Directory Submissions will increase your site visibility

November 11th, 2008

To maintain your rankings, listing and fast indexing in search engines you need continues building of links every month. With our monthly manual directory submission services you can achieve this. This service is for customers who has already availed directory submission services may be from us or other submission company. Every month there is announcement of new directories and we track these announcements and make your site submission in these directories to keep getting one way links. Minimum submission will be 50 directories a month.

Directory Submissions will increase your site visibility on the major search engines, and in return that will increase your website traffic. It also builds backlinks to your website, and the more backlinks that you have generally the higher up you will be ranked in google for keywords relevant to your website. Directory submissions play a key role in link building.
Manual Directory Submission Outsourcing
All SEO’s and Search Engine Optimization Companies can contact us directly for outsourcing their directory submissions and directory listings work to us. Since we are already doing work for many SEO Companies and know how such work can be handled efficiently for maximum client satisfaction. We even sign non disclosure agreements with our outsourcing partners. For any queries you can mail us at sales@itoutosurceonline.com
Why Bettersense for Directory Submission Service.?
Manual Directory Submission is cost effective way of building one way links from thematic category of high quality website directories which also improve page rank, internet visibility, branding and drive relevant traffic which convert into sale.

We offer manual directory submission service by our experts’ directory submitter having a vast experience of directory editing, building links and SEO. All submissions are hand submitted to free, no reciprocal, quality Internet web directories.

Hand submitting to directories as per there submission guidelines is a time consuming and tedious work. Our Professional manual directory submitter is best choice to get listed in free search engine friendly directories at reasonable cost.

The goal of our directory submission services is to have the pages of your website included in the directory database with minimal editing by directory editors. Achieving this goal requires significant directory research and analysis which our directory editors and reviewers have as they are category editors of various directories like Zeal (LookSmart non-commercial), DMOZ (The Open Directory Project), JoeAnt, IndiaBook and others.

Additional Feature of Our Directory Submission Process
Various Link Anchor Text:- We will provide you these directory listing with various link anchor text related to your web site. Using only one anchor text is considered as being unnatural linkage manipulation. We develop keyword-rich titles and page descriptions for each of your listing.

Quick Listing:- Our submission experts manually do submission in the most relevant categories that apply to submitted content . We know exactly what the editors are looking for and how to get your site listed quickly.

Relevant Directory :- There are thousands of directories out there but they all don’t qualify for our directory submission program. We identify good quality relevant directories for you in which your site will be listed and these will have redeeming value for your website.
In addition to link popularity benefits, some of the other benefits of directory listings are :-
· It’s a fast and affordable way to get one-way links
· You attract buyers in your industry
· They generate traffic for your website
· Good place to find promotional partners
Please contact us at sales@itoutsourceonline.com for all directory submission packages details and pricing along with your requirements.

About us: Bettersense IT Outsource offers Quality Manual Directory Submission Services. Our expert’s directory submitter will submit your website to Free, Non reciprocal Quality Internet Web directories at best market price in limited time frame with maximum approvals with complete submission report.

Who Feeds Who - Search Engine Relationships

October 15th, 2008

Search engines are large corporations with complex ownership and partnerships between them. While some are more technology oriented and mainly outsource their database and crawling software, others are commercially-specific and will speculate on their large user audience to sell you listings and advertising opportunities.

This brief lesson is intended to provide some insight into who owns who in the contemporary search world and which search engines provide results for which. By knowing this, you will better understand which of them are the best to target when optimizing your pages.

A while ago, there were many different engines, almost equally popular among visitors that were constantly competing in popularity, number of searches, efficiency of search technology, number of indexed pages, etc. Nowadays, after a period of incorporation, all the minor companies are owned by the larger entities.

Who Owns Who

  • Yahoo! owns AllTheWeb, Lycos and AltaVista. Yahoo! also owns and uses Inktomi’s technology and database for all the partnering engines under its wing.
  • Google partners with AOL, it is also a major result provider for many large engines because of its own cutting-edge technology (Netscape, Ask.com, Iwon).
  • Live Search does not own anybody and uses its own database (since February, 2005).

