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Gateway Pages Versus
Great Content
by Bob McElwain
Gateway pages are called by many names.
Bridge, doorway, entry, and portal pages, to
name a few. Their purpose is to trick
search engine spiders into believing the
page is highly relevant for a given keyword,
and thus warrants a high position on the
list offered to the searcher. At best
such pages suggest a lack of ethics.
At worst, they will bite you badly in two
ways.
First, can you really expect a page of
randomly generated prose with frequent
repetition of the keyword, "green
apples," to grab visitor attention?
Suppose you have discovered the magic
formula (which does not exist). And
suppose you have a #1 position on some
search engine for this keyword.
If a visitor clicks this listing and hits
this unreadable page, what will happen?
If all you want is hits, you have another.
I personally do not want visitors silly
enough to click from such a page into my
site. They will only waste my time,
resources, and bandwidth.
Second, all the "bright" people
advocating such pages are missing a key
point. Those running search engines
are at least as bright. And there are
whole bunches of them seeking to automate
the presentation of listings in a manner
that brings the most relevant pages to the
top upon a visitor's keyword entry.
Not long ago, a popular trick was to
overload a page with keywords printed in a
small font in white on a white background.
Try that now, and most search engines will
penalize you mightily.
In the not-too-distant future, gateway pages
by whatever name are going to be eliminated.
Robots are getting smarter, quickly. Search
engines are struggling even now to find ways
to discard such pages. It will happen.
Sites dependent upon top listings generated
in such fashion are going to wonder what hit
them.
The Best Approach
If you are in business on the Web and have
taken a longer view which includes staying
in business, growing it, and so forth,
forget this kind of thing. There is a
much better way, one that will be effective
however the search engines change the
algorithms that drive their bots.
What Are The Bots Looking For?
They want to return links to information
of use to those who search. The better
a search engine is in delivering relevant
information to requests, the more popular
they will be with surfers. And the
more popular they are, the greater their
income. End of story.
Thus your task is to offer great content.
Then present it in a way spiders can follow
now and in the future.
Search Engine Secrets Don't Exist
People argue incessantly about the rules
used by one search engine versus another.
It is pointless debate. I read
everything I can find about search engines.
Not a day goes by but what one expert
contradicts another regards a given rule.
No matter how much research one may have
done with a given search engine, the number
of cases examined will be so small compared
to the total as to be mathematically
insignificant. The conclusions have
equal weight.
The Web is in constant flux. The rate
of change is increasing rapidly. It
seems just the other day that InfoSeek was a
major player, possibly destined to become
the leader in this power game. Just
now, AltaVista is the leader. It makes
sense to take them very seriously. But
to build pages for AltaVista and ignore
others is silly, if not downright foolish.
I can't say, and neither can you, where
AltaVista will be even two years from now.
Sure, we can guess, but we can not know.
What Will Remain Constant
Regardless of the results of the battle
between search engines, what surfers want is
information. The one that can most
consistently provide a great set of relevant
listings will become top dog. Those
who manage these search engines not only
know this, but are driven by it.
Great Content Wins
While it is true that information about
native Blue Oaks in California is of
importance to far fewer people than are
clues to improving reading skills among
children, there is room for both contents.
With few exceptions, the search engines want
as comprehensive a reference to all
information available as possible.
Thus the nature of your content matters only
to your visitors; the search engines will
give it a fair hearing.
Building Great Content
Suppose you have created a site through
which you sell Hawaiian music on tapes and
CDs. Consider the following:
What makes Hawaiian music
so universally acceptable?
Where and how did the
characteristic rhythms and dances originate?
How did the folklore of
these islands evolve?
One can add endlessly to a list such as the
above. Now consider the popular
tourist attractions, and, of course, the
music related to each. This list may
not be endless, but it is lengthy. And
don't forget the beach lovers, the surfing
crowd, and those who snorkel and dive.
Pick The Best Keyword And Go
Pick a topic of interest to your visitors.
Then from your list of targeted keywords,
select 1 to 3 to feature as you write the
content.
For notes on developing a great keyword set,
send any email to mailto:keywordlot@sitetipsandtricks.com
For suggestions about writing a content
page, send any email to mailto:contentpage@sitetipsandtricks.com
Wrapping Up
When the page is finished, submit it to the
major search engines. (I use
AltaVista, Excite, HotBot (Inktomi), and
Lycos.) Then be sure it is an integral part
of your site so that when spiders visit,
those to which you did not specifically
submit will find it.
It may be helpful to check later to see how
the page ranks. But this is a tedious and
time consuming chore. For one thing,
it may take two months or more before the
listing shows up. And there are lots
of places to check. Web Position does
a good job in this, but it's not free.
Even with such software, I question the use
of time.
I ignore rankings. The better plan to
me is to use this time to write another page
or to get on to something else useful in
promoting my business.
Bob McElwain. Want to build a winning
site? Improve one you already have? Fix one
that's busted? Get ANSWERS.
Subscribe to "STAT News" now! mailto:join-stat@lists.dundee.net
Web marketing and consulting since 1993
Site: <http://sitetipsandtricks.com>
Phone: 209-742-6783
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