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Add You - 10 Steps to a Spider Friendly Website
Turn Your Website Into An E-Commerce Ready, Money Making Machine al should be to have the most content possible (human readable) while limiting the amount of code used to deliver this. Keywords should be limited to a few select phrases and possibly some variations on those phrases. If you are at all considering any meaningful SEO work on your site, you should really invest your first few dollars into finding the right keywords. There are many free keyword tools such as Wordtracker.com to at least give you a start, but the few extra dollars for the upgrades are usually well worth it if you want to target the correct markets and find terms that you weren't expecting.If you are setting up a website or contemplating doing so to sell products or services, you will need to be able to accept all major credit cards to maximize your selling ability and chances for success. The monthly merchant fees associated with accepting credit cards can be costly whether you make sales or not, when using a bank for your merchant account/credit card processor. If you have ever filed bankruptcy or have bad credit, getting a merchant account with a bank is nearly impossible. So what do you do?The answer is simple: get Pay Pal merchant account. Pay Pal is by far the most widely recognized online processor for e-commerce transactions and is the primary processor for Ebay sales. While there are other online credit processors like Click Bank and others, Pay Pal overshadows them all.The nice thing about Pay Pal is the sheer volume of people that have Pay pal accounts set up for Ebay who do cruise and shop the Internet. Pay pal, while Standards Compliant/Accessible This builds on the Validator tool used earlier from W3C. By making your website completely standards compliant, you remove any possible errors in the code that may hang-up a spider. While complete compliance is not as critical as parsing errors from open tags and truly broken code, it certainly helps to ease the process of being spidered. Branding The links within your site should all use the same www. or non-www. branding. Many search engines see those variants as two separate sites and Google will even apply different PR to a page based on www or non-www. This can be further enforced by changing your htaccess file to automatically switch versions if the other is visited. If you vis First Contact: The Source of Customer Loyalty The 10 steps below will ensure that GoogleBot and other search engine spiders are able to crawl your site with little effort when they visit you. The search engines job is to index as many pages as possible from the web and they do this by trying to find the most efficient pages to process so that they may move on to the next. You can ensure their favor by helping them to index your site efficiently and effectively.With customers being smarter, more cost conscious, more product knowledgeable and more demanding, improving customer service has become a major focus within many businesses. In Customer Satisfaction is Worthless; Customer Loyalty is Priceless, author Jeffrey Gitomer contends the real solution is shifting the paradigm away from customer service to customer loyalty. This may be the first step, but the next step is to shift the focus away from loyal customers to loyal employees.By recognizing the significance that the “first contact” a customer has is with the employees. The foundation for a loyal relationship begins with the employee. In retail and many service businesses, employees experience a short training session usually 16 hours or less. The time is spent viewing required legal videotapes, completing paperwork and learning the basic company policies including from answering the telephone to using the cash register. Yet, very few businesses actively Proper Nesting Many spiders are built to parse the HTML on your page. One of the things that may confuse a parser or cause it to work harder is improper nesting of HTML elements on a page. These are tags that are opened and closed out of order such as abc...cab versus abc...cba In order to have the spiders crawl through your page flawlessly, visit validator.w3c.org and use their HTML validator specifically looking for error messages that say "end tag for '####' omitted, but its declaration does not permit this" or "end tag for element '####' which is not open". These are errors that signify improper nesting and while they may allow some spiders to visit your website, your site will lose valuable SEO points because the spiders cannot visit your site as efficiently as it can visit other sites. Remember, search engines need to spider many pages quickly to stay in their game. Use of Frames This is a spider killer if there ever was one. You simply cannot link to a specific page in a framed site with any effectiveness. If you link directly to a page within the frame, the rest of the framed page disappears. If you link to the main frames page, there is no way to link to the subpages and only your homepage(s) will show. I-Frames offer a slight advantage as they are contained within a page that has it's own URL, but many times the content within an I-Frame is inaccessible. Don't place your navigation or main content into an I-Frame. SessionID's in Your URLs These lead to a seemingly unending list of variations on each URL that have no real effect on the page. Every time a spider visits your pages, they get more and more versions of the same 'other' pages, but with different URLs each time because of the sessionID. If you want the spiders to feel at home on your