Search engine
optimization is about paying attention to the basics. From making
sure that you vary your anchor text in your inbound links to
ensuring that your keyword density is between 2 and 5 percent, it is
all about getting the details right. The only other thing required
than that is time.
As part of search engine optimization,
there is one factor that is often either missed, or not done
properly.
I'm talking about maintaining a good
site layout.
There are several very real,
money-valuable benefits to having a good site
layout. Search Engine Indexing
Proper layout techniques, such as having
a site map and executing a proper, planned linking
strategy throughout your website will not only get your pages
indexed easily (but not quicker), but in some cases proper linking
will squeeze out every last sliver of ‘votes' towards your important
pages. I'll talk more about site maps and linking strategies later
on. Conversion Rate
A good site layout is all about
converting your visitors into customers. By making an easy to- use,
uncluttered and user-centric layout, you are increasing the chances
of leading your customer to into making the ‘critical move', whether
it is signing up to your newsletter, filling a survey or buying your
product. User
Satisfaction
User satisfaction should be central aim
when designing a site layout. Put yourself in the shoes of your
visitors, and decide what you want from your website. It is a
subtle shift in perception, but it will help you decide whether
you really need all those extra menu options on the left or if the
design could be simplified by placing those extra links at the
bottom of the page; out of immediate view, thus reducing clutter and
confusion but within reach if the user needs extra
information.
A good site layout will improve the
image of your website. Don't just think about search engine
rankings – keep your users as your first priority and ensure that
your visitors do not go away without being impressed by the clarity
and simplicity of your design. Word-of-mouth marketing
(either through natural linking or plain blog and forum activity) is
a power marketing tool that is largely based on how user-friendly
and helpful your website actually is.
A site map has been widely
proclaimed as the basic linking tool for site-wide search
engine optimization, and with good reason. It presents your
website's content – the linking structure of your website – on
one single page for search engines and users
alike.
Accessibility
Your site map is something like a
table of contents for your website. While not the first
resort for users looking for information on websites, today's
increasingly-aware user audience will more and more turn to a site
map if they cannot find something on your website through the
traditional menu structure, or if they need to get somewhere really
quickly.
Search
Engines
A site map, properly mapped and linked
from your home page, is the search engine's guide to the depth and
breadth of your website. When a search engine spider finally decides
that your site in interesting (read important) enough to be indexed
further, it will start by exploring links on your home page.
Through the site map, it gains immediate one-link access to
your complete website, and this greatly speeds up the indexing of
all your pages.
Even when the spider does not engage in a
deep crawl, a two-level initial crawl is not uncommon, and that will
invariably give the spider the opportunity to see all the
pages.
For examples of good site maps,
check out the following site maps:
To ensure that your website is
optimally indexed, there are some specific linking strategies
that you need to follow. It is NOT as difficult as you might expect.
At the very basic level, there are two things you must take care
of.
Template-based web
design
Design templates before you start
designing your website. Using templates to add new pages to your
website will not only bring in consistency, but also allow
you to standardize the optimal pattern of in-site
linking.
This might sound terribly complicated
unless you base all pages on a template. With a well-designed
template the process is simplified to just updating the
placeholder hyperlinks. Then create sub-templates for
categories of pages (main category pages, subcategory pages, etc.)
to further ease your burden of reconfiguring each page
manually.
Site
Structure
A template-based design should, apart
from speeding up the design process, focus on optimizing your
site-wide linking. This will not only with
indexing, but also help in increasing SERPS placement due to extra
inbound links for your important pages. Base your site structure on
solid, site-wide linking strategies like these:
- Each page should link
back to the home page.
- Each page should further link back to
its main category page.
- Each category page should provide
clear links to any sub categories.
- If possible, each page should have the
main menu structure – so as to give
maximum link exposure to the most important pages of
your website.
- Each page should further link to those
important pages on your website that do not have any
clear category (privacy policy, Help section, user guide, search
page, members section, etc.).
