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"7 Secrets To Top Search Engine Rankings (Yes, Even #1 Positions!) For SEO Dummies"
There's hope for the 'little guys' in the search engine ranking game, even if they can't tell the difference between the title and keyword meta tag! You can achieve high rankings for important keywords simply by applying certain rules ...

Boost Your Search Engine Ranking And Generate Free Traffic With Reciprocal Links
Reciprocal links are an important step in your overall plan to get site visitors. What are they? Reciprocal links are mutual links you and some other web site owner agree to post on your respective sites. Why are they so important? It goes back to...

Online Marketing: Search Engine Submissions & Ranking
Online Marketing: Search Engine Submissions & Ranking By Aaron Turpen of Aaronz WebWorkz When you are looking for something on the Internet, what do you usually do? You go to a search engine. Where do those results come from and how do you put...

Search Engine Optimization for RSS Feeds
Tips for Helping Your RSS Feed Perform! In some ways RSS is very similar to HTML, the language commonly used to create websites. Just as with HTML, webmasters using traditional search engine optimization tactics when creating an RSS feed will find...

The Search Engine Blues
There's no easy way to talk about this without getting frustrated.getting your site known on the net these days is a most difficult task. Search engines are picky and their rules change everyday, getting a top ten listing is almost impossible, all...

 
Search Engine Basics



Just about every major search engine has basically 3 parts. The first is the spider, otherwise called a robot. The spider visits a web page, reads it, and then follows links to other pages within the site. This is what it means when someone refers to a site being "spidered" or "crawled." The spider returns to the site on a regular basis, such as every month or two, to look for changes and updates. (If a site is updated often and is well marketed, this will happen much more often, sometimes even every day)

Everything the spider finds goes into the second part of a search engine, the index. The index, sometimes called the database, is like a giant library containing a copy of every web page that the spider finds. If a web page is different or appears to have changes, then the site will be re-indexed and this "book" is updated with new information.

Sometimes it can take a while for new pages or changes that the spider finds to be added to the index. Thus, a web page may have been "spidered" but not yet "indexed." Until the new information is indexed, it is not available to those searching with the search engine.

The third, and most sophisticated part of a search engine is the ranking software (sometimes referred to as the algo or algorithm). This is the program that sifts through the millions of pages recorded in the index to find matches to a search and rank them in order of what it believes is most relevant. All search engines have the basic parts described above, but there are differences in how these parts are tuned. That is why the same search on different search engines often produces different results.



About the author:

About the author:

John Colascione is the owner of Searchen Networks Inc., a search engine marketing firm located on Long Island New York. John is a professional at search engine marketing and is recognized around the world and is often spoken and written about outside of the United States.

Contact Information: Searchen Networks Inc. http://www.searchen.com