organic search engine optimization guide  
 

Designing a Web Crawler Friendly Web Site
By www.thegrandoldmall.com

The most successful online businesses all have one thing in common. They all knew how to make work for them.

Search engine optimization is the art and science of making websites attractive to the internet's search engines. The first step in successfully achieving stellar is to lure search engine's web crawlers to your website. Web crawlers are computer programs that the search engines use gather data and index information from the websites. The information the web crawlers gather is used to determine the ranking of a webpage.

One of the fastest ways to hamper a web crawler is to construct a website that has frames. Most search engines have crawlers that can't penetrate the frames, if they can't get into a webpage to read it then that webpage remains unindexed and unranked. Two search engines, Google and Inktome, have web crawlers that are capable of penetrating frames. Before submitting your website to a search engine do some research and find out if they have a crawler that is incapable of penetrating any frames.

If you have written frames into your URL it will probably be worth your effort to go back and rewrite your URL's. Once you have rewritten your URLs you might be surprised to find that the new addresses are easier on humans as well as web crawlers, the frameless URLs are easier to type in documents as links and references.

Once you have rewritten your URL's it is time

Top News - WebProNews
Updated :

Google Calls Upon Retailers to List Inventory

Google announced today that it is making public its help documentation for Local Shopping inventory for Google Merchant Center. This is a feature that allows retailers to let consumers know about what they have in stock right from the web. 

"One weekday evening a few weeks before our son was born, my wife commissioned me to find a box of raspberry red leaf tea for the delivery," says Google Product Search business product manager Paul Lee, explaining the usefulness of such a feature.  "I promptly drove to the nearest grocery store, which has an awe-inspiring wall of tea. After diligently scanning the wall and not finding the tea, I began to wonder if it even existed. Was the similarly-labeled raspberry tea the same thing? What about red leaf tea?" 

"Stumped, I pulled out my phone and looked up 'raspberry red leaf tea' on Google," he continues. "Beneath the 'Shopping results,' I saw a red map marker for a nearby Vitamin Shoppe and a link, 'In stock nearby,' next to a picture of Alvita Raspberry Red Leaf Tea. I hopped back in the car, and 15 minutes later had accomplished my mission. Two weeks later, my wife accomplished her much more important mission and we welcomed Benjamin, a healthy and happy baby boy, to our family."

Keep in mind that Google doesn't accept all retailers who apply for listing this information, but there is a form you can fill out to do so. If you aren't accepted, Google will keep you on file for potential future inclusion. 

You'll be asked to submit a complete and accurate data feed, including unique product identifiers. You'll also need to be listed and verified in Google Places.


Publ.Date : Thu, 02 Sep 2010 13:26:55 -0400

Just How Concerned with Privacy Are Facebook Users?

PeopleBrowsr shared a rather interesting report with us this week, looking at privacy related tweets during the center of this year's Facebook "privacy storm." The firm studied the public's reaction to Facebook's open graph-related announcements that set off the majority of the Facebook privacy controversy back in April.

Are you concerned for your privacy as a Facebook user? 
Let us know.

The report specifically compares the general public's (or at least the portion that uses Twitter) thoughts about Facebook privacy with the media sensationalism around the story. The firm studied tweets with references to privacy, along with other keywords like Facebook, Open Graph, Zuckerberg, and Google.

"We are the last generation to know privacy as it was," says Brian Solis, Chief Data Analyst for PeopleBrowsr. "As Facebook moves human connections and society into a more public spotlight, people and the press will push back. But this will move things forward collaboratively. Over time I believe the debate will evolve into a series of productive forums and memes that explore the risks of living in public and the rewards for participation."





Some of PeopleBrowsr's findings from the study:

- Prior to the F8 conference on April 24, privacy tweets hovered between 1,000-3,000 references per day, then spiked to 9,000 on the day of F8

- On April 25 (day after the conference), privacy-related tweets fell to 3,500 – then surged to 7,500 when politicians joined the fray. Around May 25, privacy discussions hit the ceiling in this study with 20,000 unique discussions.

- In terms of context, Facebook dominated the landscape for mentions of #privacy

- Conversations followed media reports


"We see that even on the day when privacy took center stage, the media sensationalized the topic. But the public, at least those on Twitter, did not flood the streets with 140 character picket signs. 9,000 tweets does not seem to account for the millions of Twitter users or the 500 million people who have Facebook accounts," says Solis.

That last statement is true on a couple of different levels. For Solis' purpose it does not appear to indicate that the majority of Facebook users were that concerned. However, it is also worth noting that the majority of Facebook users are not necessarily active Twitter users. Facebook has over 500 million people. It's not a flawless argument, and the findings should be taken with a grain of salt like any such study. That said, Twitter is generally viewed as a good indication of public opinion, as trending topics often reflect pop culture and news at large. If there is something significant happening, you can generally find people talking about it on Twitter.

