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In
the last year Google has found itself thrust in an unfamiliar
position. First, it has had to contend with the loss of half of
its market share after Yahoo! dropped Google as its SERPS provider
and began focusing on its own modified version of Inktomi. Additionally,
the rise of MSN Search has further evened out the search engine
playing field.
Second, while Google is still the
de facto leader of the search engine world, it is now a leader
people love to hate. Google's meteoric rise to fame and its hypnotic
hold on the search industry have led some observers to compare
Google to Microsoft.
The end result? Google occupies only
an estimated 35 to 40 percent of the search engine market share.
With Yahoo and MSN taking over another 40 to 50 percent, webmasters
have had to readjust and consider optimizing their websites Yahoo
and MSN as well.
But really, do we need to do anything
different?
| SEO
theory - General SEO vs. Search Engine Specific SEO |
When it comes to search
engine optimization, webmasters generally flock to one of two
camps:
- Forget about optimizing specifically
for each search engine and concentrate on general ‘best'
SEO practices.
- Find out what each search engine
is looking for, and optimize your web pages accordingly.
Both are with their problems, but
surprisingly, once you get to the bottom of the argument
| Both
sides are essentially saying the same thing |
How? Let's find out.
General-SEO proponents say that since
search engine algorithms are constantly evolving, today's optimizations
may not work in tomorrow's search engines. So, to optimize for
search engines individually is to keep playing catch-up all the
time. Another argument often posited is that eventually, all search
engines aspire to the same goal – to provide quality results
that are most relevant to a user's search term. If that is the
ultimate goal, the Holy Grail of search engines, as it were –
then if you were to optimize with only the generally proven SEO
practices, you would rank well in all search engines and continue
to do so even through various algorithm updates.
Search Engine specific proponents
claim that as every search engine gives a different level of importance
to different factors, it pays not only to know which search engine
is looking for what in your web pages, but to also know how to
optimize your web pages so they rank as well as possible on different
search engines such as Google, MSN, Yahoo and others.
To me, that's like saying the same
thing in two different ways. Since all search engines, leaders
or not, are generally measuring the same factors (and just giving
them a different weight), the key to constant high rankings across
the search engine world is this:
Optimize your web pages for ALL
factors – in other words, cover all your bases.
This means not only to espouse best
practices for SEO, but to also ensure that you optimize your web
pages for all the search engines – because eventually, as
long as you don't do anything that a particular search engine
penalizes (keyword spamming is bad, and if Yahoo doesn't catch
it now, it will soon enough), any optimization that you do will
help your web pages rank better.
Having said all that, it stands to
reason that we should find out more about the ‘other' 40-
50 percent of the search engine market, Yahoo and MSN. Surprisingly,
both Yahoo Search and MSN Search are quite similar to each other
in their differences with Google.
Let's look at both on-page and off-page
factors.
| On
page optimization factors |
Whereas Google has giving a primary
importance to inbound links and the quality and theme of your
web page's inbound links, Yahoo and MSN both tend to favor on-page
optimization a lot more. That's not to say that they don't consider
off-page factors; it's just that both MSN and Yahoo give far greater
importance to on-page factors than does Google.
Here's a quick check-list of the
important factors you MUST cater to in order to rank highly
in MSN and Yahoo:
This is given far greater importance
in both Yahoo and MSN – in fact, their keyword density tolerance
is slightly higher than that of Google. The trick here is not
to over-do the keyword density (lest you get punished by Google
or even MSN for keyword spamming).
A good benchmark is to keep your
keyword density at 3%. More can possibly help, but it's not necessary,
and generally a range of 2% to 4% is fair enough. Contrary to
some experts, keyword density in itself is only as important as
the other on-page factors, namely the title tag and the Meta tags
(keywords and description both).
When trying to optimize your content,
ensure that you follow this pattern:
- Include your keyword phrase in
the first sentence of the paragraph for each header (the paragraph
after each major heading).
- In your final paragraph (for each
header), use your primary keyword phrase again. Preferably twice.
- In between, use combinations of
your primary key phrase by splitting it up and using individual
words, and throw in semantic uses to vary the nature of the
content.
- Avoid using the keyword phrase
too much – some SEO experts say that your keyword phrase
should be used once in every paragraph and twice in your first
and last paragraphs.
