Your Company Slogan Here...
Search engine spiders want to read the text on your pages, and especially the introductory text near the top of the page. This mirrors the way human beings assess pages — by reading them, starting at the top. Provide text. Pages without text rarely gain high rankings. This is especially important for home pages. If there's no text on the opening page then the spider might stop right there and not even bother to look at the rest of your site. It's one reason for avoiding Splash pages at the front end. Ideally you should provide at least 150 words of text on your home page.
Here are some guidelines to keep text-hungry spiders happy:
Make full use of early paragraphs to include relevant keywords. Most search engines place emphasis on early text, and less on the words further down the page. The numbers vary from engine to engine, but you can assume the first 50 words are crucial, the next 50 are important, the 50 following are likely to be read. After that, it's anybody's guess, though some engines do manage to fully index pages with more than a thousand words. Try to get your important keywords — the expressions you expect your visitors to use in their searches — included in your first 150.
Don't overdo any repetition. If you repeat your keywords too often, you could be penalized. There's no magic number to aim for, but if you repeat keywords three times or less, you should be safe. Concentrate on the main text.
You might have a separate top table (perhaps containing an advert and logo) plus a left hand column with links. These will appear in the HTML file before your main, central text block. There's a temptation to think these areas are more important than the main text area because spiders read them first. If these outlying areas contain a lot of text (unlinked) then this may well be true. But many engines try to ignore peripheral HTML blocks, especially if they're heavy on links, and head straight for the center. It's not too difficult for them to do. They simply look for the largest title (within
Another Header Here
It's not much use getting your keywords in the right place if you've chosen the wrong ones. It doesn't help the spiders either. They'd prefer you to choose the right keywords so their indexing works as intended. It's worth spending a few hours on deciding your keywords, maybe trying out a few expressions in the search engines and seeing if they deliver the sites you want to compete with.
Spiders have lists of stop words — mainly related to adult content and profanity. When they find one of these words they may abandon your site altogether. If you have a page that includes a possible stop word, hide it from spiders by making it an exclusion in your robots.txt file (see later). Also watch out for words that have two meanings, one of which is sexual. Spiders don't understand context.
If you have pages full of links, make sure there's plenty of text to accompany them. Pure link listings are often ignored by spiders, but if you add a couple of sentences describing each link, the problem disappears.