site, then the barbed-wire fields of sessionIDs are not going to work. One way around this is to use a sitemap creation service like AutoMapIt.com that allow you to 'ignore' certain URL keys like the sessionID or keys used for sorting lists. This way, they have at least one link to each page that doesn't include a sessionID. Even if they are turned off at your sitemap, when the spiders visit, they will find the IDs again. SessionID's may show up in otherwise friendly URLs. If your users have to log-in on your site or you use some types of tracking software, sessionID's are what helps your site to keep visitors logged in. They are usually stored in cookies through your browser and don't normally show up in your URL. If cookies are not available (like on most spiders), the sessionID then gets passed through the URL. You may want to turn cookies off in your browser and surf your site... do the sessionIDs show up? Search-Friendly URLs This goes beyond the sessionID's in the URL and appeal more to the actual URLs being used. According to Google Webmaster Guidelines, "It helps to keep the parameters short and the number of them few". Apache makes this easy through mod_rewrite and Windows servers offer Isapi-Rewrite to accomplish turning 'ugly' URLs into 'static' URLs. You should NEVER use id= in your URLs as Google does not to spider those pages. Change it to cid= or lmnopid=, but if you use id=, your pages are already doomed from the start. Proper Meta Tags Despite their value decreasing, and a lot of talk about them being of no use now, meta tags are anything but dead. Google uses your meta-description as the description on their SERPs. Yahoo uses description tags and prefer sites that have them. Many other search engines use the meta keywords as well. Even if they only verify that it is present and correct, many search engines won't touch your site without them. The meta robots tag is unnecessary unless it's restricting access to a page. It is the spiders natural state to index a page and follow all links from it. Using it to 'allow' spiders only increases your code:text ratio needlessly and may hurt your potential rank by a slight amount. Javascript/Images/Flash Use these sparingly to accentuate your site for users. You should never rely on these for critical website functions like navigation, content, or other vital page info. Even though 98% of the internet uses javascript, turning it off along with images and multimedia in your browser (or using the Lynx browser) will allow you to visit your site as the search engines do. This 20 minute task will alert you to potential problems that your site will have when the search engines visit. Links Most everyone knows that links into your website bring spiders to visit and help your rank, but the links within your site to itself and other websites are also very important. Google limits you to 100 links per page and most other engines are rather close (but perhaps more generous) and allow you 150 or so links per page. This is total for links within your site and links to other sites. Keyword stats and code:text ratio Your goal should be to have the most content possible (human readable) while limiting the amount of code used to deliver this. Keywords should be limited to a few select phrases and possibly some variations on those phrases. If you are at all considering any meaningful SEO work on your site, you should really invest your first few dollars into finding the right keywords. There are many free keyword tools such as Wordtracker.com to at least give you a start, but the few extra dollars for the upgrades are usually well worth it if you want to target the correct markets and find terms that you weren't expecting. Standards Compliant/Accessible This builds on the Validator tool used earlier from W3C. By making your website completely standards compliant, you remove any possible errors in the code that may hang-up a spider. While complete compliance is not as critical as parsing errors from open tags and truly broken code, it certainly helps to ease the process of being spidered. Branding The links within your site should all use the same www. or non-www. branding. Many search engines see those variants as two separate sites and Google will even apply different PR to a page based on www or non-www. This can be further enforced by changing your htaccess file to automatically switch versions if the other is visited. If you visi How To Get Started On Ebay ider killer if there ever was one. You simply cannot link to a specific page in a framed site with any effectiveness. If you link directly to a page within the frame, the rest of the framed page disappears. If you link to the main frames page, there is no way to link to the subpages and only your homepage(s) will show. I-Frames offer a slight advantage as they are contained within a page that has it's own URL, but many times the content within an I-Frame is inaccessible. Don't place your navigation or main content into an I-Frame.You probably heard it - the fastest way to earn extra money online is to sell on Ebay. You can start right now, today, and in 3 days be paid online for items you sell. All you need is to register at the Ebay site, read their tutorial and get started selling items you have around the house.Ebay is a 70 billion dollar a year industry giant, and they are dependent on entrepreneurs to make that business figure grow. Entrepreneurs mean people like me and you. In 2005, the number of people making money from working on Ebay increased by 68%. As Ebay researched, over 724,000 million people either make a full time or a supplemental income from working EBAY. And