Besides, Facebook's numbers continued to grow. Diaspora (the "Facebook alternative") will be here soon. I'm willing to bet that will have little impact on Facebook's growth as well.

Do you think the privacy discussion around Facebook was overblown? Share your thoughts.


Publ.Date : Thu, 02 Sep 2010 17:17:59 -0400

NZ Police Clear Google In Street View Scandal

When it comes to Street View and the collection of sensitive WiFi data, Google is, at least to some degree, safe from serious penalties in New Zealand.  A police investigation has determined that the company didn't violate any laws.

Privacy Commissioner Marie Shroff referred the matter to police in June, which seemed to put Google in a precarious position.  Logic dictated that Shroff wouldn't call in law enforcement for no reason, after all.

But fortunately for the search giant, New Zealand police said in a statement today, "An investigation by Police has determined that there is no evidence to suggest a criminal offence has been committed."

Detective Senior Sergeant John van den Heuvel of the Police National Cyber Crime Centre just suggested, "Anyone using Wi-Fi needs to ensure they have appropriate security measures in place.  People should not underestimate the risk that information they broadcast might be accessed by others, either inadvertently or for more sinister purposes."

Now the ball is back in the privacy commissioner's (figurative) court, and she hasn't made clear whether her office will take further action or not.

We'll be sure to report any other noteworthy developments that occur.


Publ.Date : Thu, 02 Sep 2010 16:08:01 -0400

MusOpen Uses Diaspora Model to Set Classical Music Rights Free
You may have heard about Diaspora, a Kickstarter project that aims to be an open replacement for Facebook users that don't like Facebook's dealings with privacy. There is another interesting Kickstarter project called MusOpen, which aims to buy and release rights to a large amount of music, or in other words, open source it. 
 
A volunteer with the project named Ben Givens reached out to WebProNews with some information about it. He says they're close to completing it, but they're still looking for feedback. 
 
What MusOpen does is hire orchestras to record digital performances of symphonies by composers like Beethoven, Brahms, Sibelius, and Tchaikovsky. This music is in the public domain, but as the EFF points out, many modern arrangements and recording of them are copyrighted. 
 
"That means that even after purchasing a CD or collection of MP3s of this music, you may not be able to freely exercise all the rights you'd associate with works in the public domain, like sharing the music using a peer-to-peer network or using the music in a film project," says the EFF.
 
That's where these unique performances come in. 
 
"The process depends somewhat on the amount raised," Ben tells us. "Assuming we get near our goal...we will create a voting system where every donor submits and votes on music. The winning ideas will determine the type of ensemble and amount of music. If the donors want a set of symphonies, we will speak to well known orchestras, probably in Europe to save money, and record it there. Otherwise we may mix an orchestra and smaller ensembles."

 
"Distributing the music will take place primarily on Musopen.org or through our twitter account," he says. "We have partnerships with the OLPC project and Wikipedia so we'll likely add music to those as well."
 
"I'm volunteering for Musopen to help spread the word about this project specifically as I feel very strongly in its potential," Ben says. "There are no full time people working on it, the entire group consists of dedicated volunteers who have day jobs."
 
MusOpen was founded by Aaron Dunn, who has a team of advisers and a music editor. There are also volunteers like Ben who work on the site and spread the word about it.


Publ.Date : Thu, 02 Sep 2010 16:57:19 -0400

Add RSS Feeds To My Web Pages
Backlinks

to start submitting your website to search engines. Some webmasters like to use an automated search engine submission service. If you decide to go with the submission service you should be aware that there will be a fee involved, the minimum fee is typically fifty-nine US dollars. This price should keep a few URLs on the search engines for a year. Other webmasters like to avoid big fees by submitting their website to individual search engine on their own.

Once your webpage is submitted to a search engine you need to sit down and design a crawler page. A crawler page is a webpage that contains nothing else expect links to every single page of your website, Use the title of each page as the as the link text. This will also give you some extra keywords that will help improve the ranking the crawlers assign to your website. Think of the crawler page as a site map to the rest of your website.

Typically, the crawler page won't appear in the search results. This happens because the page doesn't have enough text for the crawlers to give that individual page a high ranking, after all its nothing more then a portal to the rest of your site and your human users won't need to use it. Don't panic if it crawlers don't instantly appear to index your website. There are a lot of websites available on the internet that need to be crawled, indexed, and then ranked. It can sometimes take up to three months for a web crawler to get to yours.
 

 


 
 
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