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For some unfortunate souls
SEO is simply the learning of tricks and techniques
that, according to their understanding, should
propel their site into the top rankings on the
major search engines. This understanding of the
way SEO works can be effective for a time however
it contains one basic flaw ... the rules change.
Search engines are in a constant state of evolution
in order to keep up with the SEO's in much the
same way that Norton, McAfee, AVG or any of the
other anti-virus software companies are constantly
trying to keep up with the virus writers...
Search Engine Optimization
continues...
Basing your entire websites future
on one simple set of rules (read: tricks) about
how the search engines will rank your site contains
an additional flaw, there are more factors being
considered than any SEO is aware of and can confirm.
That's right, I will freely admit that there are
factors at work that I may not be aware of and
even those that I am aware of I cannot with 100%
accuracy give you the exact weight they are given
in the overall algorithm. Even if I could, the
algorithm would change a few weeks later and what's
more, hold your hats for this one; there is more
than one search engine.
And So What Is Necessary?
To rank a website highly and
keep it ranking over time one must optimize it
with one primary understanding, that a search
engine is a living thing. Obviously this is not
to say that search engines have brains, I will
leave those tales to Orson Scott Card and other
science fiction writers, however their very nature
results in a lifelike being with far more storage
capacity.
If we consider for a moment how
a search engine functions; it goes out into the
world, follows the road signs and paths to get
where it's going, and collects all of the information
in its path. From this point, the information
is sent back to a group of servers where algorithms
are applied in order to determine the importance
of specific documents. How are these algorithms
generated? They are created by human beings who
have a great deal of experience in understanding
the fundamentals of the Internet and the documents
it contains and who also have the capacity to
learn from their mistakes, and update the algorithms
accordingly. Essentially we have an entity that
collects data, stores it, and then sorts through
it to determine what's important which it's happy
to share with others and what's unimportant which
it keeps tucked away.
So Let's Break It Down ...
To gain a true understanding
of what a search engine is, it's simple enough
to compare it to the human anatomy as, though
not breathing, it contains many of the same core
functions required for life. And these are:
The Lungs & Other
Vital Organs - The lungs of a search
engine and indeed the vast majority of vital organs
are contained within the datacenters in which
they are housed. Be it in the form of power, Internet
connectivity, etc. As with the human body, we
do not generally consider these important in defining
who we are, however we're certainly grateful to
have them and need them all to function properly.
The Arms & Legs
- Think of the links from the engine itself as
the arms and legs. These are the vehicles by which
we get where we need to go and retrieve what needs
to be accessed. While we don't commonly think
of these as functions when we're considering SEO
these are the purpose of the entire thing. Much
as the human body is designed primarily to keep
you mobile and able to access other things, so
too is the entire search engine designed primarily
to access the outside world.
The Eyes
- The eyes of the search engine are the spiders
(AKA robots or crawlers). These are the 1s and
0s that the search engines send out over the Internet
to retrieve documents. In the case of all the
major search engines the spiders crawl from one
page to another following the links, as you would
look down various paths along your way. Fortunately
for the spiders they are traveling mainly over
fiber optic connections and so their ability to
travel at light speed enables them to visit all
the paths they come across whereas we as mere
humans have to be a bit more selective.
The Brain
- The brain of a search engine, like the human
brain, is the most complex of its functions and
components. The brain must have instinct, must
know, and must learn in order to function properly.
A search engine (and by search engine we mean
the natural listings of the major engines) must
also include these critical three components in
order to survive.
The Instinct
- The instinct of a search engines is defined
in it's core functions, that is the crawling of
sites and either the inability to read specific
types of data, or the programmed response to ignore
files meeting a specific criteria. Even the programmed
responses become automated by the engines and
thus fall under the category of instinct much
the same as the westernized human instinct to
jump from a large spider is learned. An infant
would probably watch the spider or even eat it
meaning this is not an automatic human reaction.
The instinct of a search engine
is important to understand, however once one understands
what can and cannot be read and how the spiders
will crawl a site this will become instinct for
you too and can then safely be stored in the "autopilot"
part of your brain.
