Submitting your URL to Google
For Seo and Page Ranking
Google is primarily a
fully-automatic search engine with no human-intervention
involved in the search process. It utilizes robots known
as ‘spiders’ to crawl the web on a regular basis for new
updates and new websites to be included in the Google
Index.
This robot software follows
hyperlinks from site to site. Google does not require that you
should submit your URL to its database for inclusion in the
index, as it is done anyway automatically by the
‘spiders’. However,
manual submission of URL can be done by going to the Google
website and clicking the related link.
One important thing here is
that Google does not accept payment of any sort for site
submission or improving page rank of your website. Also,
submitting your site through the Google website does not
guarantee listing in the index.
Cloaking
Sometimes, a webmaster might
program the server in such a way that it returns different
content to Google than it returns to regular users, which is
often done to misrepresent search engine rankings.
This process is referred to as
cloaking as it conceals the actual website and returns
distorted web pages to search engines crawling the
site.
This can mislead users about
what they'll find when they click on a search result. Google
highly disapproves of any such practice and might place a ban
on the website which is found guilty of cloaking.
Google
Guidelines
Here are some of the important
tips and tricks that can be employed while dealing with
Google.
Do’s
• A website should have
crystal clear hierarchy and links and should preferably be easy
to navigate.
• A site map is required to
help the users go around your site and in case the site map has
more than 100 links, then it is advisable to break it into
several pages to avoid clutter.
• Come up with essential and
precise keywords and make sure that your website features
relevant and informative content.
• The Google crawler will
not recognize text hidden in the images, so when describing
important names, keywords or links; stick with plain
text.
• The TITLE and ALT tags
should be descriptive and accurate and the website should have
no broken links or incorrect HTML.
• Dynamic pages (the URL
consisting of a ‘?’ character) should be kept to a minimum as
not every search engine spider is able to crawl
them.
• The robots.txt file on
your web server should be current and should not block the
Googlebot crawler. This file tells crawlers which directories
can or cannot be crawled.
Don’ts
• When making a site, do
not cheat your users, i.e. those people who will surf your
website. Do not provide them with irrelevant content or
present them with any fraudulent schemes.
• Avoid tricks or link
schemes designed to increase your site's
ranking.
• Do not employ hidden texts
or hidden links.
• Google frowns upon
websites using cloaking technique. Hence, it is advisable
to avoid that.
• Automated queries should
not be sent to Google.
• Avoid stuffing pages with
irrelevant words and content. Also don't create multiple
pages, sub-domains, or domains with significantly duplicate
content.
• Avoid "doorway" pages
created just for search engines or other "cookie cutter"
approaches such as affiliate programs with hardly any original
content.
Crawler/Spider
Considerations
Also, consider technical
factors. If a site has a slow connection, it might time-out for
the crawler. Very complex pages, too, may time out before the
crawler can harvest the text.
If you have a hierarchy of
directories at your site, put the most important information
high, not deep. Some search engines will presume that the
higher you placed the information, the more important it is.
And crawlers may not venture deeper than three or four or five
directory levels.
Above all remember the obvious
- full-text search engines such index text. You may well be
tempted to use fancy and expensive design techniques that
either block search engine crawlers or leave your pages with
very little plain text that can be indexed. Don’t fall
prey to that temptation.
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