Glossary of
terms.
Absolute link - See Relative Link
AdWords - See Sponsored Links.
Ajax - JavaScript and XML based technique
which allows a web page to request additional
data from a server without requiring a new page
to load. Generally not search engine friendly,
as the engines cannot index the content without
performing the actions required.
Algorithm - A complex mathematical formula
used by search engines to assess the relevance
and importance of websites and rank them accordingly
in their search results. These algorithms are
kept tightly under wraps as they are the key to
the objectivity of search engines (i.e. the algorithm
ensures relevant results, and relevant results
bring more users, which in turn brings more advertising
revenue).
ALT tag - Image tag used to describe an
image to search engines and various types of browsers
such as those for disabled users. Value in rankings
is minimal, but can be beneficial if the tag pertains
well to the page's content.
Altavista - The top search engine in 1998
and 1999, bought out by Yahoo, who later sold
it to Compaq - which made it into a portal page
and alienated their users.
Anchor text - Text contained within a
web link. Search engines often use the anchor
text as an idea for what the destination page
provides. Can also be related to "Google
Bombing"
Ask - Formerly known as Ask Jeeves, owned
by IAC, it is one of the main four search engines
in the English language, but at this point the
least used of the four.
Authority Site - Site that has been running
with a good amount of information on a particular
topic, generally for over a few years also. Factors
that build authority include site age, link strength,
unique content and history.
Backlink - A text link to your website
from another website. See also link.
Baidu - Top search engine in China, which
Google struggles to compete with in their market.
Bold Tags - Shown in coding as <b>Content</b>
this determines the bold text on a page. It can
help visibility to a minimum extent, and is recommended
over the <strong> tag (a common variant).
Bookmarking - The ability to bookmark
and share content from a site. This can also help
increase a page's link strength, as engines also
follow these links into social media sites such
as Del.icio.us and Stumble Upon.
Breadcrumb Trails - Navigational technique
used to help search engines and website users
understand the relationship between pages. Example
of breadcrumb navigation:
evolutionsearchmarketing.com Home
> SEO Tips
> Glossary
The page the user is actually on is unlinked,
but the pages above it within the site structure
are linked within the site structure.
Broken Link - A link that does not reach
its location, potentially due to a URL error in
the coding, or the page being taken down. This
often is seen by engines as a hindrance.
Cache - Copy of a page stored by the search
engine itself.
Cloaking - Method of displaying different
content to search engines than to users. Can get
a site blacklisted from search engine results
if misused, usually done by sites maliciously
trying to show search engines a "more optimised"
version of their content.
CMS - a sites Content Management System
Comment tags - Source code tags used within
development teams, not used by search engines
to rank
Copy - The words (actual content) used
on your website.
Copywriter - A professional writer who
specializes in the writing of advertising copy
(compelling, engaging words promoting a particular
product or service). See also SEO copywriter and
web copywriter.
Crawl (also known as spidering) - Search
engines such as Google find pages on the World
Wide Web and records their details in its index
by sending out 'spiders' or 'robots'. These spiders
make their way from page to page and site to site
by following text links. To a spider, a text link
is like a door.
CSS - Cascading Style Sheets, used to
streamline a sites coding. More info at http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/
Deep linking - a link from another site
that goes towards your site, but not to the homepage.
For example, if someone linked to an article on
your site instead of just linking to your homepage.
These links can be more valuable as they strengthen
up within your site, instead of just boosting
the homepage which is usually already the strongest
page.
Directory - a listing of websites manually
compiled. Some of the more established ones include
Yahoo Directory and Best of the Web.
DNS - Domain name server (helps identify
where you are based / hosted)
Domain name - The virtual address of your
website (such as www.evolutionsearchmarketing.com).
This is what people will type when they want to
visit your site. It is also what you will use
as the address in any text links back to your
site.
Doorway pages (also known as Gateway pages)
- Pages designed solely for search optimisation
that are not part of the internal user journey.
Also known as entry pages, and often penalised
by search engines.
Duplicate Content - Repetition of content,
also frowned upon by engines, which may end up
listing neither version
Dynamic Content - Database driven content
that build pages from a sites template and database
Flash - A technology used to create animated
web pages (and page elements). Search engines
usually cannot see any content that may be within
the file, nor are they able to follow any links
on them.
Frames - an old design technique used to display
multiple pages at once to users. However, search
engines can only see one page and cannot connect
to the other frames. A variation of this is the
iFrame (internal frame).