Who Feeds Who

The most outstanding work in the field of relationships between search result providers and consumers, and known to all SEO experts, is Bruce Clay’s SE relationship chart. Here we provide a static representation. The dynamic (and much more convenient) version is available at
http://www.bruceclay.com/searchenginerelationshipchart.htm
Here’s the search engine relationship chart:

serelationshipimage6ks6 Who Feeds Who - Search Engine Relationships

Pay-for-Performance Search Engines

October 15th, 2008

As opposed to organic search results (free by nature), the majority of search engines now offer Pay for Performance (PFP) options. Pay for Performance lets you promote your site by paying for SE exposure, rather than by relying on solely organic listings determined by your SEO efforts.
The picture below demonstrates the difference between organic and paid search results in Google.

image3ra7 Pay-for-Performance Search Engines
There are three main types of Pay for Performance options:

  • Pay-per-click - the best examples are Google AdWords and Yahoo! Search Marketing Solutions (formerly Overture). With pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, advertisers place bids for different search keywords. When users perform searches for these keywords, advertiser short, textual ads are shown together with organic results. If a user clicks on one of these ads, the advertiser is charged the per-click sum agreed to earlier.
  • Paid inclusion (or paid submission) is a fee-based inclusion into the database or directory of a search engine. The more prominent paid inclusion programs are Overture Site Match (Site Match is entirely handled by Overture which is owned by Yahoo!) and Yahoo! Directory Submit.
  • Paid sponsorship - with this model, an advertiser pays a flat fee to a search engine. In return, the search engine shows the advertiser’s ads together with search results for pre-selected keywords. ExactSeek, for example, features this pay-for-performance model.

Pay-per-click

PPC advertising is by far the most widespread form of pay-for-performance search marketing. As it?s the most effective way for a search engine to make money, PPC is offered by almost every SE on Earth. However, the two most prominent providers of PPC advertising are Google and Yahoo.

Google AdWords

Google AdWords is the world leader in pay-per-click advertising. Currently it has more than 150,000 advertisers. The ads show up not only with Google search results, but also with Google partners such as AOL search, About.com and thousands of other websites that publish AdWords ads. Google has an interesting ad ranking system. It ranks ads not by the bid (the amount their owners are ready to pay for one click), but by the combination of the bid and the click-through ratio. This way, Google maximizes its revenue stream (since Revenue to Google = Bid x CTR x Views) and gives small advertisers an opportunity to effectively compete with big companies. A small advertiser cannot compete on the cost-per-click basis, but can successfully overcome any big company in terms of the click-through ratio.

AdWords ads can only contain 95 characters: 25 for the headline, then two 35-character-long description lines, and a visible URL field.

AdWords gives advertisers several options to target keywords: broad matching, exact matching, phrase matching, and negative keywords. The matching options define how close the search string entered by a user should be to a keyword selected by an advertiser. If the advertiser has chosen [tennis ball] as their keyword (square brackets mean exact match), their ad will be shown only if a user enters tennis ball into the search box. If the advertiser has chosen “tennis ball” (quotes mean phrase match), the ad show up if a user searches for red tennis ball or yellow tennis ball or simply tennis ball. Finally, if the advertiser has chosen tennis ball with no brackets or quotes around it (for a broad match), the ad will show up even if a user enters wilson rackets. With negative keywords, advertisers can prevent their ad from showing up if a user enters this keyword. For example, a retailer would usually add -free, -replica to the keywords list to avoid targeting “free stuff” hunters.
One recent development with AdWords was the release of AdWords API (application program interface) that will allow third-party developers to create applications that will work directly with AdWords accounts ? facilitating and automating many bid and ad management tasks.
You can learn more and sign up for Google AdWords? at http://adwords.google.com

Yahoo

Yahoo! Search Marketing Solutions http://overture.com (formerly Overture) is Google’s main competitor in the field of PPC advertising. Overture (originally called GoTo) was the first company to offer PPC advertising and was later acquired by Yahoo. Yahoo ranks ad listings exclusively based on the bid amount; furthermore, if you get a top-3 listing with Yahoo, your ad will be prominently placed with MSN, Altavista, CNN, and other search and news portals.
Yahoo Search Marketing offers Sponsored Search and Content Match?. Sponsored search ads show up among search results in Yahoo and its partners; Content Match? ads appear on the content partners of Yahoo (this is not search, but conventional websites that are capitalizing on their content by showing third-party ads from Yahoo or Google)

Other PPC Engines

A PPC model is an excellent source of income for any search engine. Therefore, almost every search engine offers PPC advertising opportunities. Among the more prominent PPC Engines are:

Paid inclusion

With paid inclusion and submission, site owners pay search engines to get their sites reviewed and included either into the general search index, or into a directory. Yahoo! is the main player in the market of paid inclusion. It?s paid for inclusion programs are Search Submit, and Directory Submit.

