Friday, July 20, 2007

Newbies and the SEO Lingo

Since I've had articles regarding SEO, I was rather amiss in not letting those new to SEO to have an intro into the SEO Lingo. When I first started, and I heard the word SEO or Search Engine Optimization I wondered what I had gotten myself into. You may be wondering the same. But don't ignore the process, learn what you can in stages, and apply what you learn.

What's most important to the search engines? Quality content should be your base.

I've written an article called "SEO Lingo" that gives you a little lingo, and what some of the search engines look at when they visit your site. Once you got the lingo, go back and look at some of the other available articles on my site, or within this blog to help you with the SEO process.


SEO Lingo
By Vickie J. Scanlon


For the newbie, SEO is well, new, strange or difficult to get a handle on. You may even say to yourself, why do I need this. I just want a website to make money. Right. The answer is simple. You need it to attract the search engines or you will not make money. So what is the lingo, and what is SEO?

SEO

SEO is the process by which you help the search engines find your site, as well as, determine what your site is about. How do you do that? Some of the pieces you need is the domain name, the title, keywords, meta tags, alt attributes and content.

The search engines use an "Algorithm" - which is simply a set of instructions to follow in determining the importance of the web page, and other niceties, such as page rank.


Page Rank

Page rank is determined by the number and the quantity of inbound links coming into your site. If your web page or pages are relevant to other webmasters, then the search engines will reward you for it, with a higher rank. Sounds easy, but the weight of the rank can be diminished if a site that is not all that relevant to your site, links to you.


Algorithms and the Human Factor

Many webmasters in the past had been very inventive at work-arounds with the search engines algorithms -- thus pushing their websites up to the front of the line in search engine ranking. But that is a-changing, Google has made their algorithms a little more unpredictable, making it more difficult for webmasters to predict what technique would work to get the ranking.

But Google has pushed the envelope, so to speak, and has gone a little farther. They are now beginning to approach it from more with the eyes of a human viewer. Granted there are still bugs-and you still see on occasional website that may have some irrelevant data - but it's getting better.

Other Lingo

Meta tags- A meta tag is a tag that is a general-purpose tag. It's used between the "head" portion of the web page.
Keywords- keywords are specific words that identify what your web page is about. Keywords should be within the body of the copy and with the meta keyword tag and title tag.
Title- Identifies the page. If you want the search engines to find you, do not leave the title tag blank, or place your Company name in the tag, unless it is relevant, or leave it as Home Page.

One final note:
The meta tags, such as the title tag, keyword tag, and description tag, should be after the head tag, but before the ending head tag.


So what's the bottom line.

The bottom line is this. Yes, meta tags, keywords, title, and domain name are important. But your content is just as, or more important. If the content is not relevant to the keywords, tags,
title, etc. then you're not going to get a ranking by the search engines.

To conclude, know the lingo, and you have a third of the battle won. The other two-thirds requires work on your part and, a commitment to quality content.

About The Author:
Vickie J Scanlon -- Visit her site at: My Affiliate Place for free tools, articles,ebooks, how to info, affiliate opportunities, travel and tech accessories, security software and computers for your home office or online business.

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