Search Engine Optimization
The acronym "SEO"
The acronym "SEO" can also refer to "search engine optimizers," a term adopted by
an industry of consultants who carry out optimization projects on behalf of clients,
and by employees who perform SEO services in-house. Search engine optimizers may
offer SEO as a stand-alone service or as a part of a broader marketing campaign.
Because effective SEO may require changes to the HTML source code of a site, SEO
tactics may be incorporated into web site development and design. The term "search
engine friendly" may be used to describe web site designs, menus, content management
systems and shopping carts that are easy to optimize.
Benefits from San Software
San Software and search engines
The leading search engines, Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft, use crawlers to find pages
for their algorithmic search results. Pages that are linked from other search engine
indexed pages do not need to be submitted because they are found automatically.
Some search engines, notably Yahoo!, operate a paid submission service that guarantee
crawling for either a set fee or cost per click
Search engine crawlers may look at a number of different factors when crawling a
site. Not every page is indexed by the search engines. Distance of pages from the
root directory of a site may also be a factor in whether or not pages get crawled.
Getting indexed
Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the volume and quality
of traffic to a web site from search engines via "natural" ("organic" or "algorithmic")
search results. Typically, the higher a site's "page rank" (i.e, the earlier it
comes in the search results list), the more visitors it will receive from the search
engine. SEO can also target different kinds of search, including image search, local
search, and industry-specific vertical search engines.
As an Internet marketing strategy, SEO considers how search engines work and what
people search for. Optimizing a website primarily involves editing its content and
HTML coding to both increase its relevance to specific keywords and to remove barriers
to the indexing activities of search engines.
Preventing crawling
To avoid undesirable content in the search indexes, webmasters can instruct spiders
not to crawl certain files or directories through the standard robots.txt file in
the root directory of the domain.
Additionally, a page can be explicitly excluded from a search engine's database
by using a meta tag specific to robots. When a search engine visits a site, the
robots.txt located in the root directory is the first file crawled. The robots.txt
file is then parsed, and will instruct the robot as to which pages are not to be
crawled. As a search engine crawler may keep a cached copy of this file, it may
on occasion crawl pages a webmaster does not wish crawled.