Jenerate Limited Logo Jenerate Limited - Top Banner
Jenerate Limited - Left Banner Jenerate Limited - Website Development and Hosting Packages
About Us
Our Packages
Our Solutions
Our Portfolio
Client Testimonials
 
 
Jenerate Limited - Website Design and Development Ireland
     

GRAPHIC DESIGNWEBSITE DESIGNJOOMLA CONTENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEMSHOPPING CART SOLUTIONSWEBSITE PROMOTIONINTERNET MARKETING, SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMISATIONJENERATE SPAM FIREWALLCMS TRAININGSEO PACKAGES

OUR SERVICES
Graphic Design
Website Design
Content Management Systems
E-commerce Solutions
Website Promotion
Internet Marketing
Jenerate Spam Firewall
CMS training
SEO Services
 
Enquire about getting your website today.
LATEST NEWS
goldenspider
 
   
Jenerate Limited - Email and Telephone Technical Support
 
How Search Engines Work - Part 2 PDF Print E-mail
You’re probably thinking chiefly of your human visitors when you set up your website’s navigation, as well you should. But certain kinds of navigation structures will trip up the spiders, making it less likely for Internet visitors to find your site in the first place.

As an added bonus, many of the things you do to your site, that will make it easier for a spider to find content, will often make it easier for visitors to navigate your site.

It’s worth keeping in mind, that you might not want spiders to be able to index everything on your site. If you own a site with content that users pay a fee to access, you probably wouldn’t want a Google bot to grab that content and show it to anyone who enters the right keywords.

There are ways to deliberately block spiders from such content. In keeping with the rest of this article, which is intended mainly as an introduction, they will only be mentioned briefly here.

Dynamic URLs are one of the biggest stumbling blocks for search engine spiders. In particular, pages with two or more dynamic parameters will give a spider fits. You know a dynamic URL when you see it, it usually has a lot of “garbage” in it such as question marks, equal signs, ampersands (&) and percent signs. These pages are great for human users, who usually get to them by setting certain parameters on a page.

For example, typing a zip code into a box at weather.com will return a page that describes the weather for a particular area of the US - and a dynamic URL as the page location.

There are other ways in which spiders don’t like complexity. For example, pages with more than 100 unique links to other pages on the same site can make them get tired with just one look. A spider may not follow each link. If you are trying to build a site map, there are better ways to organize it.

Pages that are buried more than three clicks from your website’s home page also might not be crawled. Spiders don’t like to go that deep. For that matter, many humans can get “lost” on a website with that many levels of links if there isn’t some kind of navigational guidance.

Pages that require a “Session ID” or cookie to enable navigation also might not be 'spidered'. Spiders aren’t browsers, and don’t have the same capabilities. They may not be able to retain these forms of identification.

Another stumbling block for spiders is pages that are split into “frames.” Many web designers like to use frames; it allows them to keep page navigation in one place even when a user scrolls through content. But spiders find pages with frames confusing. To them, content is content, and they have no way of knowing which pages should go in the search results. Frankly, many users don’t like pages with frames either; rather than providing a cleaner interface, such pages often look cluttered.

Information supplied by SEO Chat
 
 
Valid CSS!  
© 2008, Jenerate Limited - All rights reserved.