Most Often-Overlooked Contributors to Poor Search Engine
Rankings
As a search engine marketing consultant, I see a lot of websites
that haven't been optimized for the search engines. Over the
years, I continue to see the same problems with what I call
"non-optimized websites." Typically, the biggest issues tend to
be basic website design elements that are not included when a
website is developed, not bad web design. Most search engine
optimization problems can be fixed by making sure nothing is
overlooked when building a web page.
One reason why I think the internet has been so successful is
that website technology has allowed anyone to make a website and
publish it on the internet. There are a lot of people out there
that have absolute no formal training when it comes building
websites--and a lot of people who build websites for a living
have trained themselves. That actually is a good thing,
especially because it has allowed the internet to grow at such a
rapid pace. There are website standards in place such as those
developed by the W3C, the World Wide Web Consortium
(www.w3.org). These standards, though, have more to do with
coding--not what the typical website visitor actually sees.
Problems arise when search engine spiders try to crawl websites
and figure out what a web page is "about". Search engine spiders
aren't humans, so they cannot read and interpret what a web page
is "about" without help from the person who created that web
page. There are certain elements that must be included in a web
page that ultimately helps the search engine spiders figure out
what a web page is about, which ultimately helps your website be
found in the search engine's results.
Duplicate Content The search engines do not wish to have
multiple copies of the same web pages in their indexes. It takes
up a lot of unnecessary room in their databases, and slows down
how much processing they have to do on a regular basis. Google,
in particular, has been removing web pages from their search
engine index that they deem to be a duplicate. If you have
duplicate web pages on your website, Google will keep the first
copy they find and throw out all the others.
When I look at websites that haven't been optimized for the
search engines, I typically see a lot of duplicate content--or
web pages that Google thinks are duplicates. The website owners
don't mean to have duplicate pages, but their pages are most
likely are considered to be duplicates by Google. Web pages need
to be at least 25 percent different from another web page in
order to be considered a unique web page. Websites that have the
same title tags and meta tags on every page is one major factor.
The search engines see the title tags and meta tags as part of
the web pages--if those are the same on every web page then the
pages could be duplicates. The search engines then look at the
overall content of the page. If there's not a lot of text but a
lot of graphics on the web page it could also be a duplicate.
When it comes to making sure your web pages aren't considered to
be duplicates, every web page on your website needs to have a
unique title tag, meta keywords tag, and meta description
tag--and enough indexable content on the page, as well.
Not Enough Content Many web designers like to use fancy graphics
on websites--it makes the websites look cool and are visually
appealing. There's only one problem, though--search engine
spiders cannot read text that appears in graphics. So, text that
can be read by a human won't necessarily be read by the search
engine spider. The search engine spiders consider text to be
necessary content, not graphics. Oftentimes I see websites that
are very well designed--but since all the text that appears on
the web pages appear only in graphics, then the page is most
likely considered to be a duplicate of another page, as only the
image file name is referenced in the source code of the web
page--which doesn't cover the "25 percent unique" requirement by
the search engines.
The more text that is included on a web page the better a search
engine can figure out what that web page is about. Title tags
are essential--they should give a quick overview of the general
subject of the web page. Since meta tags are considered to be
part of the content of a web page, the text included in the meta
tags help make a web page unique--which further helps cover the
"25 percent unique" requirement by the search engines.
Search Engine Spider Issues The search engines spiders, when
visiting your website, need to be able to crawl their way
through all the web pages on your website. It's absolutely
necessary that they can follow the links on your web pages. If
they can't follow the links, it's likely that only the home page
of your website will be listed in the search engines.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of website navigation techniques
that look really good and function well when a human visits a
website--but those navigation techniques won't allow a search
engine spider to follow the links. It's imperative that your
website's navigation is search engine friendly and that you
include a breadcrumb trail.
Lack of Links In order for web pages to be crawled, indexed, and
ranked well in the search results, they need links. Lately, the
search engines have been relying more and more on linkage data
(what other websites say about your website) in order to
determine the search engine rankings. Not only is it important
for your internal navigation to be search engine friendly, it's
important that your web pages have links from other websites.
Having links to your web pages helps the search engine spiders
find your pages--and the more links your web pages have the
better. Many websites that haven't been optimized well typically
don't have search engine friendly links and they don't have many
links from other websites.
By focusing on making sure your web pages aren't considered
duplicate pages and providing enough search engine friendly
content on your web pages, your website will benefit from
increased visibility in the search engine results. Working on
your website's internal navigation and including a breadcrumb
trail as well as getting more links to your web pages will
increase the likelihood of the search engine spiders finding
your web pages. These are the most often overlooked issues--and
they are the biggest contributors to poor search engine
rankings.