Friday, August 5, 2011

Dynamic URLs vs. Static URLs

During earlier times, all websites used static HTML pages and so the first search engines were oriented towards static web pages. As the web technology developed several new methods to generate websites and dynamically generated web pages came into being.

A dynamic URL is the address of a Web page with content that depends on variable parameters that are provided to the server that delivers it. The parameters may be already present in the URL itself or they may be the result of user input. A dynamic URL can often be recognized by the presence of certain characters or character strings that appear in the URL (visible in the address bar of your browser).

Example of a dynamic URL:
http://www.domainname.com/page.php?mode=view&u=123

Dynamic URLs are generated from specific queries to a site’s database resulting in the different URLs for the same content unlike to static URLs in which URL or the file name of a webpage remains same until the webmaster makes any change in its HTML code.

A static URL is a URL that does not change over a period of time. A static URL will also not contain any URL parameters.

Static URL’s look like this:
http://www.domain.com/page.html

Static URLs are typically ranked better in search engine results pages, and they are indexed more quickly than dynamic URLs, if dynamic URLs get indexed at all. Static URLs are also easier for the end-user to view and understand what the page is about. If a user sees a URL in a search engine query that matches the title and description, they are more likely to click on that URL than one that doesn't make sense to them.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Robots.txt

The Robot Exclusion Standard, also known as the Robots Exclusion Protocol or robots.txt protocol, is a convention to prevent cooperating web crawlers and other web robots from accessing all or part of a website which is otherwise publicly viewable.

Robots are often used by search engines to categorize and archive web sites, or by webmasters to proofread source code. The standard is different from, but can be used in conjunction with, Sitemaps, a robot inclusion standard for websites.

Robots.txt is a text (not html) file you put on your site to tell search robots which pages you would like them not to visit. Robots.txt is by no means mandatory for search engines but generally search engines obey what they are asked not to do.

The format is simple enough for most intents and purposes: a USERAGENT line to identify the crawler in question followed by one or more DISALLOW: lines to disallow it from crawling certain parts of your site.

The Basic structure of a robots.txt:
User-agent: *
Disallow: /

Google Blogger has introduce the robots.txt file in each blogger blog.
To check the robots.txt file of your blogger blog, just type the following URL in the adress bar of your browser.

http://www.yourblogname.blogspot.com/robots.txt
(replace yourblogname with your blog name).

Keyword Stuffing

Keywords are a critical element in any search engine optimization (SEO) campaign. One of the first signs of a novice SEO campaign is a Web page that is littered with keywords.

Keyword Stuffing means mislead search engine results by overloading the web page content with long lists of keywords you wish to rank for. It includes repeated use of a keyword to improve a page relevance.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

What is Nav Bar?

A nav bar or navigation bar is a sub region of a web page that contains hypertext links in order to navigate between the pages of a website. It is accessible in several colors, and is configured in the Template tab in Blogger's interface. If you are using a classic template, you'll see a menu from which you can select a color.

For blogs using Layouts, just click the "edit" link on the Navbar page element. Having easy-to-use navigation is important for any web site. Many blogger want to hide their navbar because it will accomplish their blog layout look better and professional without a box (navbar) above it. It is additionally accepted as a links bar or link bar.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

What is favicon?

A favicon or favorites icon also known as a shortcut icon, website icon, URL icon, or bookmark icon, is a file containing one or more small icons, most commonly 16×16 pixels image associated with a particular website or webpage which is shown in the address bar of a browser when loading a webpage.

This is used to decorate your site in the bookmarks and tab bar of browsers.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Keyword Analysis

Keyword Analysis is at the heart of every successful search engine optimization (SEO) campaign. An analysis on the quality and relevancy of keywords is made prior to adopting them for website promotion. Keyword Analysis is the abstraction of words that people use to find information on the Internet.

Keyword Analysis helps you raise conversions and find new markets, but can be time-consuming. It is the initial process for website promotion and can accomplish the difference between success and abortion for your website. It is about what keywords should use on web-pages to get visibility on search engines.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Google Plus

Google Plus is Google's Latest Social Network has launched on Tuesday, 29th June, 2011. It’s much like the Facebook News Feed, allowing users to share photos, videos, links or their location with friends.

What are Keywords?

In the Search engines, you can type in one or more key words to search for the information you need. Within seconds, you got with a list of results. You can add some key words to narrow bottomward your choices, or you can start opening next and next and next page to find out if that page or site has the advice you need.

keywords that analyze what the page is about, usually acclimated in search engines. Keywords help search engines to categorize your site, and to allow people to find your pages more quickly.

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