Bad Things Whitepaper

How Poor Searchability Affects Your
Business
The Web provides an arena where all companies can communicate with
their customers across a global network at any time. Online content can
originate from many sources: press releases, print catalogs, data fact
sheets, or internal databases. While a lot of this content will be ‘re-purposed’
in new ways for the Web, many organizations often have large backlogs of legacy
documents. Return on Investment (ROI) is defined by an organization’s ability
to maximize their collective accumulated database of knowledge and legacy
work. The rush to get information online often prevents any consideration to
making the information searchable once it’s published. Web teams under pressure
to publish legacy documents may not give much thought to this during the initial
publishing process. Afterwards, the onerous task of making the content
searchable becomes insurmountable. Business intelligence information falls into
many categories: organizational; financial; products; pricing; alliances;
customers; technology; customers; regulations; market; customer surveys;
marketing toolkits; suppliers. When organizations begin to consider the sheer
volume of information they use to run their businesses, the argument for making
this information searchable, and therefore findable, becomes clear. With the
competition a click away, searchability is vital for ecommerce sites and can be
a significant source of competitive advantage. There are many challenges to
improving search engine ranking, including:
=> COST -- Repairing the searchability on
a 20,000 page website will typically cost over $500,000, depending on what
technology and processes are already in place
=> WASTED TIME ON THE PART OF USERS --
How do users feel about the avalanche of data at their fingertips? Stressed out.
Consider these statistics from Roper Starch Worldwide7, a global research firm:
36 percent of Internet users report that they spend more than two hours a week
searching the Web for accurate information. 71 percent get frustrated searching
the Internet for accurate information. On average, it takes about 12
minutes before a user gets frustrated when searching the Internet.
=> LEGACY DOCUMENTS -- Many organizations
have a wealth of information housed in legacy documents of all different file
types (MS Office, PDFs, etc.) The resources, time, and planning to make these
documents searchable can seem insurmountable.
=> LOST SALES -- According to the NPD
Group, 55 percent of purchases made by Internet users in the US originated from
websites found through search engines.
=> PEOPLE DON’T COME BACK – 60 percent of
consumers who shop for travel deals online report that if they can't find what
they are looking for, they'll just leave for a competitor
=> IT’S DIFFICULT TO MANAGE LARGE, COMPLEX
WEBSITES – Managing consistency across multiple teams in terms of
applying meaningful search elements can be difficult, if not impossible, without
an automated solution to monitor the situation.
“Search engines create more awareness about websites than all
advertising combined, including banners, newspapers, TV, and radio.”10
Optimizing your site for search engines presents three main hurdles: getting
found (search engine spidering); getting ranked; and getting clicked (search
results presentation). The challenge to organizations is to ensure that their
site is consistently ranked highly with the major external search engines. Site
ranking involves getting your website properly spidered by a search engine,
properly placed in its index, and appearing among the top results delivered to
the end user by the search engine. Internet search engines have individual
algorithms or ‘recipes’ for determining a site’s rank. Each uses a variety of
elements including: page title, metadata, body text, link popularity, ALT text,
and URL name, and assigns various weights to each element. To optimize site
ranking, you must maximize your use of these search elements on your site
content.
“Search result presentation” describes the manner in which your
website is delivered to a user’s search query. When a user searches for a topic,
they receive listings giving them information to help them decide if the listed
site is relevant to their needs. This listing is critical, as it is often the
one chance you have to entice a user to click on the result to visit the Web
page. Even organizations that have succeeded in making their website “search
engine friendly”, and have received a high ranking will fail if their site is
not properly presented to the user. For example, if the search results do not
have compelling titles and/or descriptions about what the site has to offer,
the search engine does its best to guess the description from the main text.
It’s all about control: do you want it, or will you relinquish it to the search
engines?
How to Improve Search En Engine Ranking
Improving search engine optimization
There are three major steps you should take to help optimize your
site for search engine ranking:
1. Brainstorm keywords. Determine how your
company wants to be interpreted in the public eye. Gather together company
stakeholders, customers, and partners. Check out what your competitors and
complementary technology companies are using for their keywords. Examine your
web logs, traffic analysis data, and search engine logs to see where your
visitors are coming from, and what search keywords they used to find you.
