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Search engine optimization (SEO) refers to organizing Web site content and using other non-paying methods to help improve a site's placement in search engine results, and is a subset of search engine marketing (SEM), which also includes buying keywords or sponsoring search results to artificially elevate a Web site's placement in search engine results. Web sites that naturally appear high in search engine results typically have maximized their SEO methods, by using:
Relevant and unique title tags on all Web pages;
Succinct meta tag content descriptions;
Header tags (specifically h1 tags) within the content;
Text navigation links;
XML Sitemaps; and,
Robots.txt files.
Set up your content pages like an org chart
When planning the content design for your website, organize it in a broad-to-specific flow of information with an emphasis on shallow paths. Your home page is the introduction to your content. Unless your site is tiny, save the deep dives in content for other pages. Instead, introduce your content theme, provide basic overview information, and present the information navigation scheme for the site. Thinking in terms of building an organizational chart of content will help you “bucketize” your content into logical groupings and landing pages.
However, this information categorization effort can go in the wrong direction if you are not careful. Instead of a long drill-down from the home page through folder after folder to get to the good information you offer, keep the content organization closer to the surface. You don’t need to plunge deep as you get into detail. Instead of going vertical, expand your content horizontally. Stay shallow, using many first and second level directories instead of burying your content in deep silos. This pattern of information flow will help users more easily find what they want to see and help the search engine bot crawl the information on your site.
Use <strong> tags to highlight keywords in body text
We’ve already discussed how to use keywords in your pages (in <title> tags, meta tags, heading tags, anchor tags, and the like). This selective placement of certain words emphasizes the value of those words as descriptors of the content on your page. But what about using keywords in body text? Yeah, it is still important to judiciously sprinkle your keywords in your body text. That helps the reader understand the content of your page, and a modest (and I do stress modest!) bit of repetition in the use of those keywords from the aforementioned strategic areas again in the body text reinforces your use of them.
But is that the only way to stretch your keyword dollar? Well, if you encapsulate your body text keywords with <strong> tags, this will add a bit more emphasis to the relevance of those words relative to the theme of the page. It’s not a big emphasis, mind you, but sometimes a lot of the little things can add up in value. After all, a pocket full of dimes can be worth more than a $5 bill!
Ensure text content is not shown via scripts, Flash, or images
Make sure the bot can read your content. Text is easy to read for any browser, even one as simple and as formatting strict as a search engine bot. However, bots are not human. They can see references to images and animation files, but they are hard pressed to read that content. The same goes with scripts. Bots can see the <script> tags, but since bots don’t execute the script on the page, any page element requiring the script to run so that it will be presented will be missed by the bot.
Folks who fill up their websites with images representing pretty text content to be read are making a mistake if they also want to be effectively crawled by bots and indexed by search engines. Let’s say you run a website that sells kitchen knives. Your text content about your products is read by the bot and indexed by the search engine. But an image of a chef’s knife has no indexable meaning to a bot. And neither does the a banner graphic image containing the words “Matt’s Cutlery Shop” splashed across the page.
Images are dead zones to a bot—there’s no information there to collect. If you want the text on your site to be indexed, you should put it in the page as text, plain and simple. And for the times that you do use images, you need to use ALT attributes with the <img> tag to describe the content of the image (sprinkle some of those magic keywords here if they are relevant!). That’ll at least draw some relevance of the image on the page to those keywords, even if the images themselves are not indexed.
If your site uses animation technology, such as Silverlight or Flash, there’s good news and bad news. First the good news: bots are getting better and better at extrapolating text content from these sophisticated presentation technologies. But now for the bad news: it’s still a hit-or-miss game (frankly more miss than hit), and the use of these technologies is ultimately not a good bet for SEOs.
No one is saying to never use animations. The key strategy for using Silverlight and Flash on your website is to have these be elements of a page rather than representing the entirety of your page content. That way, you can still include easily crawlable text and strategic tags for keyword usage. Try to use these technologies for image instead of text presentation. That way you still get the “wow” factor they offer to users, and your pages remain fully available to be crawled and indexed by the bots.
For what it’s worth, if you do put some text in Silverlight and Flash content, be strategic about it. Sprinkle relevant keywords there as well. Who knows? Maybe the bots might be able to make heads or tails out of the animation (as I said, things are improving in that area). At a minimum, it will promote the association of those keywords with your content to the user.
Avoid redundant content between pages
This is often a problem for sites that have affiliates sellers of their products and use dynamic URLs to distinguish which affiliate’s logo to show or attribute the inbound traffic to. But occasionally folks copy content between pages, and as Martha Stewart might say, “This is not a good thing.”
Basically, redundant content is recognized by the search engine during indexing, and often redundancies are eliminated from the index, or at least they are removed from the search engine results pages (SERPs) for relevant queries. It’s not likely you want your content to be removed in a de-duplication process when a user searches on keywords for which you’re most relevant, so make sure your pages don’t duplicate content between them.
Also avoid duplicating someone else’s content. Plagiarism is never good, so write your own thoughts on your subject of interest. Search engine indexes hold a lot of information, and that allows for detecting duplicates and plagiarism. You don’t want to be penalized for stealing someone else’s content, do you? But I bet you wouldn’t shed any tears of sadness if someone else were penalized for ripping off your content expertise and presenting it as their own, would you? When you find great and relevant content on a 3rd party site, just link to it! That’s how it’s done properly, and that is, indeed, a good thing.
