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Internet Marketing and Web Design News - Florida & BeyondFriday, January 30, 2004
11:45 AM
Here's some great info regarding what the common mistakes are in developing a search engine friendly website. It covers all the main topics such as the title tags, body copy, excessive code, and targeting the wrong keywords.
Top Site Clinic Problemsby Christine Churchill Bad Title Tags I would have thought that the importance of good Title tags had been drilled into every Webmaster in the world, but I can't remember a Site Clinic yet where we didn't encounter at least one site with poor Title tags. Title tags continue to be the most important item on your page. They tell the search engines and human visitors what the web page is all about. The contents of the Title tag are what you see at the top of the web page in your browser and are the first text you see in the listings on the search engine's results page. An eye-catching title can get the searcher's attention when they scan through the results. One of the most common errors related to the Title tag is just sticking the company name in it or using the same Title on every page. We've even seen sites that left their Title tags completely blank or simply "Title." Remember - each page on the site should have a unique title. Lack of Visible Copy The old saying "a picture is worth a thousand words" isn't true when it comes to search engines. Search engines can't read text embedded in a graphic. You need visible copy on the page for the search engine to be able to know what your site is all about. A general guideline when it comes to page copy is to include at least 200 relevant, plain-text words on each page. You need at least this much to elegantly insert your vital keywords without diminishing the quality of your marketing copy. Lack of Relevant Links Repeat after me: "No links equals no rank." Competition has raised the bar for getting a good ranking. Now you need relevant links from sites in a related field. A few years ago it was possible to get a good ranking by just adding keywords to the page, but now all the major search engines include link analysis as part of the ranking process. If you want a search engine to consider your site important for a keyword phrase, get listed in major directories or find friendly sites that already rank well for that keyword phrase and negotiate a link from them. Links from your nephew's hobby site aren't going to help you much (unless, of course, your site is about the same hobby). Query-string Overkill Getting feedback on how consumers navigate your site is valuable information, but it shouldn't be done at the expense of your search engine presence. When you start using long tracking codes and session IDs in your URLs, you risk having your pages not picked up by the search engines. Bad HTML and Broken Links Many people believe that if a site looks correct in a browser then the HTML must be valid. This is not true. Internet Explorer is a very forgiving browser, but search engines are not as forgiving. They may skip the error (and with it large sections of your page) or they may just leave your page when they encounter an error. Either way, this is not an ideal situation. The easiest fix is to run an HTML validator (like the W3C's <http://validator.w3.org/> or NetMechanic's <http://www.netmechanic.com/maintain.htm) over the site and fix the errors. In addition, if your page has bad links, neither the human visitor nor the search engine spider can follow them. Plus, your visitors may lose confidence in your company. The best advice is to run a link checker every week. Excessive Code Losing 10 pounds is on everyone's New Year's Resolutions list - including your web sites! Want to know the fastest way to put your site on a diet? Use an external cascading style sheet (CSS). Font tags have been discouraged for years, but many WYSIWYG editors (FrontPage included) stick them everywhere. That alone ought to be good reason to motivate you to learn HTML. If you're not familiar with CSS, there are a number of good reference sites out there. My two favorites are WebMonkey Excessive code can also manifest itself in the form of long JavaScript. Instead of having line after line of JavaScript in your web page, place it in an external file and link to it. Removing it from your page trims down the file size, reduces download time, and keeps the JavaScript from pushing your main content down the page. Targeting the Wrong Keywords Some Webmasters choose keywords without doing any analysis. This is a mistake that can cost money. If your company sells "widgets" but the consumer refers to your product as "wagets," you have a problem. You have to speak the same language as your target market and include "wagets" in your web page copy. If you hire a search engine marketing company and they don't talk about doing a keyword analysis as the first step, then you need to hire a different firm. Look at the Big Picture Many times we get so focused on