| AFFORDABLE WEB PAGE BUILDER HAS BEEN THERE AND DONE THAT...BUT IT IS AN ALWAYS CHANGING WORLD IN THE WORLD WIDE WEBB BUSINESS, ISP'S, BROWSERS, SEARCH ENGINES AND THEREFORE SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION |
| Body of a Web Page A web page is an electronic document written in a computer language called HTML, short for Hypertext Markup Language. Each web page has a unique address, called a URL or Uniform Resource Locator that identifies its location on the network. A website has one or more related web pages, depending on how it's designed. Web pages on a site are linked together through a system of hyperlinks, enabling you to jump between them by clicking on a link. On the Web, you navigate through pages of information according to your interests. Home Sweet Home Page When you browse the World Wide Web you'll see the term home page often. Think of a home page as the starting point of a website. Like the table of contents of a book or magazine, the home page usually provides an overview of what you'll find at the website. A site can have one page, many pages or a few long ones. If there isn't a lot of information, the home page may be the only page. But usually you will find at least a few other pages. Web pages vary wildly in design and content, but many use a traditional magazine format. At the top of the page is a masthead or banner graphic, then a list of items, such as articles, often with a brief description. The items in the list usually link to other pages on the site, or to other sites. Sometimes these links are highlighted words in the body of the text, or are arranged in a list, like an index. They can also be a combination of both. A web page may also have images that link to other content. How can you tell which text are links? Text links appear in a different color from the rest of the text--typically in blue and underlined. When you move your cursor over a text link or over a graphic link, it will change from an arrow to a hand. The hypertext words often hint at what you will link to. When you return to a page with a link you've already visited, the hypertext words will often be in a different color, so you know you've already been there. But you can certainly go there again. Don't be surprised though, if the next time you visit a page it looks different and the information has changed. The Web is a dynamic medium. To encourage visitors to return to a site, some web publishers update pages often. That's what makes browsing the Web so exciting. |

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| Website Traffic and Search Engine Optimization: Title, Tags and Content: Search engine optimization is primarily about getting your website tuned up to optimum effectiveness as far as search engines are concerned. However, the intent is to get a good search engine placement so that more humans will be exposed to the "opportunity" to visit your website. If done properly, the steps you take to optimize your website for search engines can also often be used to optimize your site to get website traffic. After all, it accomplishes little to get a good ranking by a search engine and yet be passed over by the human viewing the search engine results. Three basic areas that should be considered in planning and designing the website itself are: 1. The Title of The Website 2. The Meta Tags including: The Description Meta Tag, the Keyword Meta Tag and the Revisit Meta Tag. 3. The Content of the Website The Title of the Website Is the Headline If you think of your website as the best advertisement you can design to tell people about your business or product, then the title is the headline of that advertisement. The title is embedded in the head of the website. Most objects in the head are normally visible only to search engines. However, the title is visible to both search engines and visitors. In fact, the title of the website is normally the first clue a potential visitor has about your website, as it is commonly displayed as the first identifying text someone sees when they get a list of websites from a search engine after entering a search. The title will also normally be seen in the line at the top of the page. Titles should be five to ten words long, 70 to 80 characters. As with the domain name, the title will be scrutinized by the search engine as to its relevance to the search topic. Part of the ranking awarded by the search engine, part of the placement in the list of returns may be influenced by the wording, or words, of the title. For example, the domain bicycleparts.com, may be enhanced by a title that uses the words "bicycle parts"; "Bob's bicycle parts and service." Thinking in terms of a headline, maybe Bob would want a title that reads, "Best bicycle parts delivered to your door." The Meta Tags Talk to the Search Engine Meta tags are snippets of code which are placed within the head. Normally, they only speak to the search engine, but not having the right ones could cost your website its rightful placement and could create a poor impression with potential visitors. While there are several Meta tags which could be of importance, there are two that are extremely valuable viz. descriptor tag and the keyword tag: The "Description" Meta Tag Has Messages for Search Engines and Website Visitors Alike The description will commonly expand on the brief "headline" presented by the title. Not only will the information in this tag be of value in helping a search engine determine placement of your website within search results, but the description contained in this tag is normally shown along with the title when the search engine shows the returns for a search. Failure to provide a description may not only make it more difficult to obtain good placement within returns, but it is likely that in the absence of a description, the search engine will simply grab the first few words it sees on your page, and that may be what the viewer reads as a description of your website. Most search engines display the first 20 words of the description also the description should not exceed 150-200 characters. The "Keywords" Tag: It used to be that search engines wanted "you" to list the important keywords in your website. These days, the programs used by the search engines generally extract the pertinent and relevant keywords from the content of the page itself and ignore the keyword tag completely. Many website designers have gone so far as to drop this tag. The "Revisit" Tag: While not specifically a search engine optimization item, the "revisit" tag may help provide more website traffic. The "revisit" tag tells a search engine spider to return in a particular number of days to re-index the site. This can be of great importance with a site that updates data regularly, but might only get indexed by the search engines at longer intervals. Content Is King! Though it might be debated and there are certainly exceptions, generally having a website full of valuable content is one of the best ways to make search engines and people happy. The search engines have something to sink their teeth into, and can extract a lot more data from the content than you possibly could tell them in the title and tags. I Many advertisers write the content of their website and then try to see where to stuff in the keywords. While this could possibly fool the search engine, odds are it is going to make the writing a little strange, and might help cause the visitor to choose to visit, and do business with, a more professional looking site. The simplest course is to choose the website topic, title, description, and keywords and then write heartfelt copy based on those items. This article is not the final word on search engine optimization. At best, it is merely an overview of areas to be considered by the budding website designer or internet business entrepreneur. As in most things, search engine optimization is an art, and sometimes seems to border on magic. |