Organize your content with header tags
Organize your content on your page. Think in terms of writing a theme from back at school. For each page, start off with a big idea. Then break the idea into smaller parts and develop them. Introduce the big idea with an <h1> tag. Use <h2> tags to introduce the smaller parts. Don’t worry about the weirdness of the formatting that is inherent with these tags – you can use CSS to change that.
The key here is that the <h1>, <h2>, and deeper tags (all the way down to <h6>) are regarded by the bot as more like XML than HTML in that they describe the data they contain (HTML merely focuses on the display of the information). The bot responds to this content organization by attributing the words used in the heading tag text as relevant keywords for that section. Take advantage of that concept to strengthen your keyword relevance for the bot to pick up.
Keep in mind the following tips for using header tags:
Only use only one <h1> tag per page. No, you won’t be considered web spam of you use two, but you diminish the value of the <h1> tag if you use more than one (after all, there is supposed to be only one big idea per page, right?).
Within the <h1> tag, feel free to use one or more <h2> and deeper tags per page. Use those <h2> – <h6> tags to help the bot discern the priority of content on the page.
Use keywords within header tags, but don’t copy the text of the title tag (that doesn’t help advance any specific ideas, and thus it’s a lost opportunity for more keyword affinity).
Limit header tag text to 150-200 characters.
And don’t use header tags on images (again because the bot can’t read images, thus this is a lost keyword opportunity) – stick with text.
Make page copy actionable and unique
When you write the content for your pages, always think about the reader. Why are they going to be interested in this? What will motivate them to come back or, better yet, link to your page? If you make your content compelling, you’ll earn fans. And to do that, you need to make your content actionable. Make it interesting, give your readers something they can do, and good things will happen.
Don’t use hidden text or links
Never place hidden content on your website. That includes things like text and links that are formatted to be shown in the same font color as the background and/or in the tiniest possible font sizes. Search engines have seen this trick played out time and again by folks who have nefarious goals of misleading both search engines and thus end users. As a result, these techniques are considered to be behavior of web spammers.
Don’t allow your legitimate site to be penalized because it used web spammer techniques. The search engines can see when such techniques are used and discount any value they might have added to a site’s relevance to the hidden keyword text, so it doesn’t even work, anyway. And the ensuing penalties imposed on sites employing this practice actually make this a very damaging technique. That’s the antithesis of good SEO!
We’re now cresting the hill but not yet finished with advice on how to make your site architecture more robust for SEO. Next up in our site architecture series: <head> tag optimizations. If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, feel free to post them in our SEM forum. Until next time…
-- Rick DeJarnette, Bing Webmaster Center
When I attended both SMX Advanced in Seattle back in June and SES San Jose just a couple of weeks ago, I heard a lot of questions from webmasters about Bing, especially pertaining to search engine optimization issues. Typically these included:
I want to do SEO for Bing—where should I start?
How is Bing different in terms of SEO?
What do webmasters need to know and do?
Are there any insider tips for successful ranking?
I’ll tackle these questions by providing some useful, baseline information and include pointers to more detailed, pertinent docs.
As you know, Bing is an evolution in the search engine space. With its innovative, new user interface (UI) design bringing new depth and opportunities for searchers, they can now quickly find the information they seek when they search the Internet. New UI features, such as Quick Tabs, Related Searches, and Document Preview (to name just a few), surface more information and present more opportunities to discover what searchers want to know so they can make more informed decisions more quickly. As a result, we describe Bing as a decision engine. (For more information on the new UI features in Bing, see the Bing Webmaster Center blog post, Bing white paper for webmasters & publishers released.)
Under the covers of the new UI, we do a lot of engineering work on a very large scale. For example, we crawl a variety of content types found on the Web, index that content, apply appropriate algorithms, and finally send relevant content to user queries in our search engine results pages (SERPs).
Bing’s SEO principles
SEO is fundamentally about creating websites that are good for people. The most basic advice we can give for achieving optimum rank for your site in Bing is to do the following:
Develop great, original content (including well-implemented keywords) directed toward your intended audience
Use well-architected code in your webpages (including images and Sitemaps) so that users’ web browsers and search engine crawlers can read the content you want indexed)
Earn several, high-quality, authoritative inbound links
As you can see by the links, much of this material has already been discussed in-depth in the Webmaster Center team blog in our ongoing column, search engine marketing (SEM) 101.
The type of SEO work and tasks webmasters need to perform to be successful in Bing hasn’t changed—all of the legitimate, time-tested, SEO skills and knowledge that webmasters have invested in previously apply fully today with Bing. Moreover, investments in solid, reputable SEO work made for Bing will bring similar improvements in your website’s page rank in other search engines as well.
Ultimately, SEO is still SEO. Bing doesn’t change that. Bing’s new user interface design simply adds new opportunities to searchers to find what the information they want more quickly and easily, and that benefits webmasters who have taken the time to work on the quality of their content, website architecture, and have done the hard work of earning several high-quality inbound links.
Key content and tools for performing SEO with Bing
To keep up with the latest and greatest information coming from the Bing Webmaster Center team, we recommend that you follow and review the following content:
Review the Bing official guidelines for successful indexing document for various recommendations on technical and content issues as well as known problems that can affect your site’s rank
Visit the Webmaster Center blog to keep up with the latest information from the team (you can even subscribe to our blog’s RSS feed to automate this process)
Register all of your websites with Bing Webmaster Center tools, where you can use our tools to see all sorts of data to your website pertinent to webmasters
Participate in our Webmaster Center user forums to ask questions and provide us with feedback
We look forward to working with you as partners in helping our mutual customers find the information they seek on the Internet.
-- Rajesh Srivastava, Principal Group Program Manager, Bing
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