2. Ensure your content uses these keywords. Make
sure your web content contains keywords in page titles, metatags, body text, ALT
text, and URL name.
3. Submit your site to the most popular search
engines and d directories. irectories. You’re not going to satisfy every search
engine’s criteria, so pick the top engines and directories to submit to, such as
Google, Alta Vista, MSN, and Yahoo!.
Most search engines use the following elements when they attempt
to decipher page content. It is important to ensure that you use repeated,
consistent page keywords:
1. Page Title –The page Title is the most
important aspect of site ranking, and should be unique for every page. Search
engines give words in your Title the highest relevancy. Choosing the right title
is critical to search engine ranking. Robots consider the title of a page to be
the most telling description of the content of a page.
2. Metatags –The text found in the
Description tag will be displayed to the user in the search results for many
engines. Therefore, a good description is critical so a page not only ranks
well, but so people will actually click on your link once they see it. The
“Description” tag is especially important because for some engines, such as
Excite and Google, it's the only metatag supported. A Description tag can boost
your rankings on some engines, and some engines use it as a site's summary on
the results' pages to make sure its contents are enticing to the reader.
Otherwise, a search engine has to extrapolate, or guess what the description
of the page should be, which means you are relinquishing important control of
how your company is presented to end users. Keywords are used when ranking a
page. They will help search engines when reinforcing what the page is about and
when they attempt to determine a theme. A “Keyword tag” summarizes all the
keywords under which you would like to be listed by the search engines.
3. Body Text – Most engines will spider
the actual page content to look for consistent use of keywords throughout the
text. Typically they will only scan the first paragraph (100-150 words). These
keywords should be consistent throughout your search elements: page title,
metadata, and body text.
4. ALT text –ALT text describes non-text
elements (images, JavaScript, etc.) in words so automated devices such as search
engine spiders can read the page. A site containing many images may look good,
but it's not optimized to score high with search engines. Since search engines
don't index images, they can't index all the information that your website has
in image format. ALT text solves this problem, and should always be added
because it can positively influence keyword frequency and help achieve better
rankings (not to mention making sites more accessible to individuals with
disabilities using assistive devices).
5. URL name – The actual link name should
include the same consistent keywords.
6. Link popularity -- An increasing number
of search engines use link popularity as part of their ranking algorithm, but
it’s not the only factor. Sites that are good resources tend to get linked. The
logic behind this is, if other sites think you are worthy of being linked to,
your site must have strong content. Submit your sites to other complementary
sites.
7. Search Search-engine Friendly
Content – Search engine crawlers operate most effectively on static
HTML pages. They have difficulty with Flash, frames, scripts, images,
multimedia, etc. If your site uses these advanced technologies, you must
consider ways to make sure the search engines can find them.
Getting found
The most significant challenge for website owners is driving
traffic to their site. Inclusion in search engine indexes can be a powerful
method to drive targeted users to a website. Search engine submission refers to
the act of getting your web site listed with search engines. Another term for
this is search engine registration. Getting listed does not mean you will
necessarily rank well for particular terms, however. It simply means the search
engine knows your pages exist. There are three ways of getting found once you’ve
optimized your site content: robots that automatically “crawl” your site,
submitting your URLs to search engines, or paying for them to be included.
Examples of paid inclusion programs are Yahoo!'s Express, LookSmart's Express
Submit, Inktomi's Search Submit or Index Connect, AltaVista's Trusted Feed, and
FAST's PartnerSite. The engines that don't use paid inclusion are Google, Open
Directory Project (ODP), and Northern Light, although Google provides AdWords
as paid placement. In the past, it has been a challenge for Web search databases
to remain fresh, as they typically require one month (and often longer) to crawl
the Web to find newly published pages. Website owners have expressed frustration
in getting their content listed in search engines in an expedient manner. Often,
once the content owners go through the effort of getting their content included
in the search index, the listing does not reflect the site's current
content.
Getting ranked
Site Ranking indicates the location within a search engine’s
database that will, in turn, determine where an individual web page will show up
when a user queries a particular topic. This is critical to any organization,
especially those in the B2C market selling commodity goods and services, as most
web users will not have the patience to go beyond the first results page,
especially if they locate what they are looking for on the first page. Once a
search engine has used a user’s search terms to gather "hits" from its database,
it lists or "ranks" them in the results display by machine-predicted
"relevance".
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