Meta tags are the answer to everything
wrong with your web site. They will get the search engines to index your
site every day. People will flock to your site. Your son will never
pierce his nose for a nose-ring. Your daughter won't date until she's
21, and then only date nice guys making good money. Your house will
appreciate $100,000 this year. Meta tags are the magic bullet of web
site promotion!
Do you believe that drek? Believe it or
not, that is the message that is being given out on a lot of the web
sites about promotion, and in books on the shelf at the book store. Meta
tags are not magic. They are, however, an essential part of a well
designed web site promotion program. So, let's look at how they work and
how to put them to work for your site.
To figure all of this out, let's
construct an example and look at each piece of it. Lets run over to Alta
Vista and look for a frog site....
OK. Here we are at Alta Vista. I've
searched for 'frogs' and on page 6 of the response I found this entry:
Isn't that informative? After looking through 6 pages of listings for
frogs, would you run over to this site? The person that spent his or her
hard earned spare time to build this page should get a better reward for
all of that hard work.
What went wrong here? Obviously, the
search engine took the first stuff it found that looked like text
instead of HTML. It did the best it could with really limited
information. The author of the page just didn't construct the page to be
indexed by search engines. Let's fix it a piece at a time.
The title isn't bad. It does give some
information. But it could be better. Remember, most search engines give
more weight to words found in the TITLE, especially if those words are
also found in the body of the text. So, a better TITLE might be:
"Pet Exotic Frogs For Sale: White's Tree Frog - Pelodryas caerulea"
This is much more informative and likely to generate more solid keywords
in the search engines. Especially if we refer to these same words in the
body of the page (or in our other heading sections.) Here's what we have
so far:
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Pet Exotic Frogs For Sale: White's Tree Frog - Pelodryas
caerulea</TITLE>
Now, let's give the search engines that
don't use meta tags some copy to look at that we want used in the
description. We do this by placing a short comment into the page after
the TITLE tag. Now our page looks like this:
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Pet Exotic Frogs For Sale: White's Tree Frog - Pelodryas
caerulea</TITLE>
<!-- Best prices on pet exotic frogs anywhere on the internet. These
White's Tree Frogs can be shipped overnight to arrive healthy and happy.
Order online today. -->
This takes us to your first meta tag:
Description. We now give the search engines that use meta tags the
description of the page that we want to have displayed when our page
comes up in a search. Don't make it too long, as the engines will only
give a limited amount of text.
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Pet Exotic Frogs For Sale: White's Tree Frog - Pelodryas
caerulea</TITLE>
<!-- Best prices on pet exotic frogs anywhere on the internet. These
White's Tree Frogs can be shipped overnight to arrive healthy and happy.
Order online today. -->
<META Name="description" Content="Best prices on pet
exotic frogs anywhere on the internet. These White's Tree Frogs can be
shipped overnight to arrive healthy and happy. Order online
today.">
Now we have told the engines what to
say about our site, but we still want to tell them what keywords we
would like to be found under. Please DON'T put keywords in here
just to get traffic. Imagine that you are running a restaurant. Your
sign outside can bring in lots of look-e-loos, but if they don't buy,
they just get in the way. They take up time and space that could be used
to take better care of your real customers. Measure your success by
sales (or whatever is relevant to your site) and not by pounds of
visitors you con into coming to your site.
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Pet Exotic Frogs For Sale: White's Tree Frog - Pelodryas
caerulea</TITLE>
<!-- Best prices on pet exotic frogs anywhere on the internet. These
White's Tree Frogs can be shipped overnight to arrive healthy and happy.
Order online today. -->
<META Name="description" Content="Best prices on pet
exotic frogs anywhere on the internet. These White's Tree Frogs can be
shipped overnight to arrive healthy and happy. Order online
today.">
<META Name="keywords" Content="FROG, FROGS, WHITE'S
TREE FROG, PET FROG, FROGS FOR SALE, ONLINE SALES, ONLINE ORDER, ON LINE
ORDER, PET EXOTOC FROG, EXOTIC FROG">
</HEAD>
Now our entry in the Alta Vista results
should look something like this:
Pet Exotic Frogs For Sale: White's Tree Frog -
Pelodryas caerulea
Best prices on pet exotic frogs anywhere on the internet. These White's
Tree Frogs can be shipped overnight to arrive healthy and happy. Order
online today
http://www.herp.com/pet/frog.html
- size 1628 bytes - 11 Feb 97
We have now built a good heading for our page that will give better
information to any search engine that stops in to look us over. We have
given our search words, a short description, put good search words in
the title. Things are looking pretty good. Now we should have a better
chance of being indexed correctly, and we haven't Spammed. We haven't
overloaded our page with keyword repetitions that could get us
penalized. And even the engines that stop short on a page will find us.
Oh, didn't I mention that some of the
robots and spiders stop when they run into certain things on a page.
Some stop when they run into a JAVA applet. Building a good header like
the one above means the spider will have found enough information ahead
of the applet to give you a meaningful entry.
But, which search engines will this
help with? Let's take a look:
-
Alta Vista
-
Meta tags supported?
Yes
-
Spamming penalty?
Yes
-
Excite
-
Meta tags supported?
No
-
Spamming penalty?
Yes
-
HotBot
-
Meta tags supported?
Yes
-
Spamming penalty?
Yes
-
InfoSeek
-
Meta tags supported?
Yes
-
Spamming penalty?
Yes
-
Lycos
-
Meta tags supported?
No
-
Spamming penalty?
Yes
-
Open Text
-
Meta tags supported?
No
-
Spamming penalty?
No
-
Web Crawler
-
Meta tags supported?
No
-
Spamming penalty?
Yes