Forum Moderators: not2easy
Sorry for the "rookie" questions but I want to make sure by the time Google crawls my sites I have the right content needed to be successful.
Thanks in advance,
Scott
(An additional thought comes to mind; I treat editorial copy as I do testimony in court. I try to only write from personal experience, and tend to qualify a lot of statements with things like "in my experience", "according to so-and-so", "reportedly", and so on. Is it humility, CYA'ing, or an attempt to best serve my visitors? You be the judge.)
The idea, as I see it, is to produce web pages that fulfill a visitor's needs. If you sell blue widgets, then make sure your page accurately and honestly describes the widgets you're selling, whom or what they're appropriate for, why someone would want a widget, and why someone would want *your* widget. If you have a page about widgets, make sure you accurately describe widgets, contrasting and comparing where applicable, with enough technical information to keep geeks happy and enough copy in layman's terms to educate the ignorant; links to other sites or pages with quality content are also good.
Good content should be updated, as appropriate... It's probably safe to stop warning people about the impending apocalypse of Y2K. :)
And, of course, make sure G! and the other SE's can index your pages, and that they'll be viewable by as many people as possible.
Hope that helps some... though it probably just confused you more. :)
The key is not make "quality content" your holy grail. Instead, make a solid business plan your holy grail. Use your website as an instrumentation to meet your goals and objectives. Then, create quality content to meet your online goals and objective. To create quality content, provide service/product descriptions, testimonials, pictures, pricing info, FAQ section, Contact Us section, etc. etc.
Per above, see how you take the idea of a business plan, and break it down into subsections? (I hope I've helped a little)....
Quality content is not the end all be all, but rather should be integrated into your plan to achieve your goals and objectives.
I love this place.... ;)
My second part of the question though was regarding those "meta"? key words that some people place in their coding.
In your opinion (speaking to everyone here) is that just as important to search engines as good content is to human readers?
I often read that your keywords should be listed but I'm not sure if they are talking about in your HTML code, or your web site description. You see, Google does not let you give any detail on your website. They just ask for the URL when you submit it. So unless you insert your keywords into your HTML code, how else can you do this? At least with Google.
Hmmmm...
Scott
For sure, including relevant tags will add to the quality aspect of your site.
Some search engines read the codes and some don't. It's good practice to add the meta tags as they do no harm to those search services that do not read them.
As far as site submissions are concerned, search engines only require the url, whereas directory submissions (such as Yahoo) will require a description.