If your template is properly designed and
as mentioned earlier you specialize your template into
sub-templates, your site structure will become more
defined and manageable, and your linking strategy will help in both
improving the search engine indexing and increasing
your rankings.
Reality
Check
Don't spend more time than necessary on
site structure and optimizing your linking process. The important
thing here is to automate as much as possible, and to plan
thoroughly. However, simply arranging your site with a basic linking
strategy and a detailed site map is enough for your indexing
optimization. As for search engine rankings, use your linking
strategy to help you get that extra edge, but don't depend on it –
inbound links from other websites are much more
valuable.
Cascading Style Sheets, or
CSS, have rapidly become main-stream for their ability to
separate style and formatting from the content. There is a wealth of
very useful material on CSS on the Internet – for now I'll just tell
you how they can help your site design.
Separating Style from
Content
The aim of Style Sheets was to aggregate
the style elements common to the whole site into one, single, easily
accessible location. The results are nothing short of spectacular;
if used properly, you can change the whole design of a website (even
those with thousands of pages) by altering just one
page. CSS is also a great way to standardize your site
design.
Of course, like all design tools, CSS is
much better used when it is part of your website design from the
very beginning. You can use separate style sheets for content
pages, category pages and your main page, or use the same style
sheet for all your pages. Whatever division you end up choosing, the
advantages of CSS more than justify making the effort to understand
how it works.
For dynamic, database driven
websites, there are two types of problems that hinder indexing of
their site pages. Let's look at both.
Non-HTML
Pages
For quite some time, having non-html
pages in your website meant that spiders could not properly index
your website. That does not hold true anymore, with all major search
engines being able to index pages of all extensions – it
doesn't matter if your page is .htm, .html, .asp, .aspx, .php or
even a file (.pdf, .doc, etc.), a search engine can easily include
it in its index.
As for which get indexed quicker, there
is no specific evidence suggesting that .asp pages don't get indexed
as quickly as .html pages, or vice versa. What matters more is that
you have links from other websites pointing to
yours so that you can get picked up by search engine spiders
as quickly as possible.
Dynamic Database-Driven
Pages
If you have a database driven website
that involves pages that return results from search
queries (e.g. product pages), these cannot be indexed
properly by the search engines due to their dynamic content.
Essentially, the problem is this:
A search engine spider indexes a page by
acquiring its URL, and then parsing the page's content
(i.e. the code behind the page – or what we would see if we opened
it in a text file). With dynamic, generated-on-the-fly pages, the
spider's request to view a page is invalid, since page requests of
dynamic pages must be accompanied by some information.
For example, if you have a help section
that dynamically acquires help pages from the database, it will
probably generate a URL similar to:
http://www.yourwebsite.com/help/info.php?sec=1&q=5
In this case, the page “info.php” will
process the request (user-request for a help page) only when
provided values for the required variables – “sec” and
“q” in this case. Since the search engine does not know this, it
cannot provide the values and thus cannot index this
page.
Fixing dynamic
pages
There is a cure for this problem, and it
involves some programming – the code itself is beyond the scope of
this article, but one possible answer, if your website is hosted on
an Apache Linux server, is to use the ‘mod-rewrite' module
and rename all dynamic pages into something short and
understandable, such as
http://www.yourwebsite.com/help/help_page.php
For more information, just search for
“mod-rewrite” in Google or the search engine of your
choice.
Your site layout is full of small
details that need to be taken care off. The best advice in this
matter is to begin planning right from the beginning –
everything from linking strategy to using CSS, ensure that your
site design is mapped out. Otherwise, you will spend more
time revising the old design rather than promoting your website and
adding new content to it.
That wraps up this lesson. I hope all of
you will really begin to take your site layout seriously, if you're
not already, as the layout of your website plays a MAJOR role in
your search engine rankings.
Stay tuned for the next lesson, as
I'm going to tell you about a powerful resource that has enabled me
to make over $150 extra income every single day... and it's
all on complete auto-pilot. I don't do anything!
All the best,

Brad
Callen Professional SEO SEO
Elite: SEO Software
Get Your Free Copy of 7 Days To
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