Yahoo! Search Submit

Search Submit adds your site into Yahoo’s index and ensures that it will be re-crawled every 48 hours (as opposed to around two weeks for sites that were automatically added by crawler to the index). Search Submit costs include a $49 initial fee and cost-per-click fees (starting from $0.15) for each click you receive.

Yahoo! Directory Submit

With Directory Submit, there is a $299 fee for your site to be reviewed and (if accepted) added to Yahoo! Directory. After this, you will be subject to an annual recurring fee of $299. For more information about Yahoo! Pay for Performance products, please visit http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com

Paid sponsorship

The category of Pay for Performance search mainly includes flat fee search advertising. ExactSeek (http://exactseek.com) is a nice example of such a model.

ExactSeek

With ExactSeek, you purchase a so-called ?Featured Listing? (actually, your ad) on a selected keyword. Your listing then shows next to the search results for the selected keyword. You do not pay for every click ? you pay for your presence in search results. There is no ad ranking system, if there are several listings for one keyword, they will show in random order.

Human-Powered Search Engines

October 15th, 2008

The term “human powered” mainly refers to directories, i.e. online catalogs which categorize websites into thematic sections. Yahoo!, along with the regular Web search, offers one of the most complete catalogs on the Web.

When you submit a site to a directory, it is queued for editorial review. Usually, when you submit, you are allowed to choose the category your site will be placed under, and the desired description and title for your site, which will show up in a related category. However, the actual presence of your site is subject to the editor’s decision when he or she browses your site.

Directories DO NOT accept automated submissions and have special methods to protect themselves from auto-submission software. You should always submit manually to a directory.

What the directories are useless for

With the directories, there’s no concept of “ranking“, because once you’ve been included into the index, your site is ranked within the appropriate category by an independent factor, for instance, alphabetically or according to the Google Page Rank.

Thus, the concept of “optimization” has no bearing when applied to directories like DMOZ or Yahoo.
In terms of traffic, these directories are also of little value. The percentage of Web surfers that would prefer browsing categories in a directory over a regular search is quite small; few people tend to dive into the depth of the branchy vertical hierarchy of categories. Thus, on its own your category listing won’t bring much traffic.

What the directories are useful for

Since the directories are compiled by humans and are for humans (unlike  search engine listings which are compiled by robots for humans), the relevancy of directory results is very high. Search engines know that – almost all search engine spiders start their regular crawl at a directory like DMOZ or Yahoo. If you are listed there, the search engines will find you during their next crawl, even without your submission.

Additionally, directories themselves have high Page Rank values (as a rule). When you are listed in a directory, the directory is linking to your site. This link is considered high-quality and is very good for your overall link popularity, which is an influential factor when it comes to ranking. For  search engines that are able to analyze the context of your link (such as Google), your directory listing will be important because your link is supplemented by a relevant description.

This article describes two major search services that mainly function as directories and which are extremely valuable for ranking improvement: Yahoo! and DMOZ.

Yahoo! Directory (http://dir.yahoo.com)

To submit pages to the Yahoo! Directory, it will cost $299 for an annual review (for adult-related sites - $600). If you pay, it’s possibly to be listed within a few days. If you go the non-commercial route, it can take months and quite often they won’t list you at all. Registration at the Yahoo! portal is required for both cases.

Yahoo is now making use of clickthrough measurements as part of its relevancy ranking system. Searches performed at Yahoo!, instead of leading directly to websites, point to yahoo’s internal redirecting script so that Yahoo can measure what people are searching for. Yahoo also tracks and measures pages that are not directly listed in Yahoo but are linked from pages that are listed.

There are some tips that can help you get indexed in the directory faster if you are submitting as a standard (non-commercial) site. First, put a copyright notice and date on your page. Avoid using “trademarks” for your company or product name until after you’ve submitted and gotten indexed by Yahoo!. It appears that Yahoo! is concerned about posting anything that is trademarked as a company name in the listings. Yahoo! Directory will list additional pages of a site (beyond the one submitted) and/or subdomains if the editor finds the content unique and if there aren’t many listings for the same topic in the category.

