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Five Common Myths About Search Engine Submission

Started by Webm, 2011-10-13 11:24

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digital marketing

Webm

Search engine submission is a question that often puzzles those who are new to the Internet. It is natural to scratch your head and wonder how you will get your website listed in major search engines. If you ask someone how to get your site listed, you may hear many misconceptions about search engine submission. You may even be taken for a ride and end up without parting with some hard earned cash. Therefore, before this happens to you that we will examine some common myths about the search engine submission.

1. Search engine submission is a very important

Indeed, it appears that submitting your site to search engines is of utmost importance. After all, if your site is search engine then how can anyone find you? Sure, you have to be included in search engines, but that does not necessarily mean you have to actively "submit" your site. This is because search engines use their "spiders" or search robot programs to search the Internet for new pages. If another site, which is already included in the search engines, links to yours, so when a search robot visits the site, follow the link to your site and collect information.

Therefore, if you are building a new site to make sure you get some links to their sites and established sites. Ask your webmaster, friends, other organizations and complementary sites for links. Just enough to get listed in major search engines. You may still want to submit your site to make sure, but consider the other items before proceeding

2. There are thousands of search engines to be included in

"Include in 300,000 search engines" read the headlines of some ads on your presentation. If you look at the traffic logs of most web sites, you will see most of the traffic comes from a handful of search sites like Google, Yahoo, MSN and Ask Jeeves. There simply are not thousands of search sites on the Internet. Therefore, do not pay money to be included on these sites. Often, the sites listed in these ads are rarely visited free for all link pages. If you see a page that does not have much traffic, but you'll have a lot of spam.

Focusing on the major search engines and not worry about the ghosts there is no mention in the ads.

3. Monthly presentation search engines is a must

In the early days of the Internet, companies that handle search engine submission warned the public that sites can be easily lost from indexes and search engines to prevent this from happening, it is important to re-send your site every month. He said this was a good way to let search engines know about new additions to your pages.

It is unlikely that your site will disappear from a search engine for no reason at all. If your site is "down" for a considerable amount of time it may be possible for your site is dropped from the list, but otherwise this happens rarely.

And you do not have to re-submit your site to notify search engines about changes on the page or pages. The spiders of search engines regularly check pages already in the index. You can actually create a "robots" meta tags and give instructions such as "review every 15 days," and this will perform the job better than a new presentation.

4. Automatic shipments are useless and must file manually

Often there is a heated debate over whether this manual are better than automated submissions. For Yahoo, MSN and Google now is best done with a manual submission, because all these engines require completion of a code word that is displayed on the screen. These search engines instituted this procedure to block spam. Therefore, for the giants of the search, manual submission is the way forward.

What about secondary sites? There are small search engines and directories. Some of them may be useful for you, especially if they represent a particular geographical area or niche business you're looking for. If the list of secondary engines and directories becomes too large, then you may want to consider automated submission. There are some programs that do this or you can find shipping services that are free or low cost, which leads to the last myth.

5. You should be prepared to spend lots of money to get the proper presentation

If you look at the first point that shows that you may not have to make any presentation at all to get your site listed in Google, Yahoo, MSN and Ask Jeeves. These are the search engines that will provide 90% of its visitors. So, do you really want to spend a good amount of money to get to the last 5 or 10 percent of potential visitors? Look around a free or low cost to take over secondary search engines, and if there are small search engines that are very important to your business, then visit yourself and submit your ad. Save your money for other important tasks.



Webm


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