Search Engine Optimization: A Basic Introduction (Part 1 of 2)

April 23, 2010 at 2:04 am 4 comments

For most of us, search engine optimization (SEO) can be more than a little confusing. The main idea is to increase traffic to your site through optimizing pages for search engines, but how does it work? In plain English, how do you get the pages within your site “read” by the search engines and stored in the database of existing pages? In SEO terms, how do you get your site crawled and indexed?

Search engines use two major areas of assessment to produce search engine result pages (SERPs) most relevant to a specific search: document analysis and link analysis.

Document Analysis
Document analysis comprises several factors. The search engine crawls pages for keywords related to the search while taking both quantity and location into account. Keywords in more important places carry more weight. For example, a search engine assumes keywords in your domain name, title tag and H1 tags (headings) as more likely to convey subject matter than page content and captions. Search engines also surmise that pages with multiple instances of a keyword are more relevant to the query, the word or phrase entered in a search engine.

Actual page content is another factor that search engines are able to recognize and use to rank pages. Search engines use semantics and lexical analysis to “read” text and judge its quality. Other factors are also measured, such as how long a viewer spends on your page. How do you keep a viewer on your page longer? You can compel them to stay with unique, intelligent content.

Link Analysis
Search engines not only strive to produce relevant SERPs, but also quality SERPs, a process which is achieved through link analysis. Search engines assume that the more sites there are that link to your site (called backlinking), the more authoritative your site is. Popularity equals importance.

Search engines also “read” what the backlinking site says about your site. The anchor text (the actual text being linked) and the text directly surrounding the link are both considered. If the anchor text for the backlink is “this is a terrible site,” search engines take that text into account. Therefore, you wouldn’t want another site to link to yours with the anchor text “click here,” but something more relevant, such as your company name or descriptive keywords.

Links from any old site won’t do either. The more trusted or authoritative the site is that backlinks to your site, the more weight that backlink will carry. This being said, backlinks from poorly coded sites with inferior content can actually hurt your ranking. Link farms, sites that exist solely to house links for the purpose of influencing rank, are an example of this type of harmful spam. Sites that participate in link farms are penalized by search engines and given a lower ranking.

Tomorrow, I’ll complete the second post on this topic. There’s more to SEO than keywords and backlinks! Stay tuned.

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Continue reading SEO: A Basic Introduction (Part 2 of 2).

Entry filed under: SEO. Tags: .

Whole Foods: Social Media Case Study Search Engine Optimization: A Basic Introduction (Part 2 of 2)

4 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Palapple | SEO Solutions for your Business  |  April 23, 2010 at 3:06 am

    Palapple Blog | SEO Solutions for your Business…

    Thanks for sharing. Search engine optimization is indeed one of the most crucial areas in Internet marketing, it is a perfect bridge between technology and business….

    Reply
  • [...] 23, 2010 Yesterday I posted a little introduction to search engine optimization. As I stated, document analysis and link analysis are cornerstones of the SEO process, but [...]

    Reply
  • 3. BURN LIST  |  April 23, 2010 at 9:24 pm

    Ohh that is pretty sweeet. Thanks for sharing. Nice to see a cool site again in this industry.

    –BurnList–

    Reply
  • 4. BURN LIST  |  April 26, 2010 at 4:08 pm

    Ahh that is pretty sweeet. Thanks for sharing. awesome to look at a cool site about this stuff again and find out whats going on in the industry.

    –BurnList–

    Reply

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About the Author


Kate is a web designer living, working and studying in Raleigh, North Carolina discovering new web marketing strategies each day through observation and trial and error. One thing is certain: Contact nor visibility alone is enough, but the combination of these two factors is a powerful tool.

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