It appears that Yahoo will reject your domain if it has more than 54 characters. Keeping Yahoo! compliance in mind, stay under 55 characters (not including the .com or other suffix) when choosing your domain name.

Yahoo! regularly performs checks for dead links. If your site is down during one of these checks, you may find it deleted from the Yahoo! Directory.

To sum up all of the above, the following is recommended for the Yahoo! Directory. First, try to get listed in their directory for free (register at the Yahoo! Portal, go to http://dir.yahoo.com and submit your URL under the related category).

When submitting for free, there is no guarantee your site will be reviewed and listed anytime soon. However there are some guidelines that might help. Try to purchase a domain name with your most important keywords in it, preferably separated by hyphens. If these keywords are your company name, it’s the best variant as you can submit the same words you use in the domain name as the name of your company. Create unique and original content for your website. Ensure it has no broken links or “Under construction” pages. If possible, make your design look as professional as possible because – remember – the site will be reviewed by a human editor. Generally, focus on proving to the directory that your site is all about your keyword phrase.

It will help if your site is more than just one page. It should have at least 6 to 7 pages. Put contact information at the bottom of the main page. When submitting a description, make sure it uses your key phrase. When choosing a subcategory, provide a second subcategory as well. Try to choose a subcategory that is close to the upper-level categories. If your keyword phrase is in the name of a subcategory, that’s an added bonus too.

Once you have submitted, wait for a couple of weeks. If your site still isn’t in the index, you may resubmit (there’s no penalty for resubmission and sometimes it helps), submit to another category or choose paid submission if you don’t have much time.

DMOZ / ODP (www.dmoz.org)

DMOZ stands for “Directory.MOZilla” and is also known ODP which stands for Open Directory Project. It is a multilingual open content directory of World Wide Web links owned by Time Warner that is constructed and maintained by a community of volunteer editors.

After Google made the decision to remove links to DMOZ results from its result pages, DMOZ lost some of its importance. Listing there, however, can still be extremely profitable for your rankings and general Web visibility.

To submit, go to their main page, then find the most appropriate category for your site and click the “Suggest URL“. Unlike Yahoo! Directory, here you shouldn’t submit to a top-level category. Instead, drill down until you find the best subcategory for your site.

If you submit to an inappropriate category, the editor of that category has to transfer your submission to another category. In order to do that, he/she has to visit the main page and click through to find the “perfect” category. This is time consuming, and a lot of editors won’t do it. They’ll simply reject your submission. So, you should be very careful about choosing the best category for your site. When searching for an appropriate subcategory visit the different engines that utilize ODP results (Google and Google family: AOL Search and Netscape Search; then, AltaVista and finally Lycos). Search for your keyword phrase, and see which categories come up. Give your preference to results from the engine you’d most like to target.

Create a captivating title and description which contain your keywords. Make sure it is professional and sincere. Then complete the submission form.
Submit your main URL in the best subcategory. If you have an interior page that stands on its own and has a lot of relevant information, you can try submitting it into a second subcategory.

A “last updated on” note on your site can be informative to the editors, especially if it’s been updated very recently. Like the Yahoo! Directory, ensure that your site is error-free and there are no missing images or broken links. For instance, you may use the Web CEO Site-Quality Auditor for this purpose. Don’t submit directly to the ODP if you’ve submitted your site to the ODP links on any of the other engines.

A smart technique would be to attempt submitting to the regional categories at the ODP as well as career categories. You may be able to get listed in several categories in this manner.

The directory is compiled by volunteers and this may be one of the reasons why sometimes it’s quite difficult to get listed. So, once you have submitted your site, wait at least a month. Then, if you aren’t listed, go to http://www.resource-zone.com and post a question about your listing in the Site Submission Status Forum. If you want to detect whether you’ve been listed, don’t do it through the search as the index isn’t synchronized with the database very frequently. Instead, go to the correct category and look for your listing.

Another way to find out the results of your submission is to contact the category editor personally. When doing this be as polite as possible – these editors are volunteers and they do not like being told what they should and shouldn’t do. They will help as long as you show that you appreciate the job that they do.

Unlike Yahoo!, you shouldn’t re-submit to DMOZ because it pushes your site to the bottom of the queue and would just extend the waiting period.
As with Yahoo!, good content matters a great deal. Generally DMOZ won’t list sites that are only set up to earn affiliate income or sell something. Try to make your pages as informative about your subject as possible.

