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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)


  1. META Mechanic FAQ
  2. Page Primer FAQ
  3. Search Engine Starter FAQ
  4. Search Engine Tracker FAQ
META MechanicTM

Q: What is META Mechanic?

A: META Mechanic is an automated tool that gathers information about your Web site from you and then generates finished Title, META Keywords, and META Description tags for you already properly coded and ready for use.

Q: Why would I want to use META Mechanic?

A: Many search engines index META tags and will boost your score if you use them properly. We recommend you use META tags on all your pages. They can help in engines that use them, and there is no penalty for using them in engines that don't index them. META Mechanic takes the work out of creating them. You answer a few site-specific questions and META Mechanic produces finished tags for you.

Q: What are META tags?

A: META tags are optional lines of HTML code in the HEAD section of your document that can be used to describe your page. META tags provide descriptive information about your site to search engines, but in a form that isn't displayed by the browser.

The relevant attributes for search engines are the DESCRIPTION and KEYWORDS attributes. Only 25% of web sites include META tags, and not all search engines use them to rank pages, but many do.

Q: Do all search engines use META tags to rank sites?

A: Not all do because some web pages try to trick search engines by including misleading information in the keyword section. Search engines have become very good at noticing this trick however. Many will ban your site if you engage in this sort of spamming.

Even though all search engines don't index META tags, enough do to make them a worthwhile addition to your site..

Q: How do I get the tags META Mechanic creates into my Web page?

A: META Mechanic offers you two options to get your META tags.

First, you can have META Mechanic generate the raw HTML code for your Title and META Tags. Then you cut the tags and paste them into the HEAD section of your Web page.

The second option is you can chose to have a META Mechanic provide you a copy of your Web page with the TITLE and META tags inserted. If you chose this option, you enter the URL of your Web page and META Mechanic will create a copy of your Web page with the new tags already in place. Then all you have to do is upload the new page to your server.

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Page PrimerTM

Q: What is Page Primer?

A: Our Page Primer analyzes your page and grades it based on how well it will do in the search engines. We'll help you identify techniques that will improve your search engine ranking AND warn you about problems that could get you banned from some search engines.

Q: Page Primer gives me improvement tips. Does it also show me how to put them on my page?

A: Yes! Page Primer gives you tips on TITLE and META tags, discusses their importance, and shows you the basic HTML you need to add them to your page.

Q: Do all search engines use the same criteria to rank pages? Will the same techniques work for all of them?

A: No! All search engines use different algorithms to determine page rankings. We'll give you tips on how to do well with specific search engines like Alta Vista, Excite, and others.

Q: How soon will I see Page Primer's results?

A: Page Primer will display your results moments after you enter the necessary information. All you need to do is complete the Page Primer information form, submit the page, then get ready to tune your web page.

Q: Does Page Primer make any changes to my web site?

A: No. We provide tips on how to improve your page's ranking and avoid some common mistakes. We'll show you how to improve your page, but you make the actual changes yourself.

Q: Why do I have to enter just one page at a time? Why can't you analyze my whole site at once?

A: We analyze and grade each page individually because that's how search engines look at them. Remember, while your site is focused on one or two particular areas, you can further target your individual pages. Search engines may penalize you if you repeat the same keywords over and over, but you CAN use targeted, content-rich keywords and keyword phrases to draw visitors to individual pages within your site. Page Primer helps you do that.

Q: How do I know which keywords to enter?

A: You should determine what keywords you think your visitors will use to find your site. Think about your site's focus and intended audience. Consider asking your customers or visitors what keywords THEY would think to use to find you.

Targeted, specific keywords work the best. Instead of using the keyword "horses", consider "Quarter Horses" or "Tennessee Walking Horses".

Page Primer can't choose your keywords for you, but it can give you tips to better organize your page to get the best ranking depending on the keywords you choose.

Q: Do capital letters matter in keywords?

A: A few search engines, like AltaVista and Infoseek, are case specific. When submitting to these engines you may want to make upper and lowercase versions of your main keywords. For other engines, lower case versions of your keywords are recommended.

Q: Should I separate the words with commas?

A: This is a big controversy. The safe answer is it doesn't hurt to have them there and commas do make the text more readable to the human. Most search engines recommend you use them, but it doesn't appear to be a requirement to do well.

Q: What components of my web page do you check?

A: Page Primer does a thorough evaluation of many page components, including:

  • TITLE tags
  • META tags
  • Keyword frequency
  • Keyword phrase frequency
  • IMG tag descriptions
  • Hidden text

Q: What are keywords and keyword phrases?

A: Well, it depends on who's asking.

  • From the visitor's perspective: Keywords are the search phrases that visitors enter into search engines. As a developer, you should always try to determine what keywords your visitors may enter to find your site.
  • From the web developer's perspective: Keywords are the search terms that you want to be indexed under. Include the KEYWORDS attribute in your META tags. Be careful though and don't repeat them too often. Many search engines will consider it spamming and may penalize your site.

