Some people believe that they should
create different pages for different search engines, each page optimized for one
keyword and for one search engine. Now, while I don't recommend that people
create different pages for different search engines, if you do decide to create
such pages, there is one issue that you need to be aware of.
These pages, although optimized for different
search engines, often turn out to be pretty similar to each other. The search
engines now have the ability to detect when a site has created such similar
looking pages and are penalizing or even banning such sites. In order to prevent
your site from being penalized for spamming, you need to prevent the search
engine spiders from indexing pages which are not meant for it, i.e. you need to
prevent AltaVista from indexing pages
meant for Google and vice-versa. The best
way to do that is to use a robots.txt file.
You should create a robots.txt file using a text
editor like Windows Notepad. Don't use your word processor to create such a
file.
Here is the basic syntax of the robots.txt file:
User-Agent: [Spider Name]
Disallow: [File Name]
For instance, to tell AltaVista's spider,
Scooter, not to spider the file named myfile1.html residing in the root
directory of the server, you would write
User-Agent: Scooter
Disallow: /myfile1.html
To tell Google's spider, called Googlebot, not to
spider the files myfile2.html and myfile3.html, you would write
User-Agent: Googlebot
Disallow: /myfile2.html
Disallow: /myfile3.html
You can, of course, put multiple User-Agent
statements in the same robots.txt file. Hence, to tell AltaVista not to spider
the file named myfile1.html, and to tell Google not to spider the files
myfile2.html and myfile3.html, you would write
User-Agent: Scooter
Disallow: /myfile1.html
User-Agent: Googlebot
Disallow: /myfile2.html
Disallow: /myfile3.html
If you want to prevent all robots from spidering
the file named myfile4.html, you can use the * wildcard character in the
User-Agent line, i.e. you would write
User-Agent: *
Disallow: /myfile4.html
However, you cannot use the wildcard character in
the Disallow line.
Once you have created the robots.txt file, you
should upload it to the root directory of your domain. Uploading it to any
sub-directory won't work - the robots.txt file needs to be in the root
directory.
I won't discuss the syntax and structure of the
robots.txt file any further - you can get the complete specifications from http://www.robotstxt.org/wc/norobots.html
Now we come to how the robots.txt file can be
used to prevent your site from being penalized for spamming in case you are
creating different pages for different search engines. What you need to do is to
prevent each search engine from spidering pages which are not meant for it.
For simplicity, let's assume that you are
targeting only two keywords: "tourism in Australia" and "travel
to Australia". Also, let's assume that you are targeting only three of the
major search engines: AltaVista, HotBot and
Google.
Now, suppose you have followed the following
convention for naming the files: Each page is named by separating the individual
words of the keyword for which the page is being optimized by hyphens. To this
is added the first two letters of the name of the search engine for which the
page is being optimized.
Hence, the files for AltaVista are
tourism-in-australia-al.html
travel-to-australia-al.html
The files for HotBot are
tourism-in-australia-ho.html
travel-to-australia-ho.html
The files for Google are
tourism-in-australia-go.html
travel-to-australia-go.html
As I noted earlier, AltaVista's spider is called
Scooter and Google's spider is called Googlebot.
A list of spiders for the major search engines
can be found at http://www.jafsoft.com/searchengines/webbots.html
Now, we know that HotBot uses Inktomi
and from this list, we find that Inktomi's spider is called Slurp. Using this
knowledge, here's what the robots.txt file should contain:
User-Agent: Scooter
Disallow: /tourism-in-australia-ho.html
Disallow: /travel-to-australia-ho.html
Disallow: /tourism-in-australia-go.html
Disallow: /travel-to-australia-go.html
User-Agent: Slurp
Disallow: /tourism-in-australia-al.html
Disallow: /travel-to-australia-al.html
Disallow: /tourism-in-australia-go.html
Disallow: /travel-to-australia-go.html
User-Agent: Googlebot
Disallow: /tourism-in-australia-al.html
Disallow: /travel-to-australia-al.html
Disallow: /tourism-in-australia-ho.html
Disallow: /travel-to-australia-ho.html
When you put the above lines in the robots.txt
file, you instruct each search engine not to spider the files meant for the
other search engines.
When you have finished creating the robots.txt
file, double-check to ensure that you have not made any errors anywhere in it. A
small error can have disastrous consequences - a search engine may spider files
which are not meant for it, in which case it can penalize your site for
spamming, or, it may not spider any files at all, in which case you won't get
top rankings in that search engine.
An useful tool to check the syntax of your
robots.txt file can be found at http://www.tardis.ed.ac.uk/~sxw/robots/check/.
While it will help you correct syntactical errors in the robots.txt file, it
won't help you correct any logical errors, for which you will still need to go
through the robots.txt thoroughly, as mentioned above.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Article by Sumantra Roy. Sumantra is one of the
most respected search engine positioning specialists on the Internet. To have
Sumantra's company place your site at the top of the search engines, go to 1stSearchRanking.com.
For more advice on how you can take your web site to the top of the search
engines, you can subscribe to his FREE newsletter by clicking
here or take advantage of his 5-day course by sending a blank email to mailto:1stSearchRanking.1000.1164@optinpro.com.