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Archived Articles
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Optimising for Inktomi - And how it can help on Other SEs! |
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Barry Lloyd
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July 03 |
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Everyone is aware
that Inktomi is soon likely to grow in importance due to it having
been being bought recently by Yahoo! Although no firm date has been
given as to when Inktomi results will be integrated in to Yahoos
search listings, it is pretty much accepted that the time is drawing
close. In addition, MSN are likely (despite the recent launch of their
own MSNBOT spider) to be at least 18 months away from being in a position
to launch their own search engines results, which seems to tie-in
to the surprise announcement earlier this year of a lengthy extension
to MSNs contract with Inktomi. Over the past few weeks, Inktomi
has also been gaining new partners most notable being the prestigious
contract for the supply of results to the BBC web site (www.bbc.co.uk).
Although the future now looks quite bright for Inktomi, they have
spent the last few years fighting off (and losing to) the ever growing
Star of Search, Google. People tend to forget that in 2000 (a mere
3 years ago), Inktomi seemed to rule the roost in terms of search.
Their results were used by many leading search destinations, from
AOL to Yahoo! For a webmaster, if you couldnt get listed on
Inktomi you were condemned to almost total invisibility on
the web.
Most SEOs had to cut their teeth on preparing client sites for Inktomis
spiders (Slurp in its various forms), as well as those
of AltaVista (Scooter) and other engines. Googlebot (Googles
spider) was an interesting new spider and Google a search engine with
potential but was largely ignored for day to day
SEO purposes.
Now the situation is reversed! The majority of webmasters are focussed
on optimisation for Google and many are bemoaning the fact that optimisation
for Google doesnt seem to work on Inktomi (or other engines).
Fortunately, those of us who knew how to design pages for Inktomi
had learnt early on, that those pages worked very well for Google
(and other engines) provided the off-page factors that Google use
in their algorithm were taken in to account.
In all my years of doing search engine optimisation across the widest
spectrum of site themes imaginable, I have never had to prepare a
different page for Google (or any other engine) to the one I prepared
for Inktomi first. This rather cuts across the argument put by Ammon
Johns in a recent article (sorry, Ammon) but is my experience
after the production of many thousands of pages and hundreds of sites.
So, people have asked me, why optimise for Inktomi first? Why not
chase the ultimate goal of Google before turning to the others? The
simple answer is PFI. By optimising a page for Inktomi and using PFI,
I can adjust the page to get a decent ranking on Inktomi within a
matter of days. I then know that provided I can get decent links to
the site on which that page resides (Yahoo, DMOZ, and Joeant etc.)
I can be fairly certain that I am going to get a first page
listing on Google without having to adjust anything for Googlebot!
The rankings on Inktomi give an indication of the ultimate positions
on other engines. This is far better than having to wait weeks or
months to see what the results are going to be like on Google first.
Due to this, Inktomi has been my secret weapon for SEO
for all the years that people have been ignoring it!
Like any SEO procedure, optimising for Inktomi is not rocket-science.
Inktomi looks for on-page content laid out in a manner which allows
it to understand the page content comprehensively. The facts laid
out below are back-to-basics SEO, but they work
pretty much every time! A page should consist of:
a)<title> tag I normally use around 10 words incorporating
as many keyword variants for that page as I can, while making it a
compelling title.
An example for a car hire site could be: Car Hire Las Vegas,
Rental Cars from Auto Rentals Specialists
The above is focussed on all forms of ways that someone is going to
search for looking for car rentals Las Vegas and should appear for:
Car hire las vegas, rental cars las vegas, auto rentals las vegas,
hire cars las vegas etc., etc.
b) meta description tag I use around 15-20 words re-emphasising
the keywords used in the title tag.
Example:
Great rates on car hire in Las Vegas. Check our rental cars and choose
your auto rentals from the specialists at MMT Rental!
c) meta keyword tag Inktomi still recognises this just!