Google - Top search engine in most markets,
and globally. Have been the number one search
engine since 2001, and have not looked back. They
also provide results for several other engines
such as AOL too.
Google Bombing (also known as link bombing,
as it works in Yahoo too) - A practice where groups
of people find keyterms with low query totals
(not heavily competitive) and make links that
have that term in the anchor text (link text)
of various sites. One old example was when the
term "failure" if queried in Google
used to bring up George W. Bush's webpage, though
Google has recently made these pranks tougher
to pull off.
Google PageRank (also known as Page Strength)
- Nothing to do with the actual ranking, but more
so about a scale on which Google scores a website's
strength. It gives all sites a mark out of 10.
Higher marks give a site a potential advantage
for ranking, as Google deems it a stronger site.
However, a high mark doesn't mean the site is
optimised. It just means that there is a good
amount of content and links towards the site,
and if done right, it could do quite well. For
example, BBC.co.uk is a 9.
Header Tags - The heading element briefly describes
the subject of the section it introduces.
Heading elements go from H1 to H5 with the lower
numbered headings being most important (generally
just the first three). You should only use an
H1 tag once on each page, and may want to use
multiple other heading elements to structure a
document. An H1 element source would look like:
<h1>Name of page</h1>
Heading elements may be pre-determined using
CSS sheets also.
htaccess - Commonly used file to determine
redirects such as non-www to www, and pages within.
Info on the various types of redirects can be
seen at http://www.evolutionsearchmarketing.com/the-history.html
HTML - HTML (HyperText Markup Language) is the
coding language used to create much of the information
on the World Wide Web. Web browsers read the HTML
code and display the page that code describes.
Inbound link (one way) - A link towards your
website that does not require your site to link
back to them, recommended for building link strength
with. An internal link is similar, but within
the site - such as across from one section to
another.
JavaScript - A programming language used to create
dynamic website pages (e.g. interactivity). Dynamic
pages such as these cannot often be seen by search
engines as usually a user has to enter data or
perform particular actions in order to make the
destination page appear. Search engine spiders
will never enter data (fill out forms, etc).
Keyword - A word which your customers search
for and which you use frequently on your site
in order to be relevant to those searches. This
use known as targeting a keyword. Most websites
actually target 'keyword phrases' because single
keywords are too generic, gets a very low rate
of click throughs, and for smaller sites, can
be very difficult to rank highly for them.
Keyword density - A measure of the frequency
of your keyword in relation to the total wordcount
of the page. So if your page has 200 words, and
your keyword phrase appears 10 times, its density
is 5%.
Keyword phrase (also known as "keyterm")
- A phrase which your users /customers search
for and which you use frequently on your site
in order to be relevant to those searches.
Keyword Research - Procedure of determining
which keyword get queried more by users.
Link - A word or image on a web page which
the reader can click to visit another page. There
are normally visual cues to indicate to the reader
that the word or image is a link.
Link baiting - A way of creating information
that other sites want to link up to yours for,
thus generating link strength. One example is
to create a new offering, or a widget for users
to share.
Link building - Process of getting more
sites to link to yours, which can be done in several
ways. This then makes engines deem your site to
be more relevant and related to the pages it is
linked from.
Link farm - A site built simply to list
lots of links within, yet providing no relevant
content.
Link path - Using text links to connect
a series of page (i.e. page 1 connects to page
2, page 2 connects to page 3, page 3 connects
to page 4, and so on). Search engine 'spiders'
and 'robots' use text links to jump from page
to page as they gather information about it, so
it's a good idea to allow them traverse your entire
site via text links. One example is mentioning
pages that are similar to the page a user is on
at the bottom of the page so that they can navigate
towards them.
Link popularity - The number of links
to your website. Link popularity is a key factor
in a high search engine ranking. Web sites use
a number of methods to increase their site's link
popularity including providing useful resources,
articles, link exchanging with other sites (reciprocal
linking), link buying, and link directories. However,
the value of the site linking to you is important.
A link from a major news site for instance is
better than 10 links from sites that are not of
any use to anyone.
Link text - (also see Anchor text) The
part of a text link that is visible to the reader.
When generating links to your own site, they are
most effective (in terms of ranking) if they include
your keyword.
LSI - Latent Semantic Indexing - a commonly
cited way that search engines can base your content
on
terms that are similar (but not actually on the
page content). For example, a page about "car
insurance" may help the site rank for "motor
insurance".
