Question:
In which search Engine I should submit my website beside Google & Yahoo?
Roland
2007-06-12 11:03:51 UTC
I am curious what are the top search engine(free) that I can submit my domain.name? Does it help to submit to a meta-search engines?/ Or can it hurt your ranking?? Regards.
Nine answers:
memetrader
2007-06-12 11:26:17 UTC
No professional webmaster has submitted their websites to search engines for many years. It's an obsolete method.



Search engines 'spider' the web looking for new sites/pages and it is best if they find sites/pages naturally in this way.



Although you should not submit your url to the search engines you must have some inbound links that the spiders can follow http://www.seo-blog.com/inbound-links.php



You can hand submit to appropriate directories http://www.seo-blog.com/directory-links.php to obtain your initial inbound links.
peanutsinhawaii
2007-06-12 11:44:08 UTC
The top three in my opinion are yahoo, google, and msn. They control most of the search engine market. These search engine are good at finding your website on there own but it is good to submit a sitemap! this will help get all of your pages indexed instead of just your main pages. Submitting your site will not hurt your pagerank. Submitting a sitemap will help your pagerank because the search engines will see all of your pages and assign every page a rank will the over flow to you main pages that are in you navigation!
Bob Woofix
2007-06-12 14:05:01 UTC
DO NOT submit your site to search engine - they will find you automatically.



Read this article - it explains it all:
vin
2007-06-13 04:00:44 UTC
You can submit to msn.com, ask.com etc... But the fastest way to get indexed is to start a blog on Blogger.com and put your site link in it. The spiders will follow the link to your site.
anonymous
2007-06-15 06:01:54 UTC
The most effective way to advertise on the Internet is to first set up a website and publish its domain name on major search directories such as Google.com, Yahoo.com [at http://www.google.com/addurl/?...... and MSN.com since 85% of Internet shoppers rely on these search directories to provide them with goods and services. In a sense, these search directories are a very large Internet Yellow Pages.



Nevertheless, should your website or opening webpage fail to contain "generic" keywords, then anyone using such "generic" queries will not be able to discover your website. Your domain name [URL] of your website, in a sense, will be invisible, undiscoverable.



You may want to consider some simple algorithms which, when observed and committed in designing of a website with placement of various critical metatags that can surely achieve a high search engine presence and increase Internet traffic to your website. These metatag strategies work well with published webpages at Google and Yahoo.



Design: Should you create an extensive Flash-based website, make sure to fill-in the property entries such as the Title, Description and Keywords. Failing to do so, leaves no hard HTML or ALT resource that can be readily indexed by search robots. Also consider the Internet audience and their incoming setup. For example, if they are on analog/dialup, Flash webpages take too long to load up and therefore analog users will likely lose interest and discontinue entering the Flash site. On the other hand, anyone on hi-speed DSL lines, will welcome Flash pages which load quickly. So before designing a pure Flash websitge, ask the simple question, "Who's my end user - is he on dialup or DSL?" And if you had to choose between these two users for maximum marketability, then select analog users since 80% of most resident users are still analog Internet subscribers and pure HTML designed webpages is best for them.



A non-Flash-based website which relies on hard text, is far easier to be indexed by search robots. Limit the use of stylized text saved as .gifs since as a graphic, they are not indexable by search robots.



Avoid use of frames since any number of search robots are unable to properly classify textual material.



Placement of Metatags:



A ranking or search order does take place with Google and Yahoo and it begins with the "Title" metag which should consist of no more than 65 characters separated by commas. The "Title" should describe in generic terms, the goods and services, followed by a location from which the resource is located, i.e., city, state. The placement of a domain name which is not generic within the "Title" is not appropriate, unless your domain name is a major recognizable brand name.



The second metatag is the "Description" which is usually 25-30 words to form a complete sentence which best describes one's goods and services.



And the very last category - "Keywords" are also somewhat limited to 15-16 words which can be plural and compound in nature. Again, avoid multiple entries which could be mistaken as "spamdexed entries" which is defined as the loading, and submission of repetitive words into a particular metatag category. "Spamdexing" when discovered on a webpage and reported to Google's spamreport.com can result in the elimination of your website from their search directory.



Here's an example of a very highly-placed website on Yahoo.com: Begin with the search query "pizza downtown los angeles." It will bring up some 1.4 million+ websites as results. Check out where "Pizza Next Door" is ranked. It's in the Top Five! Again, Pizza Next Door's high web presence was achieved by proper web design and placement of relevant metatags according to Yahoo's publication guidelines.