If in doubt, leave it out but I (usually as the last thing
I do) add the tag for the core phrases I want the page to rank for.
Example:
Car hire las vegas,rental cars las vegas,auto rentals las vegas,hire
cars las vegas
Note the use of commas and no spaces after the commas. I was always
a strong proponent of not using commas in a keyword meta tag
but Inktomi guidelines state this is the way to do it so who
am I to disagree!
Now we move on to the visible body text. I usually design a page so
that there is a visible page heading appearing close to the top of
the HTML in an <h3> tag. This is a repeat of my <title>
tag.
Example:
<h3>Car Hire Las Vegas, Rental Cars from Auto Rentals Specialists</h3>
The first sentence of the first paragraph is an edited repeat of my
description in <bold>
Example:
<bold>We have great rates on car hire in Las Vegas. Use the
information below to check our rental cars and choose the auto rentals
for you from the specialists at MMT Rental! </bold>
Then the page should have around 200 words of text describing your
services. If you are mentioning models e.g. car types, I put these
in list elements <li>, with a possible link to the appropriate
site section relating to descriptions of the model. This would re-emphasis
that the site was about a specific type of car hire in a specific
location with words in the list element getting a boost along with
the use of the phrase in anchor text.
All images on the page should use alt tags with a single phrase in
the tag e.g. the first image may have car hire las vegas,
the second hire cars las vegas etc.
At the end of the text, I add a final sentence in bold which a rehash
of the first sentence I wrote at the beginning of the body text.
The page is done well almost!
Make sure that the page is user friendly and makes sense. It is pointless
obsessing about the absolutely perfect page if it becomes meaningless
to the surfer in the meantime! The idea is to incorporate the rules
of optimisation in to the overall design of the site. Make sure the
page is linked to by the appropriate index page.
Do not be tempted to create doorway pages using garbage content as
filler around your key phrases. It wont work in
the long term for two reasons:
1) Inktomi has the most sophisticated grammatical parser I
have seen for detecting auto-generated content. I know, years ago
I tested ways to get around it and couldnt.
2) Inktomi checks for incoming links even on PFI pages.
If a page is deemed to be an orphaned doorway page with no incoming
links, it will drop like a stone!
My next step is to put the page in to PFI and 48 hours later it should
appear on sites like MSN. 9 out of 10 times there it is, on
the first page of the search results. If it isnt, I adjust slightly
and wait another 48 hours. When satisfied, I leave it alone.
I then concentrate on ensuring the site I am working on gains the
off-page factors necessary to help it in other SEs like Google. Submissions
are made (if the site is not already included) to Yahoo, ODP and other
directories including those which are specific to the industry being
targeted. I do not look for un-natural links like guest
books or link farms. I never, never ever crosslink tempting
as it may be! I also dont submit to Google. In fact I havent
used the Google submit button for years. The site will be found (provided
you are successful with your directory submission) by all the major
crawlers and in 6-8 weeks time will start to appear on other
SEs, with the full strength of the off-page factors kicking in about
a month after that.
I have been successfully using this method for the past 3 years and
it has worked consistently. There should be no surprises really, it
is just laying out content in a manner which search engines like.
It is just that on Inktomi, you can test the results of your efforts
a little quicker.
Try it it should work for you to!
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Article by Barry
Lloyd, CEO of MakeMeTop.
Barry Lloyd founded the MakeMeTop brand of SEO services in 1999 although
he began search engine optimisation in 1997. Barry posts on several
forums as a Senior or Veteran Member under the name MakeMeTop, is
a Moderator on the IHelpYouServices Forums, has spoken at leading
conferences on various aspects of search engine marketing and has
written articles on specific aspects of the industry for webmasters
world-wide. MakeMeTop now has offices in Northern Ireland, mainland
UK and Singapore and does search engine marketing for over 200 clients
throughout the World www.makemetop.co.uk
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