Meta tags - A short note within the header
of the HTML of your web page which describes some
aspect of that page. These meta tags are read
by the search engines and used to help assess
the relevance of a site to a particular search.
Common ones include:
Meta Descriptions - how search engines
list your site in engines. Generally not an influence
in ranking on most engines, it still gets shown
as text to support a listing in natural search
and does influence click through rate and relevance.
Meta Keywords - not a factor in Google
currently, but other engines use it to relate
content to groups of keyterms with this
Meta Refresh - Signals how often a page
should be indexed (not recommended)
Meta Robots - a Page by page method of
telling search robots to index or follow content.
Example - <meta name="robots" content="noindex,nofollow"
/> tells all robots to not index or follow
the page (the latter forces it to not pass on
link strength also). This rule however does get
overwritten if the root folder has a list that
contradicts it.
MSN - Owned by Microsoft, also known as
Windows Live Search. Windows live search is currently
available at http://www.live.com/
Natural search results (also known as organic
search results) - Results provided by search
engine algorithms, which are not paid for by the
website - these represent the majority of search
engine traffic, and are a representation of how
the site is branded online.
Organic Search - Another name for "natural
search"
Page Rank (Google) - A term used to designate
the strength a page has, and not the actual ranking
of a page. Deemed on a scale of 0-10, it takes
several factors from Google's algorithm to determine.
Paid Links for Natural Search (or Text link
advertising) - Process of buying link text
in other sites, and deemed unethical by all search
engines.
PPC (Pay-Per-Click advertising) - or PFP (pay
for performance advertising) - See Sponsored
Links.
Quality link - A link to your site, that
holds good value (e.g: from a reputable source).
All algorithms will favour 10 quality links over
100 of a lesser value for example.
Ranking - Your position in the search
results that display when someone searches for
a particular word at a search engine.
Redirect Codes - Can influence how engines
rank your pages, for instance, a 301 tells the
spiders to permanently update that link to the
new one, while a 302 is deemed temporary, and
hence wont get the page updated.
Main types of Redirects:
301 - Moved Permanently - The file has been moved
permanently to a new location. The preferred method
of redirecting for most pages or websites.
302 - Moved Temporarily - The file has been found,
but is temporarily located at another URL, ideally
not used in any optimised site.
Reciprocal link - A mutual agreement between
two webmasters to exchange links (i.e. they both
add a link to the other's website on their own
website). Most search engines (certainly Google)
are sophisticated enough to detect reciprocal
linking and they don't view it very favorably
because it is clearly a manufactured method of
generating links. Websites with an abundance of
reciprocal links risk being penalized.
Relative Link - A link which shows the
relation of the current URL to the URL of the
page being linked at. Due to several issues it
is typically preferred to use absolute links over
relative links in the source code.
Example of a relative link <a href="../folder/filename.html">tv
shows</a>
Example of a absolute link <a href="http://www.nameofsite.com/folder/filename.html">name
of file</a>
Robot - See spider.
Robots.txt file - A file which is used
to inform the search engine spider which pages
on a site should (or should not) be indexed. This
file sits in your site's root directory on the
web server. (Alternatively, you can do a similar
thing by placing tags in the header section of
your HTML for search engine robots/spiders to
read.
Root Page - Generally the homepage, a
term used to name the main page of a particular
website.
RSS Feed - A file which is often used
to make a news section, or latest offers section
available to users. Users can plug the file into
their RSS reader or browser (will be available
on the upcoming Windows / Internet Explorer release
and already available on all other browsers) and
see the latest pages the second it goes live.
This also helps get deeper links within a website,
as many directories and aggregates pick up RSS
feed content too.
SERP - short for Search Engine Ranking
Position
Sandbox - Many SEO experts believe that
Google 'sandboxes' new websites. Whenever it detects
a new website, it withholds its rightful ranking
for a period while it determines whether your
site is a genuine, credible, long term site. It
does this to discourage the creation of fly-by
night SPAM websites (sites which serve no useful
purpose other than to boost the ranking of some
other site). Likewise, if Google detects a sudden
increase (i.e. many hundreds or thousands) in
the number of links back to your site, it may
sandbox them for a period (or in fact penalize
you by lowering your ranking or blacklisting your
site altogether). From our experience some sites
get indexed right away while some do take longer,
but usually a few links built will help kickstart
it.
Second tier engine - A search engine that
merely filters results from other engines. For
example, Tiscali uses Google results.
SEO - Search Engine Optimization. - The
art of making your website relevant and important
so that it ranks high in the search results for
a particular word.
