Getting indexed
The leading search engines, such as Google, Bing and Yahoo!, 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. Two major directories, the Yahoo Directory and DMOZ both
require manual submission and human editorial review. Google offers
Google Webmaster Tools, for which an XML Sitemap
feed can be created and submitted for free to ensure that all pages are found,
especially pages that are not discoverable by automatically following links.
Yahoo! formerly operated a paid submission service that guaranteed crawling for
a cost per click; this was discontinued in 2009.
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.
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. Pages typically prevented from being crawled include login
specific pages such as shopping carts and user-specific content such as search
results from internal searches. In March 2007, Google warned webmasters that
they should prevent indexing of internal search results because those pages are
considered search spam.
Increasing
prominence
A variety of methods can increase the prominence of a webpage within the
search results. Cross linking between pages of the same website to provide more
links to most important pages may improve its visibility.Writing content that
includes frequently searched keyword phrase, so as to be relevant to a wide
variety of search queries will tend to increase traffic. Updating content so as
to keep search engines crawling back frequently can give additional weight to a
site. Adding relevant keywords to a web page's meta data, including the title
tag and meta description, will tend to improve the relevancy of a site's search
listings, thus increasing traffic. URL normalization of web pages accessible
via multiple urls, using the canonical link element or via 301 redirects can
help make sure links to different versions of the url all count towards the
page's
link popularity
score.
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