DEC. 23, ISSUE #1330
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6 Website Redesign SEO Secrets Your Developer May Not Know
By Jill Whalen (c) 2009
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At the end of the year, many businesses start to think about
redesigning their tired old website to breathe some new life
into it. You may even be in the midst of a website redesign
right now. If so, the first thing is to make sure you hire a
design and development company that knows how to build the
infrastructure of the website in a search engine
crawler–friendly manner.
Beyond that, you need to address a number of additional SEO
tactics before you get too deep into your redesign. The reason
you need to keep SEO front and center during this time is
twofold: so that you do not lose your previous traffic, but also
so that you can gain additional targeted search engine visitors
when the new site goes live.
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Here are 6 SEO redesign secrets your developer may not
know...ignore them at your own peril!
1. Creating Your SEO'd Site Architecture
Search engines look explicitly at how all your pages are linked
together in order to determine their place within the site.
Pages that are linked from every other page will be given more
weight than those that are only linked from a few others. This
is all considered a form of internal link popularity, or in
Google language, internal PageRank.
Recommendation: During your redesign, don't bury too deeply
within the site any content that was previously bringing
targeted search engine traffic. Ensure that any informational
content that will be focused on the more competitive keyword
phrases (for example, product and service pages) is high up in
your site hierarchy.
In addition, all content contained in a specific category should
be cross-linked via some sort of sub-navigation within that
section.
2. Categorization and Avoiding Duplicate Content
When people are seeking information from a search engine, they
usually have a question, a problem, or a need for specific
information. The search queries they use at Google and the other
engines reflect this. The more ways you can categorize your
content for the various target markets you serve, the better.
Recommendation: Be sure that all top-level pages answer the
potential searcher's (your potential customers') questions,
and that it's clear that your products and services can solve
their problem. In addition, you also have to ensure that
regardless of how someone found any piece of content on your
site, they always end up at the same URL to avoid PageRank
splitting and duplicate content issues.
For example, if a specific product can be classified as both a
product and a service, it makes sense that it might be listed
under both categories. However, the page (URL) that the
potential customer eventually lands on, regardless of which
category they started in, should always be the same.
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3. New Content Management System and Changing URLS
If URLs must change in the redesign due to a new content
management system or back-end coding, search engines may take
some time to index the new URLs as well as give them the same
weighting they gave the previous URLs due to URL age factors.
Recommendation: It's critical to 301-redirect all old URLs to
their relative counterpart within the newly designed website.
This will pass the link popularity of the old URLs to the new
ones quickly, as well as ensure that site visitors don't
receive 404-not-found errors.
This will be easier if the new URL naming is similar to the old
one, because you can use automated methods. If URLs must change
completely with no correlation to the names of the old URLs, and
hand-redirects are required, you'll want to at least redirect
all the top-level pages, as well as those that you're sure
receive keyword traffic from search engines. But, ideally, every
URL should be redirected if at all possible.
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4. Coding of Navigation Menus
Links contained within the navigation of your website should be
coded in a search engine–friendly manner so that they are
visible and crawlable. Some DHTML and Flash menus are invisible
to search engines, which causes the pages linked within them to
not receive the internal link popularity they should receive.
Recommendation: Make sure all navigational menus are coded with
CSS that is visible to search engines. In addition, avoid
drop-down box links as the main form of navigation (CSS
mouseovers are fine). You'll also want to ensure that all
content can be reached by hard-coded links – don't force the
user to go through any kind of search box menu because those are
traditionally search engine unfriendly.
5. Custom HTML Elements
While some level of automation for titles, metas, headers, URLs,
and alt attributes for images can be helpful, it's critical
that your new website's content management system allow you to
create custom descriptions for these as well.
Recommendation: Make sure the content management system has
fields for custom title tags, meta descriptions, heading tags,
etc. There should be no limit to the number of characters
allowed in these fields either, because every page may need a
different number of words and characters.
6. Session IDs and Other Tracking Links
It's best not to use session IDs to track visitors, but if your
system must use them, you'll only need to feed the "clean"
URLs to the search engine spiders – otherwise, they may get
caught in an infinite loop, indexing the same content under
multiple URLs.
You'll also want to avoid any sort of campaign tracking links
appended to URLs because these can split your link popularity by
causing your content to be indexed under multiple URLs.
Recommendation: If this type of tracking is inherent in your
system, use the canonical link element to maintain one URL for
every page of content.
Don't be surprised if your developer isn't happy to receive
some of these "secrets." He or she may feel that their
authority is being usurped or their creativity is being
hindered. Just remember that it's your website that you're
paying them to create in a way that will make you the most money
possible. Let your developer know up-front that these things are
non-negotiable. If they tell you that they can't do any of the
above, start looking around for a new developer – ASAP!
While there will always be a few unexpected bugs to work out
when your site goes live, you won't have to be afraid of losing
your search engine visitors as long as you know what you're
doing. We've successfully helped many companies through this
transition without any glitches. At the end of the process,
there's nothing like the feeling of having your beautiful new
website launched. But more than that, there's great comfort in
knowing that the people looking for what you offer will continue
to be able to easily find you in the search engines.
About The Author
Jill Whalen, CEO of High Rankings and co-founder of SEMNE, has been performing
SEO services since
1995. Jill is the host of the
High Rankings Advisor newsletter
and the High Rankings SEO forum.

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