How To Get Indexed By Search Engines...Fast
By David Bell
Unfortunately, this is an all too common
question. If it makes you feel any better, you're not the
only one frustrated about the length of time it takes to be
indexed, or the many pitfalls involved. It often takes anywhere
from two days to as much as six months to be listed on a search
engine. For example, last month Excite finally updated its
index for the first time since last August! Luckily, Excite
is the most extreme case lately, but waiting several weeks
to a month can also be extremely frustrating.
The WebPosition Submitter report will
give you current time estimates for each engine so you'll
know what to expect. However, an engine at any time could
choose to delay their indexing beyond the "norm"
for maintenance or other reasons. On the flip side, you could
get lucky and submit just a couple days before an engine does
a complete refresh of their database. Therefore, submission
times can never be an exact science since we're all ultimately
at the mercy of the engine.
If you've submitted your site and have
waited the estimated time to be indexed and there's still
no listing, what do you do now?
Here are 16 tips that should help
you solve this problem:
1. First, be sure you're not already indexed
but just don't know it. Unfortunately, none of the major engines
are kind enough to e-mail or notify you as to if and when
you've been indexed.
The method to determine if a page or domain
has been indexed varies from one engine to another, and in
many cases, it's difficult to tell for sure. Never assume
that you're not indexed just because you searched for a bunch
of keywords and you never came up in the first few pages of
results. You could be in there but buried near the bottom.
In addition, it's not very practical to check the status of
a number of pages on each major engine each week.
Fortunately, WebPosition has a URL verification
feature in the Reporter that makes this process much easier.
Each time you run a mission, it will report which URLs exist
and do not exist in each engine.
2. Make sure you have uploaded the pages
to your site before submitting them. This one seems obvious,
but submitting a page that does not exist or submitting with
a subtle typo in the URL is a goof we might all make at one
time or another. If you're using WebPosition's Submitter,
there's a checkbox on tab 2 that forces WebPosition to verify
that all your URLs are valid before submitting them.
3. If you have information inside frames,
that can cause problems with submissions. It's best if you
can create non-framed versions of your pages. You should then
submit the non-frames versions of your pages which can of
course point to your framed Web site. Alternatively, you can
enter your relevant text within the NOFRAMES area of a framed
page which most search engine spiders will read.
4. Search engine spiders cannot index
sites that require any kind of registration or password. A
spider cannot fill out a form of any kind. The same rule applies
regarding indexing of content from a searchable database,
because the spider cannot fill out a form to query that database.
The solution is to create static pages that the engines will
be able to find.
5. Dynamic pages often block spiders.
In fact, any URL containing special symbols like a question
mark (?) or an ampersand (&) will be ignored by many engines.
6. Most engines cannot index text that
is embedded in graphics. Text that appears in multimedia files
(audio and video) cannot be indexed by most engines. Information
that is generated by Java applets or in XML coding cannot
be indexed by most engines.
7. If your site has a slow connection
or the pages are very complex and take a long time to load,
it might time out before the spider can index all the text.
For the benefit of your visitors and the search engines, limit
your page size to less than 60K. In fact, most Webmasters
recommend that your page size plus the size of all your graphics
should not exceed 50K-70K. If it does, many people on dial
up connections will leave before the page fully loads.
8. If you submit just your home page,
don't expect a search engine to travel more than one or two
links away from the home page or the page that you submitted.
Over time they may venture deeper into your site, but don't
count on it. You'll often need to submit pages individually
that appear further down into your site or have no link from
the home page.
9. If your Web site fails to respond when
the search engine spider pays a visit, you will not be indexed.
Even worse, if you are indexed and they pay a visit when your
site is down, you'll often be removed from their database!
Therefore, it pays to have a reliable hosting service that
is up 99.5% of the time. However, at some point a spider is
going to hit that other 0.5% and end up yanking your pages
by mistake. Therefore, it pays to keep a close eye on your
listings.
10. If you have ever used any questionable
techniques that might be considered an overt attempt at spamming
(i.e., excessive repetition of keywords, same color text as
background, or other things that the WebPosition Page Critic
warns you about), an engine may ignore or reject your submissions.
If you're having trouble getting indexed in the expected amount
of time, make sure your site is spam-free.
11. If your site contains redirects or
meta refresh tags these things can sometimes cause the engines
to have trouble indexing your site. Generally they will index
the page that it is redirecting TO, but if it thinks you are
trying to "trick" the engine by using "cloaking"
or IP redirection technology, there's a chance that it may
not index the site at all.
12. If you're submitting to a directory
site like Yahoo, Open Directory, NBCi, Looksmart, or others,
then a human being will review your site. They must decide
the site is of sufficient "quality" before they
will list it. I recommend you read the submission guide on
the directory tab of the WebPosition Submitter. It contains
tips to improve your chances of obtaining a good listing on
these directories.
13. A number of engines no longer index
pages residing on many common free web hosting services. The
common complaint from the engines is that they get too many
"junk" or low-quality submissions from free web
site domains. Therefore, they often choose not to index anyone
from those domains or they limit submissions from them. It's
always best to buy your own domain name (very important) and
place it on a respected, paid hosting service to avoid being
discriminated against.
14. Some engines have been known to drop
pages that cannot be traveled to from the home page. HotBot
has been rumored to do this. You may want to consider submitting
your home page that links either directly or indirectly to
your doorway pages which is used in search engine optimization
by many.
15. Make sure you're submitting within
the recommended limits. Some engines do not like more than
a certain number of submissions per day for the same domain.
If you exceed the limit, you may find that all your submissions
are ignored. Fortunately, WebPosition's submitter will warn
you regarding current limits and recommend you stay within
them. Some submission consultants feel it is dangerous to
submit more than ONE page a day to a engine for a given Web
site. For those who wish to be ultra-conservative in their
approach, the WebPosition Submitter includes a checkbox to
limit submissions to one URL per day per engine.
16. Last but not least, sometimes the
engines just lose submissions at random through technical
errors and bugs. Therefore, some people like to resubmit once
or twice a month for good merit in case they do lose a submission.
Certainly if you've followed all the "rules" and
are still not listed, re-submit! Sometimes a little persistence
is all that's needed.
If any of the above scenarios apply to
your submission, you should make the necessary adjustments
and re-submit. If that still does not work, you should consider
e-mailing or calling the search engine and asking them politely
why you have not been indexed yet. Sometimes they will reply
back with "Sorry, there was a problem with our system
and I've now made sure you'll be indexed within the next couple
days." Or, sometimes they'll tell you why you were not
indexed. In other cases, they will ignore your e-mail and
you'll have to keep e-mailing or calling them until they respond.
Still, it's definitely worth the effort to get your site listed
with the major engines assuming you also take the time to
optimize your pages so you'll achieve top rankings. I hope
this helps in your future marketing decisions.
How To Get Indexed By Search Engines...Fast
Source : http://www.salestek.com/Salestek
Articles/SEO Article33.htm
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