Search engine submission
is a matter that often mystifies those who are new to
the Internet. It is natural to scratch your head and
wonder how you will get your website listed on the major
search engines. If you ask someone how to go about
getting your site listed you are likely to hear many
misconceptions about search engine submission. You may
even be taken for a ride and end up needlessly parting
with some hard earned cash. So, before this happens to
you let’s examine some of the most common myths
surrounding search engine submission.
1. Search Engine Submission is a Very Important
Matter
It would indeed seem that you submitting your site to
the search engines is of utmost importance. After all,
if your site is not in the search engines then how will
anybody find you? Sure, you have to be included in the
search engines but that doesn’t necessarily mean that
you will have to actively “submit” your site. This is
because search engines use their “spiders”, or robotic
search programs to scour the Internet looking for new
pages. If another site, that is already included in the
search engines, links to yours, then when a search
engine spider visits that site, it will follow the link
to your site and gather your information.
So, if you are building a new site make sure that you
get some links to your sites from already established
sites. Ask your webmaster, your friends, other
organizations and complementary sites for links. This
will be enough to get you listed in the major search
engines. You may still want to submit your site to make
sure, but consider the other points before you go ahead
2. There are thousands of search engines that you
should be listed in
“Get listed in 300,000 search engines” read the
headlines for some submission advertisements. If you
look at the traffic logs of most websites you will see
that the lion’s share of traffic comes from a handful of
search locations, such as Google, Yahoo, MSN and Ask
Jeeves. There just aren’t thousands of search sites on
the Internet. So, don’t pay money to be listed on these
sites. Oftentimes, the sites referred to in these
advertisements are seldom-visited free-for-all links
pages. If you get listed on such a page you will not get
much traffic, but you will get a lot of spam.
Concentrate on the major search engines and don’t worry
about the non-existent phantoms referred to in the
advertisements.
3. Monthly submission to search engines is a must
In the early days of the Internet, the companies that
handled search engine submission warned the public that
sites can be easily lost from search engine indexes and
that to prevent this from happening it is important to
resubmit your site every months. They also said that
this was a good way to let search engines know about new
additions to your pages.
It is not very likely that your site will disappear from
a search engine for no reason at all. If your site is
“down” for a considerable amount of time then it might
be possible for your site to be dropped from the
listings, but otherwise this rarely happens.
Also, you don’t have to resubmit your site to notify
search engines about changes to your page or pages. The
spiders of search engines regularly revisit pages that
are already in the index. You can in fact create a
“robots” meta tag and give instructions such as “revisit
every 15 days” and this will accomplish the job better
than a resubmission.
4. Automatic submissions are useless and you must
submit manually
There is often a hot debate about whether manual
submissions are better than automatic submissions. For
Yahoo, MSN and Google it is now better to do it with a
manual submission because all of these engines require
you to fill in a code word that is displayed on the
screen. These search engines instituted this procedure
to block out automated spam submissions. So, for the
giants of search, manual submission is the way to go.
What about the secondary sites? There are smaller search
engines and directories. Some of them can be useful to
you, especially if they represent a particular
geographic area or business niche that you are aiming
for. If the list of these secondary engines and
directories becomes too large, then you may want to
consider automated submission. There are some programs
that do this or you can find submission services that
are free or inexpensive, which brings us to the last
myth.
5. You should be prepared to spend a lot of money to
get proper submission
If you look at the first point you will see that you
probably don’t have to do any submission at all to get
your site listed in Google, Yahoo, MSN and Ask Jeeves.
These are the search engines that will provide you with
90% of your visitors. So, do you really want to spend a
good amount of money to reach the last 5 or 10 per cent
of your possible visitors? Look around for a free or
inexpensive service to take care of the secondary search
engines, and if there are smaller search engines that
are very important to your business, then visit them
yourself and submit your listing. Save your money for
other important tasks.