As always, these are guidelines that
have come about after experience with several websites. Your own
experiences may differ. The key is to understand the general principle:
Mix up your content with your
keyword phrase, and to use as many variations as you can without
compromising on readability (a criteria that can assure a keyword
density below 5%).
Title Tags
Ensure that your Title tag contains
your keyword phrase at the very start. It's common practice to
stuff your company's name or website's name at the beginning of
each page's title tag. This is a definite no-no. Put your primary
keyword phrase for that page first, followed by your name.
Meta Tags
Whereas Google seems to ignore Meta
tags (especially the Meta keywords tag), there is no reason you
should exclude them simply because other search engines continue
to give them some importance.
Keywords tag – keep this to
less than 15 keyword phrases, and to avoid keyword spamming, only
include those keyword phrases that are part of your web page content.
Otherwise, you run the risk of being penalized by Yahoo and MSN.
Description tag – important
even in Google, ensure that you include your primary keyword phrase
(just once), and make it unique (i.e. a proper description instead
of keyword stuffing).
Content tags (H1, H2, bullets,
italics, bold)
As in Google, use your primary keyword
phrase in H1 tags, and if possible, use variations of your secondary
keyword phrases in H2 and H3 tags.
Also, use your keyword phrase and
it's variations in bold and italics as well – minor steps
but your intention here is to ‘cover all the bases' and
these tags always help.
Remember to use bullets – not
only do they help readability, but they give increased importance
to the content in them – ergo, use keywords and variations.
Clean code
Yahoo and especially MSN have placed
a strong emphasis on clean code. Some experts say that MSN Search
spider significantly downgrades sites that have badly written
code, but the reasons could also be related – sites that
are badly designed are also liable to subscribe to ‘bad'
SEO strategies such as keyword spamming and Alt tag spamming and
thus could be punished because of them.
In any case, make sure that your
website code is clean and W3 compliant. It's easier to maintain
and in might prevent your website from being punished.
Internal linking
Internal linking is very important
to MSN and to a lesser extent Yahoo as well. Whereas Google has
eventually reduced its reliance on internal linking as a sign
of a page's importance, MSN considers all incoming links from
the same source to have value, and assigns them value accordingly.
Be sure to link extensively throughout
a site, and to use strong keyword rich and thematic
anchor text relevant to the page with the incoming link. While
anchor text is important in
both search engines and Google as well, the difference lies in
how they differentiate
between the different sources for incoming links – within
a site, MSN and Yahoo seem to
favor internal linking a lot more. In any case, having a site-map
is a must for any search
engine, and placing thematic links on each page always help your
SERPS.
| Off
page optimization factors |
Yahoo and MSN have both placed a
lot of emphasis on the anchor text and quantity of incoming text,
but their emphasis on thematic links does not match that of Google.
As always, links to a particular
page should have that page's primary keyword phrase in it's anchor
text, and across the board ensure that you use several variations
of your anchor text (to avoid making it look like link spamming).
Other than that, off-page optimization
for Yahoo and MSN run pretty much like your normal off-page optimization
for Google. There is less emphasis on thematic links so there's
the possibility to gain search engine rankings by just getting
a lot of links from the same IP Address (i.e. sitewide links)
- not a best SEO practice, but for new websites it's a quick-start
option. Yahoo and MSN have also shown little affinity for Google's
penchance with domain and site link-aging.
| Recap
- Playing the balance game |
The differences between Google on
one side and Yahoo and MSN on the other are reminiscent of how
Google has evolved over the past few years. Google's emphasis
on onpage optimization has gone down over the last three, four
years and it's entirely plausible that keyword stuffing may become
the norm again for websites trying to rank highly in these two
search engines.
What then? Does this mean that Yahoo
and MSN search engine algorithms are less developed, or in the
same place as Google was a few years ago?
Not exactly. Some of the techniques
used by both MSN and Yahoo to sniff out keyword spamming are quite
advanced (and based on their spam-filtering experiences in their
respective email programs), yet you get the feeling that optimizing
for Yahoo and MSN might involve adopting those same practices
that webmasters used for Google in its early years.
In any case, Yahoo and MSN do own
a significant portion of the search engine market and factoring
them into your search engine optimization strategy is critical
to winning with the search engines.
Now get out there and start focusing
on that other 50% of the search engines!
All the best,

Brad Callen
Professional SEO
SEO Elite: SEO Software
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