Forum Moderators: mack
Renamed all my pages to read "widgets_blue_large" instead of "widgetsbluelarge".
Made the heading at the top of each page a header and in bold. <h1><b>Widgets
Added links back to the homepage from deeper detailed product pages.
Made a logo for top of every page and links to "buy now" "about us" "contact us" and "homepage" for the top and bottom of every page.
Changed all my tables to read at 100% instead of pixel number.
Was all of the above the right thing to do?
Question?
Links to my home page from within website read index.html and buy now read buy_now.htm. If I am understanding what I read, I need to go through everything and change it to read www.mysite.com/index.html and www.mysite.com/buy_now.htm. Is that right? If so, can't do it in frontpage. Will it work in other software. Downloaded homesite free software which was recommended by a friend.
Question?
Don't yet understand what the google toolbar is other than something to do with pr. How do I get it?
That's all I can think of right now.
Was all of the above the right thing to do?
Links to my home page from within website read index.html and buy now read buy_now.htm. If I am understanding what I read, I need to go through everything and change it to read www.mysite.com/index.html and www.mysite.com/buy_now.htm. Is that right? If so, can't do it in frontpage. Will it work in other software. Downloaded homesite free software which was recommended by a friend.
Don't yet understand what the google toolbar is other than something to do with pr. How do I get it?
I'd also recommend you go to the Google site and read everything you can find under Google Information for Webmasters [google.com].
HTH,
Jim
The following recent discussion may be helpful to you:
Spent the last 24hrs redoing entire website based on many recommendations from here. Started the site 2 mos ago and it's now 70 pages. I'd like to straighten things out before adding more pages.
Renamed all my pages to read "widgets_blue_large" instead of "widgetsbluelarge".
Made the heading at the top of each page a header and in bold. <h1><b>Widgets
Added links back to the homepage from deeper detailed product pages.
Made a logo for top of every page and links to "buy now" "about us" "contact us" and "homepage" for the top and bottom of every page.
Changed all my tables to read at 100% instead of pixel number.
Links to my home page from within website read index.html and buy now read buy_now.htm
- www.domain.com/filename.htm
+ www.domain.com/foldername/
In other words, what happens if you want to change to filename.php3 or filename.asp? And then what happens if you want to upgrade to filename.php4 and filename.aspx? The second route tends to be a cleaner conversion.
If I am understanding what I read, I need to go through everything and change it to read www.mysite.com/index.html and www.mysite.com/buy_now.htm. Is that right? If so, can't do it in frontpage.
* Assuming all links are internal to your site (same domain):
* Assuming all of yours links are at root level (no subfolders):
FIND: href="
REPLACE: href="http://www.domain.com/
This should insert the domain into your links
and convert from relative to absolute paths.
Don't yet understand what the google toolbar is other than something to do with pr.
HTH
edits: grammar
I agree with sean. Your life will be so much easier if you have all navighational and layout code come from an include. Imagine wanting to add a link to your menu and have to do it 70 times as opposed to once!
Very good point sean
Next will change all internal links to domain name. Hope that doesn't mess up the search engines.
Also need to fix descriptions of page. They are mostly generic to the whole site. There are many words not contained within the body of the page. For example: have page called "Widgets", it shows pictures of 5 widgets and they're each labeled blue widget, yellow widget etc. Then user clicks on the blue widget and finds the details about that widget. So the keywords and description of the main widget page has all kinds of words that do not appear on the page. Will the search engines dump me?
Leads me to another question. Do the names of the pictures have any significance?
Read that it's important to use "alt". What does "alt" mean? Do not have that in any pages.
Also wondering, last month the site received a few hits from google from searches on "widget type model #". This very specific search brought up less than 20 hits. When I ran the same searches today, the site was no longer listed. Found the site was still listed for a different product so I know google has not ejected the site. What happened?
Thank you again to everyone for your help.
Amy
Regarding google toolbar. I use netscape so I guess it won't help me.
Amy
What does "alt" mean?
Basically, "alt" stands for Alternate Text [w3.org].
It's used for text-based browsers, people who set their browsers to not view images or folks with a visual disability.
The SEO value is negotiable, I include alt tags on most images, but rarely for the "optimization factor"
- Chad
edit reason : gwammer ;)
Regarding google toolbar. I use netscape so I guess it won't help me.
Yeah, many of us would like a version that works with Netscape, Mozilla, Opera, and Konqueror, just to name a few... :)
It's a good idea to use as many of these browsers as you can to review your sites. This will allow you to make sure your site looks great with the most popular browsers, and at least good with most of the others. Unless you are a "PR addict", just checking your main pages' PR once a month after the update using the IE browser would be useful and shouldn't be too distasteful for ya! ;)
Jim
(Using NS6 right now... think I'll switch to Opera for an hour, though)
Thought I needed alt for optimization. Guess I'll skip that one for now.
Actually Amy, alt tags will be very important for optimization since you are using images as links.
Every single image on every single page of your site should have a text equivalent, so-called "alt text", specified in the alt attribute of the <img> tag.
You can read more on this by clicking here [diveintoaccessibility.org].
Link anchor text is one of the biggest factors in Google's ranking algorithm, and if you are using images as links you will definitely want to take advantage of the alt tag to describe the page you are linking to. You may also want to take advantage of the "title" attribute to name your images.
Unless it would throw off your design scheme you also might consider using a small plain text link underneath the image links to gain the additional benefit of the traditional anchor text.
[edited by: Marcia at 9:20 am (utc) on Jan. 7, 2003]
[edit reason] fixed broken link [/edit]
Thought I needed alt for optimization. Guess I'll skip that one for now.
Sorry, I might have misworded my response.
Alt tags, by definition, are used as a text equivalent for images. That's how and why I use them. As Dante_Maure stated:
Link anchor text is one of the biggest factors in Google's ranking algorithm
So they can serve two purposes. Just remember that there will be people who can't see those images and are left with nothing but the alt text.
Hope that clears things up a little :)
- Chad
He said he uses miva merchant. He bought a package that included a program and web hosting. All he has to do is put on the pictures and write description for the products. Everything else is set up. There is a shopping cart, quantity location, the program calculates shipping weight, calculates quantity discounts. He said the grunge-work manual html method of setting up many, many pages with products (the way I'm doing it and the way he started out) takes much longer than his software. Am I on the wrong track? I do not have a shopping cart yet. I was planning to set up my site, then get some visitors, then add more products, then buy a merchant package (which I currently know nothing about). What does everyone think? Thanks in advance.
Amy
It may indeed save you time with regards to site management but at the expense of being completely search engine friendly.
If you want to get good rankings with a Miva cart you may still need to build strong content pages around it.
The following thread has a number of first hand accounts regarding Miva and Google...
[webmasterworld.com...]
I do SEO on a site that uses FP extensions and borders, it's not compatible with *not* using it. It's a whole email hassle back and forth to have the web designer make even slight adjustments, then I double check, send corrections, etc. FP is great without proprietary features and if using regular FTP. And SSI does the same as the shared borders without the headaches if someone else has to work on the site who will not use FP.