Good luck!
NumeroUnoBabiii
2007-06-12 11:09:26 UTC
go to www.dogpile.com, or askjeeves.com
Nahu
2014-03-28 09:30:57 UTC
there you go

http://www.vamve.com/webmaster

http://www.bing.com/toolbox/webmaster

http://www.gigablast.com/addurl

http://webmaster.yandex.com
anonymous
2007-06-15 20:31:35 UTC
MSN
Consultant
2007-06-12 13:31:10 UTC
Good news, you do not need to submit your site. That is the old way and the search engines...the top 30 to say, can find your site by themselves.



The point is the engines will find and index almost any page. But, if the site is not designed to achieve top rankings, it really will not matter. You want to be sure your site is search engine optimized, or seo ready. below are very basic steps for a beginner



Search engine optimization is not rocket science, but it is complex and it is an ongoing process that changes almost daily. There is no such thing as a permanent "fix" to magically send you to the top of the rankings for good. But here are some of the basics to look for when optimizing your site for the first time.



On-Page Factors



1. Title Tag

This one is very important. Among the first things the spiders will crawl on your page is the Title Tag at the very top of your HTML code. This is what you see in the blue bar at the top of your browser when you land on a page. Using unique text in this tag on each page is absolutely essential. I have seen huge sites with thousands of pages all using the same content in the Title Tag of each page, frequently the name of the company as the only text. Not only will you NOT rank for anything but what is in that tag for your entire site (Do you want every page on your site to rank for nothing but your company name? I don't think so.), but you run the risk of most of your pages winding up in Google's Supplemental Index, probably never to be seen again. You must have a unique Title Tag related to the unique subject matter of each page throughout your website (10 to 15 words, 80 characters maximum).



2. Internal Navigation

There was a time when the search engine crawlers choked on javascript links and database driven web pages that looked something like http://www.widgets.com/product.php?categoryid=1&productid=10, but they are better at reading them these days. However, you still need to make your links as digestible to the spiders as you can. As much as possible, you should make your links through plain text and CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). Javascript and image map links should be avoided as well as session IDs and variables in dynamic pages. Avoid using frames like the plague! These can all still give spiders a fit. Also, use a sitemap with text links to not only help visitors find what they are looking for, but to direct the spiders to all of your internal pages.







It is a must that you include a static html site map and xml site maps. be sure to also have a robots.txt page



3. Make Your Site Unique

They say that imitation is the highest form of flattery, but that's a big no-no on the web. Do not copy someone else. Make your site as unique as possible with information that no one else has. In other words, don't steal content off of someone else's site. Not only can that be copyright infringement, but it can put you and the site you copied from in hot water with the search engines for duplicate content (see Duplicate Content below). Creating a buzz about something unique is great link bait. Which leads us to:



4. Content

Content is King. Content is spider food. The search engines are looking for the foremost authority on a keyword or phrase. Make sure your site has plenty of keyword rich content high on the page that is useful to the visitor as well as digestible to the spiders. Make use of H1, H2 and H3 headlines that contain your keywords. Make sure your prose is natural and easy to read.



Don't go overboard and make every other word on the page the keyword you want to rank the page for. Stuffing the page with keywords is considered a form of spam.



Focus on search phrases, not single keywords, and put your location in your text ("our Palm Springs showroom" not "our showroom") to help you get found in local searches.



Having terrific content will not only be great for your visitors and spiders, but it's wonderful link bait, too (see Links below). A blog is a great way to create fresh, new content (for the spiders and for visitors) and attract inbound links.



Also, use Flash animation and images sparingly. Spiders can read text, not Flash nor pictures. A sure way to kill any chance of ranking well is to create a site that is all Flash or mostly images.



5. Duplicate Content

Let's say you have a site that sells a thousand different types of widgets and the pages are all built from the same template with the same text and the only difference is the model of widget on the page. What could happen is that the search engines will not see enough difference in the pages to consider them unique and will rank what it considers the best single page and dump the rest, in the case of Google, into Supplemental Index limbo.



Make sure all of your pages have unique Title Tags, Meta Tags (see below) and text, in this case probably in the form of product description text.



And, if you are writing articles for distribution to the various article sites for mass distribution (a great way to get back links), be sure to publish the article on your own site first and give the spiders a chance to crawl it. That identifies you as the originator of the content. Then push the article out for distribution across the web, making sure you have a link back to your site in the article content.



6. Code Bloat

Between you, your web designer and web programmer, it's real easy to wind up with a page that is full of internal code that not only impedes spiders, but causes your pages to load at a snail's pace. Be very careful with this. Too much code will send both the spiders and the visitors away and can knock the meat of your pages down to the bottom. It's best to have your spider-friendly content as high in your code as possible, so when you can, place javascript (if you absolutely MUST use it) and CSS in external files that can be called with a single line of code from each page.



