|  |  | | How to use Metatags ! |
 | You can create your own Metatag please read below ! Or using our professional Services. We create your Metatag and also install
this on your web site.To find your right keywords using our Keyword Service ! |
 |  | | Most
of the search engines support the complete Metatag.We create your Metatag also we offer the most advanced Keyword Search with our Keyword Search Service .for a small fee we install this on your web site an
update your server. |
 | |
 | | | Tips to create your Metatag by self: Before we start, let's make it clear: Definitely add meta description and meta keyword tags to your web pages |
Some search engines will give you a boost if you have them. But don't expect that to necessarily be enough to put you in the top ten. Meta tags are mainly a design element you can tap into, a crutch for helping information-poor pages better be acknowledged by the search engines.
Meta tags are not a magic solution. Meta tags provide a useful way to control your summary in some search engines. Meta tags can also help you provide keywords and descriptions on pages that for various reasons lack text. Examples are splash pages and frames pages. They might also boost your page's relevancy. However, simply including a
meta tag is not a guarantee that your page should suddenly leap to the top of every search engine listing. They are a useful tool but, as said above, not a magic solution. There are several meta tags,
but the most important for search engine indexing are the description and keywords tags. The description tag returns a description of the page in place of the summary the search engine would ordinarily create. The keywords tag provides keywords for the search engine to associate with your page.
Before getting into further specifics, let's assume you have a page without the tags. The page is titled "My World," with a header that says "Welcome to My World," then a giant graphic image, then a link at the bottom that says "enter." (Did I mention I hate your page?). Search engines that index this daring creation will probably return a listing like this: My World Welcome to My World Now let's fix it. Let's assume that within "My World" is a site chock full of information about stamp collecting. Here visitors can find out about stamp prices, stamp conventions, stamps for sale and trade, the history of stamps and much more. We'll use the meta tags to communicate this without destroying the image you've worked so hard (ahem)
to create. The meta tags go inside the header tags, so that everything looks like this: | <HEAD><TITLE>My World</TITLE><META name="description" content="Everything you wanted to know about stamps, from prices to history."><META
name="keywords" content="stamps, stamp collecting, stamp history, prices, stamps for sale"></HEAD> Now your listing will look something like this in search engines that support the descriptions tag: My World Everything you wanted to know about stamps, from prices to history. Notice how the description matches what's in the description tag? That's exactly what the meta description tag does. It lets you control the description that appears. |
What about the meta keywords tag?
It gives your page a chance to come up if someone types in any of the words listed. For example, someone might enter "stamp collecting," which will match with one of the keywords in the tag. Without that tag, there would be no chance at all, since "stamp collecting" doesn't appear on the page or in the description tag. Should you have different variations for keywords, such as shown in the example? It may help you with some search engines and not at all with others. Having "stamp collecting" together as a word vs. "stamp" and "collecting" can help if someone is searching for the exact phrase "stamp collecting." In general, try not to worry about it too much. You'll drive yourself crazy trying to cover which engines understand plural forms as a default choice vs. those without a thesaurus vs. those that do phrase searching as a default setting. Still with me? Check Keyword Service | Remember, you are using these tags
to help make up for the lack of text on your pages, not as a way to successfully anticipate every keyword variation a person might enter into a search engine. The only hope you have of ever doing that is to have good, descriptive pages with good titles and text that is not buried on the bottom of the page by Java Script, frames tags or tables. The meta tags are a tool to get around these aforementioned problems | One other meta tag worth mentioning is the robots tag. This lets you specify that a particular page should not be indexed by a search engine. The format is like this:<META NAME="robots" CONTENT="NOINDEX">Not all search engines support this tag. As an alternative, all the major search engines support the robots.txt convention of
blocking indexing. Same other help full robots tags. <META NAME="robots" CONTENT="follow"> <META NAME="robots" CONTENT="all"> <META NAME="revisit-after" CONTENT="30 days"> <META NAME="distribution" CONTENT="global">. <META NAME="copyright" CONTENT=".............."> <META NAME="rating" CONTENT="general">
<META NAME="Author" CONTENT="............................."> <META NAME="Content-Language" CONTENT="......................"> Let professionals do the work for you ! Order Now
|
|
 | | |  |
| |  |  | | Breaking NEWS |
 |  | | What search engines don't like |
 |  | | Don't do it! It is extremely important to know what search engines don't want. Otherwise, your
perfectly optimized site can be blacklisted or not indexed. This is a high price to pay, considering that search engines account for 85% of new visitors to some sites. |
 |  | | Therefore, when you learn about factors that influence search engine rankings, you should also learn what to avoid. |
 |  | | Spam - search engines' worst enemy Search engines hate spam
(irrelevant pages forced to rank high or to be indexed). Search engines strive to provide the most relevant results to their users. Spam clutters the engines' index with irrelevant information. Some webmasters create spam after they learn which criteria search engines use to rank pages. |
 |  | | Say "No" to frames! Frames make your life more difficult, so why use them? If you can avoid using frames, do so. This will save
you a lot of headache. You won't have to worry about search engines being unable to index your site. |
 |  | | Recently, some engines started to index dynamic content. However, not all dynamic pages are indexed. Most search engines are still unable to index multimedia and dynamic pages. |
 |  | | The following techniques are spam: Meta refresh tags
Invisible text and overuse of tiny text Irrelevant keywords in the title and meta tags Excessive repetition of keywords Overuse of mirror sites (same sites that point to different URLs) Submitting too many pages in one day Identical or nearly identical pages Submitting to an inappropriate category (for directories) |
| |