another 1.5 million say that Ebay gives them additional income throughout the year.So there are many ways to get started on Ebay for an extra income. Lots of people make a few extra dollars while others are making a fortune. Ebay or any business you get into online or in a physical business location ha SessionID's in Your URLs These lead to a seemingly unending list of variations on each URL that have no real effect on the page. Every time a spider visits your pages, they get more and more versions of the same 'other' pages, but with different URLs each time because of the sessionID. If you want the spiders to feel at home on your site, then the barbed-wire fields of sessionIDs are not going to work. One way around this is to use a sitemap creation service like AutoMapIt.com that allow you to 'ignore' certain URL keys like the sessionID or keys used for sorting lists. This way, they have at least one link to each page that doesn't include a sessionID. Even if they are turned off at your sitemap, when the spiders visit, they will find the IDs again. SessionID's may show up in otherwise friendly URLs. If your users have to log-in on your site or you use some types of tracking software, sessionID's are what helps your site to keep visitors logged in. They are usually stored in cookies through your browser and don't normally show up in your URL. If cookies are not available (like on most spiders), the sessionID then gets passed through the URL. You may want to turn cookies off in your browser and surf your site... do the sessionIDs show up? Search-Friendly URLs This goes beyond the sessionID's in the URL and appeal more to the actual URLs being used. According to Google Webmaster Guidelines, "It helps to keep the parameters short and the number of them few". Apache makes this easy through mod_rewrite and Windows servers offer Isapi-Rewrite to accomplish turning 'ugly' URLs into 'static' URLs. You should NEVER use id= in your URLs as Google does not to spider those pages. Change it to cid= or lmnopid=, but if you use id=, your pages are already doomed from the start. Proper Meta Tags Despite their value decreasing, and a lot of talk about them being of no use now, meta tags are anything but dead. Google uses your meta-description as the description on their SERPs. Yahoo uses description tags and prefer sites that have them. Many other search engines use the meta keywords as well. Even if they only verify that it is present and correct, many search engines won't touch your site without them. The meta robots tag is unnecessary unless it's restricting access to a page. It is the spiders natural state to index a page and follow all links from it. Using it to 'allow' spiders only increases your code:text ratio needlessly and may hurt your potential rank by a slight amount. Javascript/Images/Flash Use these sparingly to accentuate your site for users. You should never rely on these for critical website functions like navigation, content, or other vital page info. Even though 98% of the internet uses javascript, turning it off along with images and multimedia in your browser (or using the Lynx browser) will allow you to visit your site as the search engines do. This 20 minute task will alert you to potential problems that your site will have when the search engines visit. Links Most everyone knows that links into your website bring spiders to visit and help your rank, but the links within your site to itself and other websites are also very important. Google limits you to 100 links per page and most other engines are rather close (but perhaps more generous) and allow you 150 or so links per page. This is total for links within your site and links to other sites. Keyword stats and code:text ratio Your goal should be to have the most content possible (human readable) while limiting the amount of code used to deliver this. Keywords should be limited to a few select phrases and possibly some variations on those phrases. If you are at all considering any meaningful SEO work on your site, you should really invest your first few dollars into finding the right keywords. There are many free keyword tools such as Wordtracker.com to at least give you a start, but the few extra dollars for the upgrades are usually well worth it if you want to target the correct markets and find terms that you weren't expecting. Standards Compliant/Accessible This builds on the Validator tool used earlier from W3C. By making your website completely standards compliant, you remove any possible errors in the code that may hang-up a spider. While complete compliance is not as critical as parsing errors from open tags and truly broken code, it certainly helps to ease the process of being spidered. Branding The links within your site should all use the same www. or non-www. branding. Many search engines see those variants as two separate sites and Google will even apply different PR to a page based on www or non-www. This can be further enforced by changing your htaccess file to automatically switch versions if the other is visited. If you vis Three Keys To Internet Marketing Success Ls. If your users have to log-in on your site or you use some types of tracking software, sessionID's are what helps your site to keep visitors logged in. They are usually stored in cookies through your browser and don't normally show up in your URL. If cookies are not available (like on most spiders), the sessionID then gets passed through the URL. You may want to turn cookies off in your browser and surf your site... do the sessionIDs show up?Internet marketing is easily one of the best ways around today to make money, period. Not many will