What is search engine?
A search
engine is a web-based tool that enables users to locate information on the
World Wide Web. Popular examples of search engines are Google, Yahoo!, and MSN
Search. Search engines utilize automated software applications (referred to as
robots, bots, or spiders) that travel along the Web, following links from page
to page, site to site. The information gathered by the spiders is used to
create a searchable index of the Web.
What is Search Engine Rank?
When you search any keyword using a search
engine, it displays thousands of results found in its database. A page ranking
is measured by the position of web pages displayed in the search engine
results. If a search engine is putting your web page on the first position,
then your web page rank will be number 1 and it will be assumed as the page
with the highest rank.
SEO is the process of designing and developing a
website to attain a high rank in search engine results.
How do search engines work?
Every
search engine uses different complex mathematical formulas to generate search
results. The results for a specific query are then displayed on the SERP.
Search engine algorithms take the key elements of a web page, including the
page title, content and keyword density, and come up with a ranking for where
to place the results on the pages. Each search engine’s algorithm is unique, so
a top ranking on Yahoo! does not guarantee a prominent ranking on Google, and
vice versa. To make things more complicated, the algorithms used by search
engines are not only closely guarded secrets, they are also constantly
undergoing modification and revision. This means that the criteria to best
optimize a site with must be surmised through observation, as well as trial and
error — and not just once, but continuously.
Gimmicks
less reputable SEO firms tout as the answer to better site rankings may work at
best for only a short period before the search engine’s developers become wise
to the tactics and change their algorithm. More likely, sites using these
tricks will be labeled as spam by the search engines and their rankings will
plummet.
Search
engines only “see” the text on web pages, and use the underlying HTML structure
to determine relevance. Large photos, or dynamic Flash animation mean nothing
to search engines, but the actual text on your pages does. It is difficult to
build a Flash site that is as friendly to search engines; as a result, Flash
sites will tend not to rank as high as sites developed with well coded HTML and
CSS (Cascading Style Sheets — a complex mechanism for adding styles to website
pages above and beyond regular HTML). If the terms you want to be found by do
not appear in the text of your website, it will be very difficult for your
website to yield high placement in the SERPs.




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