SEO copywriter - A 'copywriter' who is
not only proficient at web copy, but also experienced
in writing copy which is optimized for search
engines (and will therefore help you achieve a
better search engine ranking for your website).
Search engine - A search engine is an
online tool which allows you to search for websites
which contain a particular word or phrase. The
four major search engines are Google, Yahoo, Ask
and MSN. There are a few lesser known engines
with their own algorithm also, such as Gigablast.
Site map - static version is a single
page which contains a list of text links to every
page in the site (and every page contains a text
link back to the site map). It helps both users
and search engine spiders find a centre point
in a website to follow links from. The XML version
consists of a feed like page that lists URL's.
Social Media - Website which allows user
generated content, such as social bookmarking
sites.
SPAM - Generally refers to unwanted and
unrequested email sent en-masse to private email
addresses. Also used to refer to websites which
appear high in search results without having any
useful content. The creators of these sites set
them up simply to cash in on their high ranking
by selling advertising space, links to other sites,
or by linking to other sites of their own and
thereby increasing the ranking of those sites.
The search engines are becoming increasingly sophisticated,
and already have very efficient ways to detect
SPAM websites and penalize them.
Spider - Search engines find pages on the World
Wide Web and records their details in its index
by sending out 'spiders' or 'robots'. These spiders
make their way from page to page and site to site
by following text links. Common ones can include,
Googlebot, Slurp (Yahoo's bot)
Splash pages - Pages designed for advertising,
and generally not search engine or user friendly.
Sponsored Links - Paid advertising which
displays next to the natural search results, sometimes
on the right hand side of the page, sometimes
on the very top and bottom within a shaded colour
area, and sometimes both.
Customers can click on the ad to visit the advertiser's
website. This is how the search engines make their
money. Advertisers set their ads up to display
whenever someone searches for a word which is
related to their product or service. These ads
look similar to the natural search results, but
are normally labeled "Sponsored Links."
These ads work on a Pay-Per-Click (PPC) basis
(i.e. the advertiser only pays when someone clicks
on their ad).
Static content - Non-dynamic and non-changing
text content.
Submit - You can submit your domain name
to the search engines so that their 'spiders'
or 'robots' will crawl your site. You can also
submit articles and news sections (often within
RSS feeds) to 'article submission sites' in order
to have them published on the Internet.
Text link - A word on a web page which
the reader can click to visit another page. Text
links are normally blue and underlined. Text links
are what 'spiders' or 'robots' use to jump from
page to page and website to website. A common
mistake is to use "click here" on a
text link, which only optimises the term "click
here."
For example - instead of saying "Download
the latest seo report - click here"
- it would say "Download the latest seo report"
Text Link Ads - Advertisements which are
formatted as text links and can have an impact
on natural search visibility.
Title tag - One of the most valuable aspects
of SEO on a page. Each title must be unique to
that page and contain some keywords related to
the page's content. Title tags should not exceed
80 characters.
URL - Uniform Resource Locator. The address
of a particular page published on the Internet.
Such as http://www.evolutionsearchmarketing.com/natural-search.html
URL rewrite - a script to make URL's more
search friendly. For instance changing www.nameofsite.com/folder/123421sdasda23.html
to www.nameofsite.com/folder/name.html
Common types of rewrites includes Apache mod
rewrites (http://httpd.apache.org/docs/1.3/mod/mod_rewrite.html)
and ISAPI rewrites (http://www.isapirewrite.com/)
Webmaster - A person responsible for the
management of a particular website.
Wordcount - The number of words on a particular
web page. Search engines favour a good amount
of content on a webpage, but not too much. As
may be the case with this page!
XHTML - "Extensible HyperText Markup
Language" is a class of specifications
designed to move HTML to conform to XML formatting.
More details at http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/
XML - "Extensible Markup Language"
is a simple, very flexible text format used
to make it easy to syndicate or format information
using technologies such as RSS feeds. More details
at
http://www.w3.org/XML/
Yahoo - The oldest of the major search engines,
it still tops the market share in Japan and a
few other countries, while staying in 2nd place
behind Google in most others. While Google has
the lead in search, Yahoo does have an advantage
in other services such as email and shopping,
where Google's versions fall short.
Tag this list as it grows and use it for resource.
share with your friends on....
del.icio.us
Digg
Newsvine
Reddit
MyYahoo!
Facebook
or Sphinn
it for the internet marketing community
|