Web Designer's Guide to Search Engine Optimization
Web Designer's Guide to Search Engine
Optimization by: Bernard Peh Search Engine
Optimization or SEO is the buzz word you will see
everywhere in the internet nowsadays. Designing a
website...
web site design articles
Web Designer's Guide to Search Engine
Optimization
by: Bernard Peh
Search Engine Optimization or SEO is the buzz word you will
see everywhere in the internet nowsadays. Designing a website
today is no longer about aesthetics. It must not only look
good, it must be visible to the search engines as well. What
should a web designer take note when designing a search engine
friendly website? This article attempts to discuss some
important pointers for web designers in creating SEO friendly
web pages.
From a search engine point of view, the perfect webpage has
no graphics, no scripting, no tables...etc but just alot of
normal, plain readable text. You can just take it that plain
text is the food for search engine spiders. Therefore, the more
text you have, the more you will keep the spiders happy.
However, from the design point of view, such pages are very
boring but the fact is that everyone is more interested in
keeping the spiders rather than us happy. The argument is that
if search engine spiders cannot find your site, no one will.
Based on this philosophy, we witnessed the fall of flash and
sites with strong graphics over the years. Many sites that
utilized heavy graphics where no longer found. Web developers
become happy because they have an excuse to create less
impressive websites...
The question is can we make both the saerch engine spiders
and us happy? The answer is definitely a "Yes" provided that
web designers can follow certain rules when designing web
pages. They need to step out of their comfort zone and learn
abit more about new web technologies.
Domain Name and URL Naming Convention
Having a proper domain and url name is quite often
neglected. Many search engines actually put some weightage in
the way you name your domain or url files. You will definitely
want to include some juicy words in your naming convention. For
example, if you site is about website critics and your url is
http://www.sitecritic.com, this will definitely be better than
a domain like http://www.bluecatfish.com. The same principle
goes for hyperlinks. If you have 2 words as key words, you can
use an underscore "_" or dash "-" to separate them.
Title
Do not fool around when writing the title. From my
experience, this is the most important part of your webpage.
Many designers like to put special characters such as " * "," |
", " : " or " [ ] " in the title to make it look unique. If you
really want to make your webpage special, I advise you to do it
else where such as in the body of the HTML document. You should
include your keywords in your title. Like the previous example,
if your web site focuses on website reviews, make sure you have
the words "Website Reviews" somewhere in the title. Noticed
that "WebsiteReviews" is not the same as "Website Reviews".
Spacing is important.
When writing the title, try not to write more than 8 words.
There are no hard and fast rules on that but the fact is that
more does not mean good. In fact, the more you write, the more
your keyword density will be diminished. If you keep repeating
the same keyword in the title, search engines will see your
site as spam and you will be dead in no time. For example, a
title like "Sitecritic Web Reviews" is much better than
"Sitecritic Web Reviews, Internet Marketing, Web Design Ideas,
Internet Directories, Budget Web Hosting, Melbourne". I will
have to stress again, do not fool around with your title.
Meta-Description
After the title tag is the meta description tag. Many people
argued that meta description is no longer important. Based on
my experience, they are still relevant in SEO rankings
especially if your website is new. The principle in writing the
meta description tag is the same as the title. The only
difference is that you want explain abit more about the
services that you provide in a friendlier format. You will also
want to include your keywords in the meta description.
Menu, Content and Links
You should not use any javascript menus that hid the urls.
Many javascript menus are fancy but actually not SEO friendly.
What ever technique you are using to create the menus, make
sure that the "a href" tag is visible. You might also want to
include a variation of the keywords in the menus, links or
text. Like the previous example, if your keyword is "Web Site
Reviews", you might not want to use the same word over and over
again. You can vary it by using "Professional Web Reviews,
Reviews of Websites, Site Reviews...etc". Varying the keywords
makes your content more interesting and is good for SEO as
well.
When writing the contents, try to put the keywords in
different areas of the document. Use tags like "b" or "h2" to
make the keywords stand out. Avoid urls that say "click here"
or "view". Though often used, they are not advisable for SEO
purposes.
Text links are stonger than image links. It is therefore not
advisable to use images as the main navigation menu throughout
the website. If you would like to incorporate images in the
user navigation experience, you might want to consider
separating the text from the images. This can be achieved
easily using CSS or the background image option in the table or
td tag.
Images
Unlike many Search Engine Experts, I strongly encourage the
use of graphics because I am passion about Web Design and is
sad to see so many websites that are well optimized for search
engines but look crap on screen. You need to balance between
the amount of graphics used and downloading speed. Like I
mentioned before, if your header banner or important images
contains text , you could split up the text and use the images
as a separate background or floating layer. That way, you can
make the image size smaller and also make the text visible to
the search engines. Transparent gifs are very useful for laying
over other content or images. Appropriate use of jpegs and gifs
can also cut down loading time by alot.
CSS Technology
CSS helps you to cut down your tag and gives more room for
the spiders to read your content. The problem with CSS is that
it is not as straight forward as tables. At the moment, CSS is
also inconsistent in different browsers, so before you publish
your web page, you need to check the layout in different
browsers. I am actually not against designers using tables
especially if they find the time spend in creating a full CSS
site not justifiable. The fact is that there are still cases
when using CSS is not advisable. An example is when displaying
tabular data; Tables still excel in displaying tabular data at
the moment. Unless you are using complex nested tables, the
table, tr or td tags should not pose too much of a problem for
the search engine spiders.
Conclusion
Web pages should not be boring and web designers should not
bow down to the Google revolution. A well designed site
combines both form and function and yet, still able to be
search engine friendly. I strongly believe that this can be
easily achieved if website designers are able to follow very
basic rules in designing their web sites.
Web Designer's Guide to Search Engine
Optimization
Web
Designer's Guide to Search Engine Optimization by:
Bernard Peh Search Engine Optimization or SEO is the buzz
word you will see everywhere in the internet nowsadays.
Designing a website...
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