For instance, one site I worked with had so much javascript going on that the first 200 lines of code after the Title and Meta Tags were javascript, knocking the rest of the content down and making the page load size huge. I was able to move the javascript into external files, each simply called by a single line of code. This made every page on the site smaller in size and brought the spider-friendly content up higher in the code by 199 lines.



For example, you could put your all 100 lines of your CSS on each and every one of your 300 site pages or you could call your CSS from an external file called style.css with one single line of code on each page like:



If you don't know what I'm talking about, you'll need to ask your web developer or learn a bit about HTML.



7. Tweak and Test

Make one change at a time and evaluate. Changing too many things at once can confuse things to the point where you don't know which change you made did what. For instance, let's say you changed your content on a page as well as the linking structure and Meta Tags at the same time and the page dropped in the rankings a few days later. How would you know which to point to as the problem?



Try one tweak at a time and give the search engines time to digest it before moving on to the next.



8. Meta Tags

The only Meta Tag that carries any weight at all as far as SEO is the description and title tags, and it doesn't have the influence it once had. Still, it's a good idea to make it keyword rich and include what you want to show up in the SERPS (search engine result pages) as your description. Yes, this is what frequently comes up describing your site in the results, so be sure it says what you want it to say.



And, it is believed that having a unique TITLE and Meta description tag on each page will help keep pages out of Google's Supplemental Index.



The keyword tag has very little influence on rankings anymore, practically none, but it can't hurt to include it. Just don't stuff if with a thousand words. Ten or so should be enough for any page.



Off-Page Factors



9. Links

If Content is King, then Links are Queen. Search engines look at links pointing to your site as verification that you are an important authority site. It's not just the quantity of links but the quality that counts. You can have thousands of links pointing to you, but if they are all from link farms or spammy sites, they won't do you any good. Try to get back links from quality sites. If you have good content, a lot of links will come your way naturally, but if you want to speed things up, you'll need to actively pursue those links. One way is to contact theme related, non-competitive authority sites and request a link. The acid test for a potential link is if there is a natural, logical reason for that site to link to you. If not, then you don't want the link.



And, you want the links back to your site to use your keyword text in them. This is extremely important. If the keyword you are targeting is "widget" then you want the link back to your widget page to use that text and not "click here" or something like that.



Another way to use your content to get back links is by submitting articles to other sites for publication (A blog and RSS feed are great for this). Just be sure the content includes links to your site.



Submitting to trusted directories is also a good place to start. Most of the best require a fee for a listing, but they can be a great first step in your link building campaign.



There's no simple, easy one-step way to gain links. It's really about networking and relationships and your useful content is the key.



10. Competition

Keep track of your competition by searching for your primary keywords and study what they are doing. Don't copy them, but you can analyze what they are doing right and you are doing wrong. See who is linking to them and investigate getting your own link. If you are a new site, you'll be playing catch up for a while, but have faith. That guy in the #1 spot had to start from scratch at some point, too.



11. Analysis & Statistics

Sounds boring, but all of your hard work is worthless if you don't know how you are doing. Chances are your hosting company will have some sort of web statistics feature where you can check basics such as unique visitors, where your traffic is coming from (referrals), page not found errors, etc. One mistake newbies make is to consider "hits" as the number of visitors they are getting. In actuality, "hits" are useless information. Hits are simply server pulls. As an example, if you have ten images on a page each time the page is loaded each image results in a server pull or "hit." What you really want to look at is the number of "unique visitors" to your site, not hits, as an indication of your traffic.



If you are an e-commerce site, you'll also want a way to track conversions, which will require something more than your basic hosting stats. Google offers free web analytics that could be adequate for many site owners, but there are also commercial applications available that offer greater functionality.



Whatever you do, don't leave the site on autopilot. Check your stats frequently. You'd be surprised at the little things you'll see that will help you bring in more traffic.



12. History

There is evidence that the search engines actually look at your domain history in their ranking algorithms (How long the domain has been up, how many years you've renewed for, if you've changed IP addresses frequently, etc.). The more stable you are the more they consider you a trusted site.



If you're in it for the long haul, renew your domain for several years at a time (not just annually) and get a dedicated IP address and keep it. The best situation is to have a dedicated web server, but not all of us can afford that. The next best thing is to pay for a dedicated IP address with your host so that you are no longer sharing the hosted IP block. It usually doesn't cost that much. Not only will the search engines see you as stable, you don't run the risk of the IP being banned if one of your shared hosting neighbors is naughty.



Don't bounce from host to host because that screams SPAMMER to the search engines. Find a good hosting company and stay there.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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