Crawler-Based Search Engines

October 15th, 2008

In the previous article we discussed how crawler-based engines work. Typically, special crawler software visits your site and reads the source code of your pages. This process is called “crawling” or “spidering“. Your page is then compressed and put into the search engine’s repository which is called an “index”. This stage is referred to as “indexing“. Finally, when someone submits a query to the search engine, it pulls your page out of the index and gives it a rank among the other results it has found for this query. This is called “ranking“.

Usually for indexing, crawler-based engines consider many more factors than those they can find on your pages. Thus, before putting your page into an index, a crawler will look at how many other pages in the index are linking to yours, the text used in links that point to you, what the PageRank is of linking pages, whether the page is present in directories under related categories, etc. These “off-the-page” factors are a significant consideration when a page is evaluated by a crawler-based engine. While theoretically, you can artificially increase your page relevance for certain keywords by adjusting the corresponding areas of your HTML code, you have much less control over other pages in the Internet that are linking to you. Thus, off-the-page relevance prevails in the eyes of a crawler.
In this lesson, we look at the main spider-based search engines, and learn how we can get each of them to index our site and rank it highly. Although this step does not closely deal with the optimization process itself, we provide information on how each search engine looks at your pages so that you can come back to this section for later reference.

Google (http://www.google.com)

Google is the number one search engine among such giants of the SEs’ market as Yahoo! and Live Search. Its search share is over 60%. Google indexes billions of Web pages, so that users can search for the information they desire. Plus it creates services and tools including Web applications, advertising networks and solutions for businesses to hold on the leading position successfully.

You can submit your site to Google here: http://www.google.com/addurl/ and your site will probably be indexed in around 1-2 months.

Alternatively, you can sign in to your Google account, go to Google Webmaster Tools and submit a sitemap of your site. For more info on creating sitemaps, please refer to Lesson (20): Creating a Search Engine Friendly Site Map.

Please keep in mind that Google may ignore your submission request for a significant period of time. Even if it happens to crawl your site, it may not actually index it if there are no links pointing to it. However, if Google finds your site by following the links from other pages that have already been indexed and are regularly re-spidered, chances are you will be included without any submission. These chances are much higher if Google finds your site by reading a directory listing, such as DMOZ (www.dmoz.org).

So submit your site and it may help, but links are the best way to get indexed.
In the past, Google typically performed monthly updates called the “Google Dance” among the experts. At the beginning of the month, a deep crawl of the web took place, then after a couple of weeks the Page Rank for the retrieved pages was calculated, and at the end of the month the index database was finally updated. Nowadays, Google has switched to an incremental daily update model (sometimes referred to as everflux) so the concept of Google dance is quickly becoming historical.

The “Dance” took place from time to time but only when they need to make major changes to their algorithm. For example, their dance in November 2003 (known as Google Florida Update) was actually their first after about six months. In January 2004, Google started another dance (Austin Update) where pages that had disappeared during the “Florida” showed up again, and many pages that hadn’t disappeared the first time were gone.

In February 2004 Google updated once more and things settled down. Most people who had lost pages saw them return and although the results were rather different than those shown before Florida, at least pages didn’t seem to disappear for no reason.

Google claims to have 1 trillion (as in 1,000,000,000,000) unique URLs in its index. The engine constantly adds new pages to the index database - usually it takes around two days to list a new page after the Googlebot (Google’s spider) has crawled it. The Google team works industriously towards algorithm perfection to keep their leading position amongst search engines.

These days, Google maintains a database which is continuously updated. Matt Cutts (head of Google’s Webspam team) reported in his personal blog that : «Google switched to an index that was incrementally updated every day (or faster). Instead of a monolithic monthly event, the Google would refresh some of its index pretty much every day, which generated much smaller day-to-day changes that some people called everflux

Google has lots of so-called “regional” branches, such as “Google Australia“, “Google Canada,” etc. These branches are modifications of their index database stored on servers located in the corresponding regions. They are meant to further adjust search results to searcher needs: when you’re searching, Google detects your IP address (and thus approximate location) and feeds the results from the most appropriate index database.

Submission to the “Main Google” will list your site in all its regional branches - after Google indexes you, of course.

