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The Reality Of Search Engine Submissions
By Robin Nobles
Contributing Writer
Over the last few months, search engine
submissions have changed dramatically. Now is the time to analyze the
way we're submitting our Web pages and to rethink our submission
strategies.
Regretfully, I still see
people paying big bucks to search engine submission services who will
submit their pages to thousands of search engines for one "low price."
What they aren't told is that the act of "submitting" their pages has
nothing to do with top search engine rankings. Even taking a step
back, submitting doesn't guarantee indexing.
Fact: The majority of traffic to your site will come from the major
search engines like Google, Yahoo! search engine, and MSN. Therefore,
submitting to "thousands" of search engines really isn't doing your
site any good.
Let's take a serious look at the reality of search engine submissions.
Do we need to pay a submission service to submit our pages to the
search engines? Can the search engines find our pages on their own, or
do we have to pay them to index our pages? Let's look at the variables
and try to save you some money.
Search Engine Submissions . . . Ways to
Submit Your Pages
1. Don't submit! Let the search
engines find your pages through links on other Web pages or Web sites.
To be honest, this is my favorite, most "stress-free" way to submit to
the search engines. Think about it. You create your Web page and
optimize it. You make sure to link TO the page from another page on
your site, such as your site map. The idea is that when the search
engine spiders your site map, it should find the link to your new
page, visit the page, spider it, and index it. Can I guarantee it will
happen? Of course not. That's why you need to monitor your spider
traffic and your rankings to make sure that the page makes it into the
search engine's index.
Search engine spiders were created to SPIDER the Web. That's their
"job" -- to crawl the Web and index new pages. I have always found
this method of "submitting" to be the most effective.
2. Submit pages through
free add URL pages at the various search engines.
My main concern here is that the search engines have always said that
over 90% of all submissions through free add URL pages is spam. I have
never wanted my submissions to be lumped in there with all of that
spam.
Therefore, I personally stay away from free add URL pages. In
particular, I never submit to Google through its free add URL page.
3. Use Overture's Site Match to
submit to Yahoo!'s family of search engines.
Overture's Site Match (http://www.content.overture.com/d/USm/ays/bjump/sm.jhtml)
has taken the place of the old Inktomi, FAST, and AltaVista paid
inclusion programs. However, Site Match isn't just a paid inclusion
program -- it is also a cost-per-click program, with the cost being
based on the type of industry you're in. You pay a flat fee for your
site to be reviewed, and then you pay a cost per click as well. The
paid inclusion spider crawls the page every 48 hours, so you're able
to tweak it to try to get better rankings.
Site Match gets your pages into Yahoo! Web pages, FAST, AltaVista,
Overture supplemental results, HotBot, and more, so the visibility is
certainly impressive. It's important to note that Site Match pages are
shown with the regular Yahoo! crawler results with no distinction
between the two.
If a page is important to you and you're having problems getting it
picked up by Yahoo!'s family of search engines, you may want to
consider Site Match. However, it can certainly get expensive if you
have a number of pages to submit.
4. Do we need software
programs or search engine submission services that will submit our
pages to thousands of search engines for one "low price"?
In a word -- NO!
We've already learned that the majority of traffic comes from the
major search engines. Submitting to the important international or
minor engines through a software program like WebPosition Gold is a
consideration. But submitting to thousands of search engines, many of
which are "free for all" Web sites (pure junk), won't benefit your
site at all.
Save your money!
5. All of this is fine and good,
but what if the site is brand new with no inbound links?
Get your site listed in a directory such as Yahoo! Directory (http://www.yahoo.com/)
or the Open Directory Project (http://dmoz.org). Then, spend some time finding a
few sites that will agree to put links on their sites to yours.
Are there any vertical search engines and directories in your topic
area? Visit Search Engine Guide and search through their topical
search engine directory: http://www.searchengineguide.com/searchengines.html
So, take the stress-free
approach with search engine submissions and . . .
1) Link to all of your important pages from another page on
your site.
2) Get inbound links from another site pointing to your site.
2) Let the major engines find your pages on their own.
3) Monitor your progress. If a search engine hasn't indexed one
of your pages, make sure to place additional links to that page in the
pathway of the spiders.
Important Note: You may be using an SEO company to handle the
optimization of your Web pages, including your search engine
submissions. Does this mean you're paying too much for those SEO
services? No. SEO work is extremely complex and time consuming, and a
good search engine optimizer is helping to make your online business a
success. The purpose of this article is to educate you on search
engine submissions in general, since so many people wrongly believe
that the acting of submitting pages will get those pages to the top of
the search engine rankings.
In Conclusion . . .
So many Web site owners and SEOs make search engine submissions much
harder than they have to be. Take a deep breath, direct the spiders
through your Web site to make sure they are able to find your Web
pages, and relax. Let the search engines do what they do best . . .
spider the Web!
About the Author:
Robin Nobles is Co-Director of Training for Search Engine
Workshops (http://www.searchengineworkshops.com). She has
trained several thousand people in her hands-on 2-5 day optimization
and marketing workshops at locations across the globe and her online
SEO courses (http://www.onlinewebtraining.com). Robin is also a
member of Wordtracker's special technical support team (http://www.wordtracker.com/moreinfo.html),
and she partners with John Alexander whose eBook, Wordtracker Magic (http://www.wordtracker-magic.com),
offers unique strategies for applying the Wordtracker service to
generate profits for online marketers.
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