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I use a particular design tool that allows me to design SEO site prior to submission with its Page Builder feature. I have two such sites that rank in the 90% and use keywords with a very good KEI.
Once complete I use one of the major submission services that all the big guys pull from. Normally this service pulls my sites in within 72 hours - usually more like 48 hours.
But neither of these sites is appearing in 48 out of 50 search engines using low competition phrases. I e-mailed the submission service and they advised that a recent change to the algorithm has affected the submissions, but they won't elaborate. They do say that at some point they may appear.
I'm lost on this one.
> a particular design tool that allows me to design SEO site
Hm.. I build my websites with a small html editor. I have created a few templates that I use everywhere and then I put some good content in. Fast and easy and gives nice positions in search engines.
> submission services
It does happen that I submit a page to a search engine, but it is _very_ seldom. If I create a new website I generally just make some good links to it. Google will find it very soon and show it in their fresh results and the other search engines come when they come.
> 48 out of 50 search engines
Are there really 50 search engines that matter anything?
The top 7 search engines are all that matter to me. But the remaining 43 act as indicators to me because they often pick up changes faster.
I develop in DW and have another application that I use to guide me in my quest for the perfect site :)
Hey! What does PFI mean?
> And welcome back, troels,
Ahhh that makes my day. :)
> LTNS.
I once made a Foo-post about that expression
> quest for the perfect site
I'm on that one too. Perhaps we're both related to Sisyphos?
> The issue appears to be related to Inktomi and their recent changes.
I guess we'll just have to be patient and wait and see what happens with Inktomi.
Bob, there's no application that can give the recipe for the secret sauce.
>>issue appears to be related to Inktomi
Exactly one of the reasons no application can do it. If you optimize *sites* for Google and individual *pages* for Inktomi it gets reasonably close, and consistent across all the engines.
Google is about relationships - between pages within sites and pages on other sites that link to it/them. Inktomi, though non-PFI may rely on link pop to a degree, is basically plain vanilla, old-fashioned, one_size_fits_all on page optimization, all the way from page titles on through meta tags and onto page <Hn1-6> tags, outbound anchor text and page text - with a combo of keyword phrase/word location on the page put into the mix.
That's basically it; it's so simple, it's almost elusive.
I use the other tool only as a guide. Since I'm still somewhat new to SEO, it helps. I'll admit it. I have a crutch. As it is now, after working a site and then running the tool on it there are fewer and fewer changes to be made. They are intuitively being done the first time. What a great way to learn!
But then Inktomi goes and messes things up and I've been crawling around for a week trying to figure out why MY secret sauce stopped working!
Your info on Google vs. Inktomi is inspiring. Up until now all I thought of Ink was that if I submitted optimized pages to it they would soon appear in Google. Learning how to use what I have been learning has proven to be the real challenge.