Google has a number of crawlers to do the spidering. They all have the name “GoogleBot” but they come from a number of different IP addresses. You can see if Google has visited your site by looking through your server logs: just find the IP address something like 82.110.xxx.xx and most probably you will see the user-agent defined as GoogleBot (”Googlebot/2.1+(+http://www.google.com/bot.html)”). Verify that ip address using the reverse DNS lookup to find out the registered name of the machine. Generally all Google crawlers host names will end with ‘googlebot.com’

Google is by far the most important search engine. Apart from their own site receiving 350 million searches per day, they also provide the search results for AOL Search, Netscape Search, Ask.com, Iwon, ICQ Search and MySpace Search. For this reason, most optimizers first focus on Google. Generally, this makes sense.

How to optimize for Google

Most important for Google are three factors: Page Rank, link anchor text and semantics.

Page Rank is an absolute value which is regularly calculated by Google for each page it has in its index. Later in this article we will give you a detailed description, but for now it’s just important to know that the number of links you’ve got from other sites outside your domain matters greatly, as well as the link quality. The latter means that in order to give you some weight, the sites linking to yours must themselves have high Page Rank, be content-rich and regularly updated.

MiniRank/Local Rank is a modification of the Page Rank based on the link structure of your single site only. Since search engines rank pages, not sites, certain pages of your site will rank higher for given keywords than others. Local Rank has a significant influence on the general Page Rank.

Anchor text is the text of the links that point to your pages. For instance, if someone links to you with the words “see this great website“, this is a useless link. However, let’s say you sell car tires and a link from another site to yours says “car tires from leading brands“, such a link will boost your rank when someone searches for car tires on Google.

Semantics is a new factor that appears to have made the biggest difference to the results. This term refers to the meaning of words and their relationships. Google bought a company called Applied Semantics back in 2003 and has been using the technology for their AdSense contextual advertising program. According to the principles of applied semantics, the crawler attempts to define which words mean the same thing and which ones are always used together.

For example, if there are a certain number of pages in Google’s index saying that an executive desk is a piece of office furniture, Google associates the two phrases. After this, a page about executive desks using the keywords “office furniture” won’t show up in a search for the keywords ”executive desk”. On the other hand, a page that mentions “executive desk” will rank better if it mentions “office furniture”.

Now, there are two other terms related to Google’s way of ranking pages:

Hilltop and Sandbox.

Hilltop is an algorithm that was created in 1999. Basically, it looks at the relationship between “Expert” and “Authority” pages. An “Expert” is a page that links to lots of other relevant documents. An “Authority” is a page that has links pointing to it from the “Expert” pages.

In theory, Google would find “Expert” pages and then the pages that they link to would rank well. Pages on sites like Yahoo, DMOZ, college sites and library sites would be considered experts.

Sandbox refers to Google’s algorithm which detects how old your page is and how long ago it has been updated. Usually pages with stale content tend to gradually slip down the result list, while new pages just crawled initially have higher positions than they would if based on Page Rank only. However, some time after gaining boosted positions, new website disappear from the top places in search results, since Google wants to verify whether your website is really continued and was not created with the sole purpose to benefit from artificially high rankings over the short term. The period when a website is unable to make it to the top of search results is referred to as “being in the sandbox”. This can last from 6 months to one year, then the positions usually restore gradually. However, not all brand new site owners observe the sandbox effect on their own sites, which has led to discussions on whether the sandbox filter really exists.

On-the-page factors considered by Google

Now that we’ve examined off-the-page factors that have primary importance for Google, let’s take a look at on-the-page factors that should be given attention before submitting to Google.

Google does not consider the META keyword tag for counting relevancy. While your META description tag contents can be used by Google as the description of your site in the search results, the META description does not have any influence for relevancy count.

Nowadays META tags don’t influence website position in search results absolutely. They can be of use as additional information source about the Web page for surfers only.

When targeting optimization for Google, be sure to use your keywords in the following:

  • Your domain name - important!
  • First words of the TITLE tag; HTML heading tags H1 to H6;
  • ALT text as long as you also describe the image;
  • Quality content on your index page. Try to make the length of your home page at least 300 words, however, don’t hide anything from visitors’ eyes (VERY IMPORTANT!).
  • Link text for outgoing links.
  • Drop-down form boxes created with the help of the SELECT tag.
  • Finally, try to have some keywords in BOLD.

Additionally, try to center your pages around one central theme. Use synonyms of your important keyword phrases. Keep everything on the page on that ONE main topic, and provide good, solid content.

