On-page
Textual Content. In the future, look for search engines
to utilize ontological analysis of text. In other words,
not only your main keywords will play a factor in your
rankings, but also words that relate to them. For
example, someone trying to sell NFL jerseys online would
naturally mention the names of teams and star players.
In the past, algorithms might have skipped over those
names, deemed them irrelevant to a search for "NFL
jerseys." But in the future, search engines will reward
those web sites with a higher ranking than those that
excessively repeat just "NFL jerseys." With ontological
analysis, web sites that speak of not only the main
keywords but other relevant words can expect higher
rankings.
The
conclusion: Write your web site content for your
visitors, not search engines. The more naturally written
sites can expect to see the better results in the
future.
Offering Large Amounts of Content. This can frequently
take the form of dynamic pages. Even now, search engines
can have a difficult time with dynamic content on web
sites. These page usually have lengthy URLs consisting
of numbers and characters such as &, =, and ? The common
problem is that the content changes so frequently on
these dynamic pages and the page becomes "old" in the
search engine's database, thus leaving the search users
seeing results that contain old information. Since many
dynamic pages are created by web sites displaying
hundreds or thousands of products they sell, and the
number of people selling items on the Internet will
obviously increase in the coming years, you can expect
that search engines will improve their technology and do
a better job indexing dynamic content in the future.
The
conclusion: Put yourself ahead of the game if you are
selling products online and invest in database and
shopping cart software that is SEO-friendly.
Incoming Links. Once thought to be a very difficult
thing to manipulate, incoming links to one's web site
have been abused by crafty SEOs and webmasters the world
over. It is finally at a point where Google is doing a
revamp of what constitutes a "vote from [one site to
another]" as they explain it in their webmaster
resources section. Link exchanges are worth
significantly less now than ever to the point where the
only real value in obtaining them is to make sure a new
web site gets crawled by search engine spiders.
Over
the years, many web sites reached top spot for
competitive keywords by flexing their financial muscle
and buying thousands of text links pointing to their
site with keywords in the anchor text. Usually these
links would appear like advertisements along sidebars or
navigation areas of web sites. Essentially this was an
indirect way of paying for high Google rankings,
something which Google is no doubt trying to combat with
each passing algorithm update. One idea of thought is
that different areas of a web page from a visual point
of view will be weighted differently. For example, if a
web site adds a link to your site within the middle of
their page text, that link should count for more than
one at the bottom of the site near the copyright
information.
This
brings up the value of content distribution. By writing
articles, giving away free resources, or offering
something else of value to people, you can create a
significant amount of content on other web sites that
will include a link back to your own.
The
conclusion: It all starts with useful content. If you
are providing your web site visitors with useful
information, chances are many other sites will want to
do the same. SEO doesn't start with trying to cheat the
algorithm; it starts with an understanding of what
search engines look for in a quality web site.