Search
Engines / Yahoo Guide
by © David Callan
Getting listed on Yahoo should be without
doubt the most important mission on any Internet marketers mind.
Yahoo is the biggest of all the search
engines, well actually that's not true, you see Yahoo is not technically
a search ENGINE it is a human compiled directory of websites and does not
have a spider bot going to sites and indexing them. But for the sake of
this article when I say search engines I am referring to all 'search sites'.
Anyway as I was saying Yahoo is the biggest
of all the search engines, did you know that recent estimates show that
Yahoo is currently capturing an amazing 40% of all search engine traffic
online? Do you know what this means? That means that almost 1 out of every
2 people that do searches on the Internet use Yahoo, everyone on the Internet
has done searches some time or another.
Nothing in the world should be clearer
to anyone with a website whose just after reading the above figures - you
need your site listed in Yahoo. A.S.A.P.
RECAP
If your site is not listed in the YAHOO
INDEX, (note - being listed under webpages does not mean you are listed
in Yahoo, it in fact means you are listed with Google because Yahoo gets
webpage results from google) you are losing lots of potential customers
to competitors that are listed in Yahoo. And with the amount of visitors
Yahoo can send you even with an average listing this could amount to hundreds,
maybe thousands of dollars worth of lost profit.
Now you know how important it is, lets
get on to the good stuff, how to submit to Yahoo.
Well first you have to determine the scope
of your site. Is your site commercial or noncommercial? Commercial sites
that want to be listed by Yahoo now must use "Business Express" when submitting.
This used to cost $199, however the price has risen to $299 a year.
"Business Express" what is it? Good question
and one that many people ask, well it's basically the same as free submit
except that with business express your site is guaranteed to be reviewed
within a weeks time. However please be aware that it does not guarantee
that your site will be accepted and added to the Yahoo index. If your site
is rejected Yahoo will allow you to appeal for free within a certain time
scale (usually 30 days) of being informed of your rejection. Also Yahoo
staff usually include in your rejection the reason you have been rejected,
you should examine these reasons fix any problems and resubmit after a
week or so.
If your site is a noncommercial site, you
will still be able to submit for free, but a review could take as long
as 8 weeks or might never happen at all.
Before you submit make sure your site is
100% ready, under construction pages need not apply to Yahoo because they
are not going to get in. Your site should be aesthetically pleasing to
the reviewer, be quick loading and of course should has lots of content.
OK lets get started. How does Yahoo return
results? Well search results on Yahoo are determined by words that appear
within these four areas:
1) category,
2) title,
3) description, and
4) URL.
These sites are then sorted by relevance
using an automated algorithm.
I will now go through these four different
factors and how to optimize you submittal for each one
First up category selection, many people
don't realize this but when someone searches for a term(s) on Yahoo its
algorithm searches through the category name also, for example visit http://www.yahoo.com
and you will see the results for a search done on 'Internet marketing articles'.
You will see under each listing that these words are highlighted if they
are in the name of the category, the top listing has the most occurrences
of these words between its title, description, URL and words in the category
its in.
You should remember this when submitting
to your category, when trying to establish what category you are going
to submit to you should do a search for one or two of your keywords and
see what categories come up. But which of these categories do you submit
to?
Since most referrals to sites from Yahoo
come from the search results and not from people visiting certain categories,
it is wise and best (in most occasions (I'll tell you why in a bit)) to
submit to a very specific category with lots of keywords in the category
name. To see this strategy in practice revisit the results page for 'Internet
marketing articles' on Yahoo.com notice that the top ranked site is in
a category with lots of keywords, these are: Internet, Business, Advertising
and Web, these combined with various keywords in the title, description
and URL combine to give this site a pretty good chance at ranking well
on a few good keywords and phrases. Therefore category names are just like
having more titles and descriptions. Note - if you are a regional operation
try to pick a category with the name of your state or province in it. This
will help you get targeted visitors from Yahoo.
Remember I said in most occasions a little
higher up the page, well here's why it's not the best policy in all occasions.
