Keywords, descriptions, and robots. All three are bits of
Meta
information that should be at the top of each page of your site to help
search engines classify your site. Meta information helps search engines figure
out what's on your webpage when they spider you. Proper Meta
information can help boost search results and increase the number of people who
click on a link to your site, bad Meta data can tank your search results and
make it hard for customers to find you. Now I don’t intend to talk about the
gritty HTML coding side of Meta data, though really Meta information is
probably one of the easiest things to
code. Instead I plan to talk about what's important when it comes to Meta
data and what you should be sure to avoid.
Let’s start with keywords,
now keywords used to be a great way for search engines to quickly figure out
what kind of content a page might have and in the 90’s search engines like
AltaVista used them to great effect.
However unscrupulous website owners often stuffed misdirecting
or false keywords that would often drive search engine results to spam sites.
So by the turn of the century search engines started to discount keywords as
something they ranked sites on in search terms. Keywords may or may not still
influence search results but don’t lose any sleep trying to figure out the
perfect two word description for the page, content is far more important. While
writing keywords keep a few things in mind first keywords can be words or short
phrases, ‘e-commerce’ and ‘complete e-commerce solution’ are both valid types
of keywords. Second is to separate your
list of keywords by commas i.e. ‘e-commerce, e-commerce provider, integrated
e-commerce’. Also be sure never to pack or ‘stuff’ too many keywords because
while search engines may not weigh keywords heavily it is considered black hat,
or bad practice, to put more than ten to fifteen keyword phrases into the tag.
Now let’s talk about description
tags. Description tags serve a dual purpose, the first is to help search
engine spiders figure out what your page is all about. The second and more
important purpose is that the content in a description tag will often be used
by a search engine on the search results page. Those little blurbs you see
under links in search results, those are often times Meta descriptions.
Sometimes a search engine might pull those little blurbs from the content of
your site but it is always good to have a useful description in your Meta data.
The key to good Meta data is to keep it short and sweet, try to keep it to
about 200 characters as that is generally about the space you will have for a
blurb on a search engine. Also start your Meta description with the most
important thing about the description. If you are selling widgets try a phrase
like “widgets designed to save you money” instead of a phrase like “save money
when you buy our widgets”, search engines like Google prioritize the
information in descriptions based on the order they appear the first word is
considered the most important with each successive word being a little less
important to your site.
And now it time to talk about the final and oft
overlooked bit of Meta data you should be concerned about. The robots
tag, the robots tag tells a search engine whether or not it is allowed to
index a certain page, follow the links on the page or archive the page on its
servers. As a general rule you should allow search engines to index your page
and follow the links on your page unless there is content on there that you
deem to be sensitive, after all to build a good search engine result you are
going to want points for links and page content. Now archiving pages is a
different matter, archived pages are those pages that appear in under a Google
search result and are often called ‘cached’ it could be
useful for you to allow a search engine to cache your page or it could be a
determent to you. It all depends on how often you update your site and the kind
of content you have on your site. A cached or archived page will not be the
most current version of you site and if a visitor clicks on a cached link they
might get outdated content. However if your site ever experiences any down time
a visitor can simply visit the cached version of your site to gather the
information they need, that is of course if Google has decided to cache the
page they cannot after all make duplicates of everything on the internet. To
get a search engine to index your page, follow all the links on your page and
not cache your page you would write in the content field “index, follow,
noarchive”. To learn how to code your own meta tags visit this useful site.
Well that’s about it for meta information. I know it got
a little heavy near the end there but I hope it was all helpful and you find
this information useful in maximizing your search rankings. But don’t forget
Meta data is important but never place more value on it than the content of
your site.
Bharat C.