Pages that are optimized for Google will score best when there are at least a few links to outside sites that are related to your topic because this establishes your page’s reputation as an authority. Google also measures how many websites outside your domain have links pointing to your site and factor in an “importance rating” for each of those referring sites. The more popular a site appears to a search engine, the higher up in the search listings they will place it.

According to Craig Silverstein with Google,

“External links that you grant from a particular page on your website can become diluted. In other words, if you place 10,000 links to other Web pages from a particular page of your website, each link is less powerful than if you were to link to only five other Web pages. Or, the contribution value to another website of each individual link is weakened the more you grant.”

Yahoo! (http://www.yahoo.com)

You can submit your URL to Yahoo! Search for free here: http://submit.search.yahoo.com/free/request (note: you need to register at their portal first) and it will be indexed in about 1-2 months.

Yahoo! is still the most popular site on the Web, according to its traffic rank reported by Alexa (www.alexa.com). Nevertheless, in terms of the number of searches performed Google carries the day.

Yahoo! provides results in a number of ways. First, it has one of the most complete directories on the Web. There’s also Yahoo! Search, which lists results in a way similar to other crawler-based engines. Here, in this section on crawler-based engines, we deal with the second service.

Sponsored results are found at the top, side, and bottom of the search results pages fed by Yahoo!. Yahoo! now owns its Yahoo! Search Marketing pay engine and provides search results to AltaVista, AllTheWeb and Lycos.
The search results at Yahoo! changed in February 2004. For the previous couple of years, Google was their search-results supplier. Nowadays, Yahoo! is using its own database. Yahoo! bought engines that had earlier pioneered the search world, Yahoo! Search officially provides all search engines acquired through these acquisitions with its own results. Therefore, when you optimize your Web pages for Yahoo!, there’s a good chance of appearing in the top results of other popular search engines, such as AllTheWeb and AltaVista.

To find out if Yahoo’s spider has visited your site, search the following information in your server logs. Their crawler is now called Yahoo Slurp (formerly, it was just Slurp). For each request from ‘Yahoo! Slurp’ user-agent, you can start with the IP address (i.e. 74.6.67.218). Then check if it really is coming from Yahoo! Search using the reverse DNS lookup. The name of all Yahoo! Search crawlers will end with ‘crawl.yahoo.net,’.

To rank well in Yahoo, you need to do the same things that help your rankings in Google. Off-the-page factors (link popularity, anchor text, etc.) are very important. Some experts consider it easier to rank well on Yahoo because your own internal links are more important and there also appears to be no requirement for link relevancy. Whereas Google claims that the Page Rank of the relevant linking sites is worth more than the Page Rank of irrelevant sites, links don’t need to be relevant to do well on Yahoo.

Like all other search engines, they’ll list you for free if you get links to your site. Much like Google, their crawler is very active and updates listings on a daily basis. However, it can take a few weeks for Yahoo to list new pages after they have found and crawled through referring links. The pages that have already been included in the listing are updated much more often, usually every several days.

In March 2004, Yahoo launched its paid inclusion program called Site Match. You can find out details about Yahoo’s paid inclusion program here: http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/srch/index.php and the pricing here - http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/srchsb/sse_pr.php?mkt=us
Site Match guarantees your site will appear in non-sponsored search results on Yahoo!, and other portals such as AltaVista and AllTheWeb.

Let’s review some quick insights into the factors on your pages that will help you rank higher in Yahoo: use keywords in your domain name and use keywords in the TITLE tag. Your title must include your most important keyword phrase once toward the beginning of the tag. Don’t split the important keyword phrase in your title!

META Keywords and META Description tags.

The Yahoo! family of search engines DOES NOT consider META tags when estimating relevancy. Use keywords in heading tags H1 through H6; Use keywords in link anchor text and ALT attributes of your images; the body main content and page names (URLs) need to have keywords in them too; the recommended keyword weight in the BODY tag for Yahoo is 5%, maximum 8%. A catalog page with lots of links, for instance a site map, will help a lot for your indexing and ranking by Yahoo!.

You can submit just the main page to Yahoo!, and let its spider find, crawl, and index the rest of your pages. If it doesn’t find an important page, however, make sure you submit it manually.

Like with all of the other engines, solid and legitimate link popularity is considered important by Yahoo’s spider as a ranking factor.

