commands to get around the problem either - these techniques are known to be used by spammers and could result in your site being banned from the index. Use of Java and Javascript can sometimes render links unreadable to engines, so if you're not sure, play safe and include text links at the foot of every page. 5. Poor quality, irrelevant or unoriginal content
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