Trouble viewing this email? Read it on the Web here.
Get To The Point from MarketingProfs

Cool Cloaking Device!

Is your website invisible? If it's not designed to be found by search engine spiders, it might as well be. The key to visibility? Keeping content clear and simple. An untold number of expensive Web sites out there are beautiful to behold, but rarely seen by searchers. To help clarify what works and what doesn't in SEO site design, Scott Buresh, in a recent MarketingProfs article, provided a list of common Web site elements that search engines can and cannot see.

Three things a search engine spider can see are:

HTML text, which spiders index, making distinctions between differences in how the text is presented (ie, bold vs regular).

Text links that are easily understood by the spider, and tell it what your page is about. However, Buresh warns that a spider can't see links like those in a pull-down menu that uses scripting language.

Tags, such as "keyword" tags, which should list key phrases that describe the page; "description" tags, which describe the page; and "title" tags, which contain the words you'll see in the (usually) blue bar at the top of your Web page.

Three things a spider cannot see are: graphical text, images, and text embedded in flash animation. Keep these to a minimum.

The Point: Website bells and whistles? Little more than cloaking devices. "Don’t sacrifice your search engine rankings for the sake of something largely unnecessary," Buresh advises.

Source: MarketingProfs. Click here to learn more.

Previous Articles

I See You. I Want You.
Now, That's a Powerful Presence!
More articles

 

Add a Comment
Share This: http://www.marketingprofs.com/short-articles/733/cool-cloaking-device

Vol. 1, No. 12    December 22, 2008

MarketingProfs, LLC | 5315 B FM 1960 W #191 | Houston TX 77069

This email was sent to (%%email%%). To ensure that you continue receiving our emails,
please add us to your address book or safe list.

manage your preferences | opt out by going here.
Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails.
Copyright © 2000-2009 MarketingProfs, LLC All Rights Reserved.