Yahoo! frowns upon having satellite sites that revolve around the theme of a main site. For example, if you sell office furniture and set up a main company site and then plant several satellite sites for each kind of furniture, it may seem suspicious to Yahoo!. Therefore, make sure that each site is a stand-alone site and serves a unique purpose, and that it’s valuable to both the search engines and your users.

As with any other search engine it is vitally important for Yahoo! that you create valuable content for your search visitors.

Windows Live Search (www.live.com)

You can submit your site to Live Search (formerly known as MSN Search) for free at http://search.msn.com/docs/submit.aspx, however they are sure to find it without your submission if you have links from sites already listed there.

MSN stands for Microsoft Network and was initially meant to be Microsoft’s solution for Web search, among other goals. Nevertheless, it was powered by Inktomi’s results and did not have its own crawler.

Since February 2005, MSN switched from another engine result base and introduced its own Web crawler. And their next significant step was on September 11, 2006 when Live Search release replaced MSN Search. For this moment Live Search is one of the most popular of world-class search engines, with around 11% of all search traffic. It definitely makes sense to target placement at the top of Live Search’s listings as the amount of traffic you will receive as a result is considerable. However, with Live Search it’s especially important to avoid spam methods since they claim to use a sophisticated series of technologies to fight against even potential spammers. PC magazine has published an article that states:

“Spammers are increasingly trying to weasel their way into search engine results, and Microsoft hopes that filtering them out can be one area where its tool can outshine Google’s.”

For more information on this article, visit http://www.pcmag.co.uk/news/1155758.

The information for finding the Live Search spider in your server visit logs is as follows: The Spider’s name is MSNBot, with the IP addresses something like 65.55.xx.xx and 65.64.xx.xx, host msnbot.msn.com, and user agent “msnbot/1.1 (+http://search.msn.com/msnbot.htm)”.

At this stage, the general rules of optimizing for Live Search would be similar to the optimization rules for other search engines. Get your site listed in the directories, obtain solid and quality link popularity, balance your keyword theme. You may also consider purchasing an ad from Live Search to get listed in the sponsored results. Live Search equally treats both off-the-page and on-the-page factors when ranking pages.

FAST Search / AllTheWeb and AltaVista (http://www.alltheweb.com)

FAST (now called Fast Search and Transfer) is a Norwegian company that specializes in search and filter technology solutions. Some time ago it built the AllTheWeb search engine. In 2003, AltaVista and AllTheWeb were bought out by the Overture engine, the second being bought from FAST Search. Overture, in its turn, was purchased by Yahoo!. It is through this route that AllTheWeb has joined the Yahoo! family of search engines. As a result, AllTheWeb’s spider is no longer crawling the Web, and you can no longer submit to the engine. Its XML feed and paid inclusion programs have been changed over to Yahoo! Search Marketing programs. Submitting to Yahoo! Search (and getting indexed there) will get your pages in AltaVista, Yahoo! Web Results, AllTheWeb, Live Search, HotBot and other engines.

AltaVista (http://www.altavista.com) was once a big player in the search industry. Until about seven years ago they could claim to be the most used search engine. Since that time, this engine has lost its independence and much of its popularity. Nowadays, it’s sending very little traffic to websites. As with AllTheWeb, it was purchased by Yahoo together with Overture.

Ask.com (http://www.ask.com)

Ask.com (formerly Ask Jeeves) is the last crawler-based search engine we are going to speak about. Ask.com supplies its search results to the Iwon search engine and is a member of the Google family of search engines.

It was designed as Ask Jeeves, where “Jeeves” is the name of the “gentleman’s personal gentleman”, or valet (illustrated by Marcos Sorensen), fetching answers to any question asked. On September 23, 2005 the company announced plans to phase out Jeeves and on February 27, 2006 the character was disassociated with Ask.com (according to the Wikipedia).

Ask.com has acquired DirectHit and Teoma which were big players in the search industry too. DirectHit was a search engine that provided results based on click popularity. Therefore, sites that received the most clicks for a particular keyword were listed at the top. Teoma was also unique due to its link popularity algorithm. Teoma claimed that it produces well ordered and relevant search results by initially eliminating all the irrelevant sites and then considering the popularity of only those that relate to the search subject in the first place.

Optimizing for Google will guarantee your appearance on the Ask.com results along with the other large engines of Google’s family (AOL, Netscape and Iwon).