The Knowing
- Search engines know by crawling. What they know
goes far beyond what is commonly perceived by
most users, webmasters and SEOs. While the vast
storehouse we call the Internet provides billions
upon billions of pages of data for the search
engines to know they also pick up more than that.
Search engines know a number of different methods
for storing data, presenting data, prioritizing
data and of course, ways of tricking the engines
themselves.
While the search engine spiders
are crawling the web they are grabbing the stores
of data that exist and sending it back to the
datacenters, where that information is processed
through existing algorithms and sp@m filters where
it will attain a ranking based on the engine's
current understanding of the way the Internet
and the documents contained within it work.
Similar to the way we process
an article from a newspaper based on our current
understanding of the world, the search engines
process and rank documents based on what they
understand to be true in the way documents are
organized on the Internet.
The Learning
- Once it is understood that search engines rank
documents based on a specific understanding of
the way the Internet functions, it then follows
that in order to insure that new document types
and technologies are able to be read and that
the algorithm be changed as new understandings
of the functionality of the Internet are uncovered
a search engine must have the ability to "learn".
Aside from a search engine needing
the ability to properly spider documents stored
in newer technologies, search engines must also
have the ability to detect and accurately penalize
sp@m and as well as accurately rank websites based
on new understandings of the way documents are
organized and links arranged. Examples of areas
where search engines must learn in an ongoing
basis include but are most certainly not limited
to
- Understanding the relevancy of the content
between sites where a link is found
-
Attaining the ability to
view the content on documents contained within
new technologies such as database types, Flash,
etc.
-
Understanding the various
methods used to hide text, links, etc. in
order to penalize sites engaging in these
tactics
-
Learning from current results
and any shortcoming in them, what tweaks to
current algorithms or what additional considerations
must be taken into account to improve the
relevancy of the results in the future.
The learning of a search engine
generally comes from the uber-geeks hired by and
the users of the search engines. Once a factor
is taken into account and programmed into the
algorithm it then moves into the "knowing"
category until the next round of updates.
How This Helps in SEO
This is the point at which you
may be asking yourself, "This is all well-and-good
but exactly how does this help ME?" An understanding
of how search engines function, how they learn,
and how they live is one of the most important
understandings you can have in optimizing a website.
This understanding will insure that you don't
simply apply random tricks in hopes that you've
listened to the right person in the forums that
day but rather that you consider what is the search
engine trying to do and does this tactic fit with
the long term goals of the engine.
For a while keyword density sp@mming
was all the rage among the less ethical SEOs as
was building networks of websites to link together
in order to boost link popularity. Neither of
these tactics work today and why? They do not
fit with the long-term goals of the search engine.
Search engines, like humans, want to survive.
If the results they provide are poor then the
engine will die a slow but steady death and so
they evolve.
When considering any tactic you
must consider, does this fit with the long-term
goals of the engine? Does this tactic in general
serve to provide better results for the largest
number of searches? If the answer is yes then
the tactic is sound.
For example, the overall relevancy
of your website (i.e. does the majority of your
content focus on a single subject) has become
more important over the past year or so. Does
this help the searcher? The searcher will find
more content on the subject they have searched
on larger sites with larger amounts of related
content and thus this shift does help the searcher
overall. A tactic that includes the addition of
more content to your site is thus a solid one
as it helps build the overall relevancy of your
website and gives the visitor more and updated
information at their disposal once they get there.
Another example would be in link
building. Reciprocal links are becoming less relevant
and reciprocal-links between unrelated sites are
virtually irrelevant. If you are engaging in reciprocal
link building insure that the sites you link to
are related to your site's content. As a search
engine I would want to know that a site in my
results also provided links to other related sites
thus increasing the chance that the searcher was
going to find the information that they are looking
for one way or another without having to switch
to a different search engine.
In Short
In short, think ahead. Understand
that search engines are organic beings that will
continue to evolve. Help feed them when they visit
your site and they will return often and reward
your efforts. Use unethical tactics and you may
hold a good position for a while but in the end,
if you do not use tactics that provide for good
overall results, you will not hold your position
for long. They will learn.
Contact
us for more information,
tips and tricks on search engine optimizing your
website properly. |