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Hack 93 A Webmaster's Introduction to Google
Steps to take for optimal Google indexing of your site. The cornerstone of any good search engine is highly relevant results. Google's unprecedented success has been due to its uncanny ability to match quality information with a user's search terms. The core of Google's search results are based upon a patented algorithm called PageRank. There is an entire industry focused on getting sites listed near the top of search engines. Google has proven to be the toughest search engine for a site to do well on. Even so, it isn't all that difficult for a new web site to get listed and begin receiving some traffic from Google. It can be a daunting task to learn the ins and outs of getting your site listed with any search engine. There is a vast array of information about search engines on the Web, and not all of it is useful or proper. This discussion of getting your site into the Google database focuses on long term techniques for successfully promoting your site through Google. It will stay well away from some of the common misconceptions and problems that a new site owner faces. 93.1 Search Engine BasicsWhen you type in a search term at a search engine, it looks up potential matches in its database. It then presents the best web page matches first. How those web pages get into the database, and consequently, how you can get yours in there too, is a three step process:
93.2 Submitting Your Site to GoogleFor the site owner, the first step is to get your pages listed in the database. There are two ways to get added. The first is direct submission of your site's URL to Google via its add URL or Submission page. To counter programmed robots, search engines routinely move submission pages around on their sites. You can currently find Google's submission page linked from their Help pages or Webmaster Info pages (http://www.google.com/addurl.html). Just visit the add URL page and enter the main index page for your site into the Google submission page form, and press submit. Google's spider (called GoogleBot) will visit your page usually within four weeks. The spider will traverse all pages on your site and add them to its index. Within eight weeks, you should be able to find your site listed in Google. The second way to get your site listed in Google is to let Google find you. It does this based upon links that may be pointing to your site. Once GoogleBot finds a link to your site from a page it already has in its index, it will visit your site. Google has been updating its database on a monthly basis for three years. It sends its spider out in crawler mode once a month too. Crawler mode is a special mode for a spider when it traverses or crawls the entire Web. As it runs into links to pages, it then indexes those pages in a never ending attempt to download all the pages it can. Once your pages are listed in Google, they are revisited and updated on a monthly basis. If you frequently update your content, Google may index your search terms more often. Once you are indexed and listed in Google, the next natural question for a site owner is, "How can I rank better under my applicable search terms?" 93.3 The Search Engine Optimization TemplateThis is my general recipe for the ubiquitous Google. It is generic enough that it works well everywhere. It's as close as I have come to a "one-size-fits-all" SEO—that's Search Engine Optimization—template. Use your targeted keyword phrase:
Other search engine optimization things to consider include:
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