Imagine if your business name or official website name began with an A
or any other alphabetically high character and someone goes into a general
high - level category and there you are listed in the top few, you could
receive lots of traffic from your category listing like this.
Basically what I'm saying here is that
if the title you are submitting (i.e.. Your official business or website
name) is alphabetically very high. Then you'd want to compromise between
a lower level very specific keyword rich category and an upper level more
general category in the hope that you'd receive more visitors because you
would be listed high on the page due to your alphabetically high title.
Personally I'd try to get into the most
general category possible on all occasions and rely on the keywords in
my title, URL, and description to get a good ranking in search results.
As for the title Yahoo insists that you
use your official business or website name when applying to them, if you
submit some keyword rich title they wont even look twice at your application.
You should take this into account when choosing a domain name/official
website name.
I did - AKA Marketing - 'A' is useful in
getting listed high in general categories as discussed earlier, because
AKA is an abbreviation I can 'get away' with having AKA all caps which
again helps with the category strategy. Also it includes a good keyword
- Marketing and they cant accuse me of applying to them with a keyword
rich title, can they?.
Yahoo favors short titles, this stems from
the fact that the shorter the title is the less likely they will be to
edit it. Which means less work for them. However if you follow the above
guidelines and indeed Yahoo's own onsite guidelines chances are you wont
get edited down.
The description part I think is the tricky
part. The Web site description posted with your URL is a big factor in
how your site will rank once it's listed in the directory.
You have to submit a description which
has your main keywords in it, and make it sound very appealing to potential
visitors at the same time, however you can't have anything that resembles
hype and bragging, for example - number 1 site on the net for ..... The
best on the web for .. . . ...
Again Yahoo will either edit it to something
which doesn't benefit you at all or just move on to the next application
(most likely). If they do edit it you can bet your keywords won't appear
in the final listing, for these reasons it is important to get it right
first time.
The description should be concise and based
on facts, most importantly it should include your most important keywords
whenever possible. Do not exaggerate what is located on your site. Remember
your site gets reviewed by a real person and in the end, your site will
not get listed, simple as that
The length of the description should be
about 10 - 15 words. Note however on the Yahoo submittal form, they say
25 is the maximum, never go near this number, they are sure to edit it,
a mess with your keywords. Refer to Yahoo's own words "Please be brief".
SIDENOTE
Sometimes people email me asking this
question ''does my title and description that I submit to Yahoo have to
be the same as the meta description tag and title tag on my site''. Simple
answer, NO!
We have already discussed most of the issues
regarding domain name choice and Yahoo above, however there are others,
most notable the whole 63 character thing, this allows for very long keyword
rich domain names,if you decide to pursue this strategy, don't go mad and
use up nearly all 63 characters because Yahoo reviewers wont like it, however
do use long domain names to your advantage. Get ones with your main keyphrase
in it, and have these words separated by hyphens ( - ) because Yahoo's
algorithm like hyphens it may give you a rankings boost. Also remember
to try for alphabetically high domains, which are plausible and make sense.
If you can that is.
Some experts question the merit of keyword
rich domains as a way of gaining an advantage over other sites in Yahoo,
however I have seen this strategy in action and it does give advantage,
most of the time it's only a slight advantage but we're talking about Yahoo
here, a small advantage can mean a lot more visitors. To see why I believe
in keyword rich domains, go to Yahoo.com and enter in ''linking strategies''.
WHAT SITE COMES UP! . That was a very good example wasn't it :-)
Other tips for Yahoo is to have an about
us page on you main page - Yahoo likes to know who it's dealing with. On
this page describe what you do honestly and also post the physical address
of your business/building your website is run from.
IMPORTANT
Don't under any circumstances spam Yahoo,
it they notice your submitting your site more than every 2 or 3 months
they will just forget about you and more on.
Well that's it - Good luck in your quest
for Yahoo success
About the Author:
-----------------------
Copyright (c) David Callan
David is the webmaster of http://www.akamarketing.com
Visit his site for free internet marketing
articles, advice, ebooks and more.
"You need to
make a commitment, and once you make it,
then life will
give you some answers."
*Les Brown {American Motivational Speaker, Author & Trainer}
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