
Web Development With Seo In
Mind
by: Adam McFarland
When a business owner decides
to bring their business to the web, generally the last thing
that they think about is search engine optimization. They
assume that whomever they hire to do their web design will
put up a site and then submit it to the search engines and
the traffic will magically pour in. Unfortunately it takes
more than that to drive search engine traffic to your site,
and even more unfortunately most developers don't program
with SEO in mind, nor do they educate the client about the
process involved in gaining traffic from search engines.
Whether it's carelessness or a lack of knowledge, or a combination
of the two, this often leads to a client that several months
down the road doesn't understand why their site doesn't
get any traffic and isn't helping their business. A good
designer will not only program with SEO in mind, but will
also educate the client about the basic principles of SEO,
whether they are the one who executes it or not.
Many times the clients I
inherit have gone through this scenario and then face drastic
on-site changes to get their site search engine friendly
before we are even able to begin the arduous process of
link building. Whether you are designing a site for yourself
or for a client, following the simple steps below when programming
will ultimately save the business time and money and result
in a search engine friendly site that truly maximizes the
online potential of the business.
Use proper tags for headings,
bold text, italic text, and lists – HTML has heading
tags, bold tags, italic tags, and ordered and unordered
lists for a reason and you should use them. Using CSS you
can practically style them however you like, but actually
using a heading tag for your headings, and bold tags for
important text, will help allow search engines understand
what text on a page is a heading or what is more important
than the surrounding text. Simply applying a CSS style that
makes text larger or bold doesn't do that.
Optimize your images –
search engine spiders can't read text within an image. Adding
ALT text to your image tag helps, but ideally you should
remove all wording from the image and style it using CSS,
adding the remaining portion of the image as a background
image to the text. Here is a side-by-side comparison (http://www.seo-playbook.com/image_example.php)
of two images that look the same in your browser, but much
different to a search engine spider.
Avoid canonical problems
– believe it or not, search engines can see http://yoursite.com,
http://www.yoursite.com, and http://www.yoursite.com/index.html
as three different pages. A simple solution is to use a
301 redirect to point all of your pages to their “www”
counterpart. You can also select the preferred domain that
Google shows in the new Google Webmaster Tools console.
Get rid of Session IDs if
you have a PHP site – have you ever seen a PHPSESSID
variable added to the end a URL on a PHP page (it looks
something like PHPSESSID=34908908)? This happens because
PHP will add a unique PHPSESSID to URLs within your site
if cookies aren't available. This can be extremely problematic
for your site's search engine ranking. Google and Yahoo
will see a unique PHPSESSID in the URL every time they visit
a page on your site, and in turn think that said page is
a different page each time. At worst, this could be viewed
as duplicate content and get your site banned, and at best
it will reduce the perceived value of each page. One solution
that I've used successfully is to utilize url_rewriter.tags.
Put CSS and JavaScript in
external files – nearly every site nowadays uses CSS
and JavaScript for something. While both are great for enhancing
user experience, neither will help your search engine ranking
if left on your page. One of the factors that search engines
consider when ranking your site is the percentage of code
relevant to the search term. CSS and JavaScript can take
up hundreds of lines of code, minimizing the importance
of your text and in turn hurting your ranking. By putting
them in separate files and simply including them in your
page by reference, you can reduce hundreds of lines down
to one and increase the amount of code in the file that
is relevant content.
Minimize the use of tables
in layouts – the debate about whether or not tables
should be used in site design has been going on for years
and there's no end in site. I fall somewhere in the middle
– there are certain circumstances (like organizing
tabular data) where I think tables still make the most sense,
but I also appreciate the SEO benefits of using CSS layouts.
CSS layouts drastically reduce the amount of code in your
site that isn't content that the user sees. Just like moving
CSS and JavaScript to an external file, the less on-page
code that isn't content, the better. Check out www.searchenginefriendlylayouts.com
for some free example layouts.
Validate your site –
a site doesn't have to be perfectly coded to rank high in
the search engines (there are many, many other factors),
but valid HTML will help ensure that search engines and
browsers alike will accurately see your page. Try using
the official W3C Validator (http://validator.w3.org/) or
install this handy Firefox extension (https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/249/).
Validating generally identifies areas of code that are redundant,
unnecessary, or not accepted across all browsers. All of
which will help make your site more search engine friendly.
Taken from articlecity.com