argue with that. It is also one of the most competitive, and information prolific businesses that there is, this being a direct reflection of internet marketing's increasing popularity. With such an abundance of information not only available, but thrown at you constantly, and with so much competition, especially in the information niche, newcomers to the field can be (don't have to be) overwhelmed very quickly.Two problems that are created by too much information are information overload, and subsequently lack of focus. Information overload occurs when you try to absorb too much information from too many sources. To overcome info overload you simply need to develop focus. Developing focus requires that you make a conscious decision to do so.Think about this for a minute. Suppose there are ten "gurus", all of them successful obviously, and all of them Search-Friendly URLs This goes beyond the sessionID's in the URL and appeal more to the actual URLs being used. According to Google Webmaster Guidelines, "It helps to keep the parameters short and the number of them few". Apache makes this easy through mod_rewrite and Windows servers offer Isapi-Rewrite to accomplish turning 'ugly' URLs into 'static' URLs. You should NEVER use id= in your URLs as Google does not to spider those pages. Change it to cid= or lmnopid=, but if you use id=, your pages are already doomed from the start. Proper Meta Tags Despite their value decreasing, and a lot of talk about them being of no use now, meta tags are anything but dead. Google uses your meta-description as the description on their SERPs. Yahoo uses description tags and prefer sites that have them. Many other search engines use the meta keywords as well. Even if they only verify that it is present and correct, many search engines won't touch your site without them. The meta robots tag is unnecessary unless it's restricting access to a page. It is the spiders natural state to index a page and follow all links from it. Using it to 'allow' spiders only increases your code:text ratio needlessly and may hurt your potential rank by a slight amount. Javascript/Images/Flash Use these sparingly to accentuate your site for users. You should never rely on these for critical website functions like navigation, content, or other vital page info. Even though 98% of the internet uses javascript, turning it off along with images and multimedia in your browser (or using the Lynx browser) will allow you to visit your site as the search engines do. This 20 minute task will alert you to potential problems that your site will have when the search engines visit. Links Most everyone knows that links into your website bring spiders to visit and help your rank, but the links within your site to itself and other websites are also very important. Google limits you to 100 links per page and most other engines are rather close (but perhaps more generous) and allow you 150 or so links per page. This is total for links within your site and links to other sites. Keyword stats and code:text ratio Your goal should be to have the most content possible (human readable) while limiting the amount of code used to deliver this. Keywords should be limited to a few select phrases and possibly some variations on those phrases. If you are at all considering any meaningful SEO work on your site, you should really invest your first few dollars into finding the right keywords. There are many free keyword tools such as Wordtracker.com to at least give you a start, but the few extra dollars for the upgrades are usually well worth it if you want to target the correct markets and find terms that you weren't expecting. Standards Compliant/Accessible This builds on the Validator tool used earlier from W3C. By making your website completely standards compliant, you remove any possible errors in the code that may hang-up a spider. While complete compliance is not as critical as parsing errors from open tags and truly broken code, it certainly helps to ease the process of being spidered. Branding The links within your site should all use the same www. or non-www. branding. Many search engines see those variants as two separate sites and Google will even apply different PR to a page based on www or non-www. This can be further enforced by changing your htaccess file to automatically switch versions if the other is visited. If you vis Your Guide When Living Abroad t it is present and correct, many search engines won't touch your site without them. The meta robots tag is unnecessary unless it's restricting access to a page. It is the spiders natural state to index a page and follow all links from it. Using it to 'allow' spiders only increases your code:text ratio needlessly and may hurt your potential rank by a slight amount.For those of you who are interested in culture, will probably know that there are many books on the subjects. Interest in culture is important if you are an expatriate who accidentally dwells in another country and is shocked by the way people live and work. If you are an tourist you may buy a book about the country you visit. You might want to know more about the environment, places to visit and some other basic topics. Such guides help you find your way in a different environment and that is especially helpful when your time is limited. During your holiday you will notice differences, but most (delicate) issues stay below the surface. But then you are to work in a foreign country and you will soon find out that people act differently on familiar issues.And then a cultural guide becomes handy. Your tourist information is no longer useful, you need to understand why people “loose their precious time with smalltalk,” to name an example. Understanding th Javascript/Images/Flash Use these sparingly to accentuate your site for users. You should never rely on these for critical website functions like navigation, content, or other vital page info. Even though 98% of the internet uses javascript, turning it off along with images and multimedia in your browser (or using the Lynx browser) will allow you to visit your site as the search engines do. This 20 minute task will alert you to potential problems that your site will have when the search engines visit. Links Most everyone knows that links into your website bring spiders to visit and help your rank, but the links within your site to itself and other websites are also very important. Google limits you to 100 links per page and most other engines are rather close (but perhaps more generous) and allow you 150 or so links per page. This is total for links within your site and links to other sites. Keyword stats and code:text ratio Your goal should be to have the most content possible (human readable) while limiting the amount of code used to deliver this. Keywords should be limited to a few select phrases and possibly some variations on those phrases. If you are at all considering any meaningful SEO work on your site, you should really invest your first few dollars into finding the right keywords. There are many free keyword tools such as Wordtracker.com to at least give you a start, but the few extra dollars for the upgrades are usually well worth it if you want to target the correct markets and find terms that you weren't expecting. Standards Compliant/Accessible This builds on the Validator tool used earlier from W3C. By making your website completely standards compliant, you remove any possible errors in the code that may hang-up a spider. While complete compliance is not as critical as parsing errors from open tags and truly broken code, it certainly helps to ease the process of being spidered. Branding The links within your site should all use the same www. or non-www. branding. Many search engines see those variants as two separate sites and Google will even apply different PR to a page based on www or non-www. This can be further enforced by changing your htaccess file to automatically switch versions if the other is visited. If you vis The Fastest Way To Become An Expert al should be to have the most content possible (human readable) while limiting the amount of code used to deliver this. Keywords should be limited to a few select phrases and possibly some variations on those phrases. If you are at all considering any meaningful SEO work on your site, you should really invest your first few dollars into finding the right keywords. There are many free keyword tools such as Wordtracker.com to at least give you a start, but the few extra dollars for the upgrades are usually well worth it if you want to target the correct markets and find terms that you weren't expecting.You Are An Infopreneur - But Are You An EXPERT?The single most important thing that will help you acquire more customers, delight them, and keep them coming back to buy more from you is the quality of your information.And that means being - or becoming - an expert at what you teach.Far too many infopreneurs are happy settling for being average, or even mediocre. That's sad. Because, even if great marketing and perfect niche targeting allows you to make a few sales and earn some quick money, you are literally stabbing your fledgling business in the back by not delivering top notch value to your buyers.So when it's time to come back for more information or education, your initial group of customers will ask themselves an important question:"Did The First Purchase Give Me Enough Value?"If the answer to that is "No" - or even, "Maybe" - you have lost the battle for their mind and loyalty. Your business just failed!Do Standards Compliant/Accessible This builds on the Validator tool used earlier from W3C. By making your website completely standards compliant, you remove any possible errors in the code that may hang-up a spider. While complete compliance is not as critical as parsing errors from open tags and truly broken code, it certainly helps to ease the process of being spidered. Branding The links within your site should all use the same www. or non-www. branding. Many search engines see those variants as two separate sites and Google will even apply different PR to a page based on www or non-www. This can be further enforced by changing your htaccess file to automatically switch versions if the other is visited. If you visit the non-www version of my sites, it will automatically be forwarded to the www version. This is not a critical step, but it is a major enhancement for not a lot of work involved. Why split your value in half when you can focus it like a laser? Just be sure to request links, add your link to profiles, and link to your own site from within your site using one version or the other, but not both. Following these ten steps will help to ensure that your site is well-received by ALL of the search engine spiders and will not limit you to the bare essentials for only one spider (or bad ranking with all of the spiders equally). Let's face it, if you have ever tried to get better rank on a search engine, you know that any break you can get will help. These steps should be performed at the creation of your web site and continue throughout it's life-cycle to ensure that the spiders are always able to visit your site with as little effort on their part as possible.
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