Submitting to Crawler-based Search Engines
February 28, 2000
Submitting to crawler-based search engines
(Altavista,
Excite,
Lycos,
Infoseek)
is quite easy. All they need is your home page
URL and your email address. Once their spider gets around to
visiting your site, it will automatically index all your pages,
so there's no need to submit more than the home page URL.
Theoretically, search engines will list your site with no questions
asked, unless you violate their rules (most of them will not list
porno sites or sites that promote illegal activity, and they won't
list URLs that trigger redirects to other URLs). In fact, however,
a few sites fall through the cracks, and simply don't get listed,
for unknown reasons. Also, many search engines will drop a site from
their listings after a time, also for unknown reasons. Therefore,
it's a good idea to resubmit your site to all the crawler-based
engines at least every six months. This is perfectly allowable, and
won't ruffle any feathers. Of course, submitting the same site over
and over again (say, more than a half-dozen times in a week) may
very well land you in the doghouse, and is furthermore totally
pointless. Once your site is included in a crawler's database, it's
in there. There's no such thing as having more than one listing for
the same URL.
Submitting different domain names that point to the same page is a
bit of a gray area. Officially, crawlers frown on the practice, but
if you don't overdo it, it's unlikely to annoy them, and may cause
your pages to come up a little more frequently in search results.
For example, The Web Developer's Journal has 3 different addresses:
http://WebDevelopersJournal.com,
http://WebDevelopersJournal.co.uk, and
http://wdj.co.uk,
all of which are indexed in the major search engines (and, of
course, only the co.uk URLs are listed in the UK-specific search
engines).
What about auto-submitters? The consensus seems to be that none
of the crawlers object to the use of auto-submitters, and I recommend
them to save time. In fact, the best of them,
Selfpromotion.com , (see the
WebDevelopersJournal article),
not only saves you time, but can help you do a better job of your
submissions, with its built-in error-correction features and scads
of valuable advice.
Submitting to Directories
Directories work a little differently. They do not automatically
spider sites, but list only the specific pages whose submissions
have been accepted, and real human beings look at each submission
to decide whether it should be included. Therefore, it's important
to choose the right categories in which to submit. Different
directories have different policies concerning how many categories
you may be listed under. Some limit you to one or two categories
per page, but most allow you to submit a page to as many categories
as are appropriate. Of course, most of them make you go through the
whole submission process for each category, so submitting a page to
lots of marginally-related categories wouldn't be a wise use of your
time.
Yahoo
is by far the most popular search site, and thus the most
valuable one to get listed in. Unfortunately, it's also the hardest
to get into. Whether it's because they're very selective or simply
overworked (more likely), it's very rare to get listed in Yahoo on
the first or even second attempt, and many a worthy site may never
get listed at all. Increase your chances by taking special care with
your Yahoo submission, and follow their rules to the letter. Some
good tips are to be found on the rather obscure page called
"How to Suggest Your Site" and
selfpromotion.com also has some good Yahoo tips.
Yahoo will list a particular page in no more than two categories,
so choose them wisely. Individual pages from the same site (that is,
under the same domain name), however, can be listed in separate
categories if they really have different topics.
Because choosing the right category is so important, and because
real people read the submissions, using auto-submitters to submit
to directories is not recommended. There are only a few worthwhile
ones anyway (see
SearchEngineWatch.com
or any of the major
autosubmitters' sites for a list), so submitting to them manually
doesn't really take much extra time.
Keeping the Search Engines Happy
Keeping the Search Engines Happy
Keywords
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