the other aspects of our web site (e.g., design, color, marketing copy) that we forget to step back and take in the larger view. Even the best of sites, Fortune 500 ones included, can suffer from problems like these. Take the time to review your site and you will be able to reap the rewards. Christine Churchill KeyRelevance Focused, Relevant Search Engine Marketing http://www.keyrelevance.com Mike Rowe beats Microsoft, 2-0 - (United Press International) MikeRowesoft Cashing InReported earlier, Mike Rowe of the now defunct MikeRowesoft.com site is cashing in. Remember that legal document he got slapped with? Well, what better way to exploit Microsoft than selling it on Ebay. "This is your chance to own a piece of Internet history," Mike says on his eBay page. "This is the book (the World Intellectual Property Organization guidebook) shown on TV, Internet, magazines and talked about on the radio and seen by millions of people world-wide." So, what's next Mike? Or are your 15 minutes of fame coming to an end? Thursday, January 29, 2004
8:59 AM
.............HOMELAND SECURITY CYBER INFORMATION..........The Emergency Email Network�........... MyDoom.B Virus Infecting Small BusinessThe MyDoom.B virus has now hit many of the small businesses throughout the US. Some info to consider from homeland security states: "At least one version of this worm has been observed to write the following data to this file 127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain local lo 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 engine.awaps.net awaps.net www.awaps.netad.doubleclick.net 0.0.0.0 spd.atdmt.com atdmt.com click.atdmt.com clicks.atdmt.com 0.0.0.0 media.fastclick.net fastclick.net www.fastclick.net ad.fastclick.net 0.0.0.0 ads.fastclick.net banner.fastclick.net banners.fastclick.net 0.0.0.0 www.sophos.com sophos.com ftp.sophos.com f-secure.com www.f-secure.com 0.0.0.0 ftp.f-secure.com securityresponse.symantec.com 0.0.0.0 www.symantec.com symantec.com service1.symantec.com 0.0.0.0 liveupdate.symantec.com update.symantec.com updates.symantec.com 0.0.0.0 support.microsoft.com downloads.microsoft.com 0.0.0.0 download.microsoft.com windowsupdate.microsoft.com 0.0.0.0 office.microsoft.com msdn.microsoft.com go.microsoft.com 0.0.0.0 nai.com www.nai.com vil.nai.com secure.nai.com www.networkassociates.com 0.0.0.0 networkassociates.com avp.ru www.avp.ru www.kaspersky.ru 0.0.0.0 www.viruslist.ru viruslist.ru avp.ch www.avp.ch www.avp.com 0.0.0.0 avp.com us.mcafee.com mcafee.com www.mcafee.com dispatch.mcafee.com 0.0.0.0 download.mcafee.com mast.mcafee.com www.trendmicro.com 0.0.0.0 www3.ca.com ca.com www.ca.com www.my-etrust.com 0.0.0.0 my-etrust.com ar.atwola.com phx.corporate-ir.net" Once it infects, none of your applications can access these sites. Also, it can come from all kinds of various email addresses...Yahoo, MSN, AOL...you name it. So, it's creating some difficulties from the IT area. Some of the subjects in the emails are: "Delivery Error hello Error Mail Delivery System Mail Transaction Failed Returned mail Server Report Status Unable to deliver the message" So, as always, watch out for messages you're not expecting. Click on the link at the top of this article for more information about the MyDoom virus. [ eChannelLine Canada ] What a Chump! The MikeRoweSoft.com Saga EndsMike asked for ten thousand dollars. He even had a fund to battle microsoft's attorneys. What did he settle for? "In exchange for the domain name, Microsoft will give Rowe and Xbox, and toss in some games. Rowe will also get a free Microsoft certification course, a subscription to the Microsoft Developer Network Web site; and a trip to Microsoft Research Tech Fest in Redmond next March." What a chump! They must have something else on this guy to get Mike's domain name. Because getting an Xbox and some other stuff isn't even close to 10 thousand dollars. And, ten thousand dollars is chump change to the multi-billion dollar maker, Microsoft. Tuesday, January 27, 2004
8:46 AM
The Register Are software upgrades going to be standardized practices?As the Microsoft ripple starts to expand, we notice that Sony's Playstation is getting on the "upgrade" bandwagon. As the Register reports, Sony's PSX software was downgraded prior to a christmas release. While good for sony, their users are feeling the wrath of subpar software. For example, the ability to comply with MP3 standards and TIFF imagery will finally be available in the next month. However, if you wanted to play digital music before then...well, you couldn't. What's disturbing even more is the "bandaid" effect - creating software patches to patch their other software patches. Currently, Microsoft's patches for XP is over 20 for a new installed system. Will Sony's PSX follow the same fate? Time will tell, but one thing is for sure for all companies: make products that have been tested thouroughly! The more that is completed at the start, the less programming bandaids needed later. |
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