SEO-News: October 28th, 2004 Feature Article

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Table Structures for Top Search Engine Positioning
By Mary Davies

So you have a beautiful website that you paid a pretty penny 
for and you are completely happy with it... except no one can 
find it. Many web designers do not understand search engine 
positioning, so when they design your website little or no 
thought is given to the elements of design that may affect your 
rankings on search engines. On the other hand some search engine 
positioning companies offer services that will boost your 
rankings but at the expense of your design. A good search engine 
positioning company can get your website ranking for key phrases 
without affecting the overall design and navigation of your site. 
You can make small changes to your website on your own as well 
utilizing the tips noted in this article. There is a happy 
medium, you can "have your cake and eat it too." 

The first step in designing a website that will rank well on 
search engines is to build the proper table structure. This 
framework for your website will easily guide the search engine 
spiders through your site taking the route you want them to. A 
good table structure is essentially a map to the spiders, it 
guides the way as they travel through your website.

 

This table structure is very beneficial to your website ranking 
as it guides the spiders to the text rich, most important content 
of your site as quickly as possible. The spiders will enter your 
site at the first table, the header, and then travel through to 
the empty cell in row 1 of the second table, the next stop is 
your content area, the "meat" of your website. After going 
through your content the spiders will then continue onto row 2 
where you have inserted a table holding your navigation, if your 
navigation is image based, as most is, it holds very little 
content that matters from the spider's perspective. The spiders 
will then follow through to row 3 where you have your footer, a 
place to add in valuable text links rich in targeted keywords. 

If this table structure does not fit your design at all there can 
be work arounds. A good example of this is shown on 
http://www.far-sited.ca. Notice that the index page upon load 
has a very simple look, no text, clean, crisp image. This is a 
good way to present your business with a simple entry page. If 
you scroll down the page you will see that there is in fact a 
lot of text below this main image. With a simple 100% x 100% 
table you can achieve this affect on your website. This table 
will open the same way in all resolutions giving your index page 
the look of a text free page when in fact it is not. 

100% x 100% table used as mentioned above:



If you choose to use the 100% x 100% table noted above you 
should still try to stick to the general table structure shown 
first for your internal pages. There can always be room for 
adjustments based on the size of your site however most websites 
use left hand navigation and this table structure is based on 
left hand navigation. If your navigation is across the top of 
your page, maybe reconsider it. It can remain at the top. I have 
designed a few websites that are ranking well with this top 
navigation, but for the best result, the left hand navigation 
using the table structure first mentioned in this article is 
best.

All in all I cannot stress enough that a well designed site will 
rank higher. Even if you do not have a complete SEO overhaul of 
your site, this table structure will increase your rankings over 
those that do not have a clean, properly structured website. 
Though the table structure is not noticed so much by the visitors 
to your website aside from the look of it, it is very noticed by 
the spiders and they will go through your website based on it. 
For an added edge, have your site designed with this table 
structure, or do it yourself. Make a point of not only giving 
the visitors to your website the information you want them to 
have but also the spiders and as quickly and easily as possible.

================================================================
Mary Davies is the owner of Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning
(http://www.beanstalk-inc.com). Mary works and writes with years 
of experience in website design and search engine optimization.
================================================================





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