Use Page Primer to position your keywords and keyword phrases for maximum benefit.

Q: What are META tags?

A: META tags are optional lines of HTML code in the HEAD section of your document that can be used to describe your page. META tags provide descriptive information about your site to search engines, but in a form that isn't displayed by the browser.

The relevant attributes for search engines are the DESCRIPTION and KEYWORDS attributes. Only 25% of web sites include META tags, and not all search engines use them to rank pages, but many do.

Page Primer shows you how to use META tags to effectively promote your site with the search engines that do index them.

Q: Do all search engines use META tags to rank sites?

A: Not all do because some web pages try to trick search engines by including misleading information in the keyword section. Search engines have become very good at noticing this trick however. Many will ban your site if you engage in this sort of spamming.

Even though all search engines don't index META tags, enough do to make them a worthwhile addition to your site..

Q: My page uses frames. Can Page Primer still help me optimize it?

A: Yes! Some industry experts warn against frames since some search engines (like HotBot) cannot index and rank sites that use frames. However, if your web page does use frames, Page Primer can give you helpful tips and HTML tags to include and increase your chances.

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Search Engine StarterTM

Q: What is Search Engine Starter?

A: Search Engine Starter is an automated search engine submission tool. By simply answering a few questions, you can submit your site to 100 of the largest search engines on the Web.

Q: Why should I submit my site to search engines?

A: 85% of users rely on search engines to locate information on the Web. By registering your site with various search engines, you make it easier for visitors to find your site and the information that you have to offer.

Q: To which search engines does Search Engine Starter submit?

A: Search Engine Starter will submit your site to 100 top search engines and directories. Click here to see a list of sites to which we submit. If you decide to only submit to a few engines, Search Engine Starter will let you pick which specific engines you want to submit to.

Q: What do you mean by "confirmed submissions"?

A: There are a lot of search engine submission tools on the Web. But using these tools means taking a leap of faith -- they give you no feedback on whether your site was accepted for registration by the various search engines. Was the search engine able to access your site? Was the engine overloaded when your submission was made? Were you accepted for registration?

Our Search Engine Starter is the only submission tool that reports the results of your submission. If we were unable to submit your site to a particular search engine, we'll tell you why and give you a link to the search engine's submission page.

Q: What happens after I use your service?

A: Once we have completed the task of submitting your site to our list of search engines, the search engines must process those submitted pages. Some will communicate back to you and others won't, but you'll receive an email from us indicating the success or failure of each individual submission. If you receive a rejection, our email will contain a link that you can click on, which will take you to the search engine itself where you may be able to provide additional information helpful in a re-submittal.

Q: Now that my site has been submitted, that's it...right?

A: Keep in mind that registration is an on-going thing: to keep their search engines running efficiently, the engine providers will periodically clean up their databases, dropping some of the sites for a variety of reasons. Because of this, it's a good idea to check regularly (at least weekly) to verify that you are still in the search engine's database. Search for your site name in the search engine to see if you are in the search engine's database. If your site doesn't show up, or your site has been dropping in the rankings, you may want to resubmit your page.

It is always a good idea to run your page through Page Primer before submitting your page to any search engine. The ranking algorithms that the search engines use to score your page for relevancy change frequently. As changes are identified, Page Primer is updated. We track the changes so you don't have to.

Q: Why do you ask for so much information when submitting my site?

A: We only request information that is requested by the various search engines. We use this information for submitting your site to the search engine. You are welcome to leave blank any fields you do not care to fill in, but this may cause one or more search engines to refuse your request to add your site to their list.

We do test the URL that you enter to insure that the site can be reached, and we use your email address to send you a report on the success of the search engine submission process, so we recommend that you at least fill in these two items.

Q: What will you do with my email address and information?

A: We do not sell or otherwise make available your information, except to the submission pages of the search engines. Be aware that many search engines will send you email as a part of the submission process. These emails may include advertising for additional services, confirmation emails, etc. If you do not want to receive these messages, select the "No" option in Part 2 of the Search Engine Starter registration and we'll use a substitute address while submitting your site.

Q: How often should I submit my site?

A: The basic advice to follow if you have a site that is not listed in the search engine's database is to submit your site weekly until your site is in the search engine's database.

To check to see if your site is listed in the search engine's database, go to the search engine and type in the name of your site as the search query. If your site doesn't show up, your site is not in the database and you need to submit. Getting listed in the search engines can be a lengthy process. Some engines, like AltaVista, may pick up your site in a few weeks. All the engines are different and depending on their backlog that week, the listing times may vary.

If your site is in the database, but not ranked or ranked very poorly, you need to optimize your site using Page Primer. This tool will give you tips to improve your relevancy score with search engines. Once you have improved your page, then resubmit your new page to the search engines.

You might also want to resubmit your site is if you have made major changes to it. Again, run the new pages through Page Primer prior to submitting your new pages to the search engines.

If your page is doing well in a search engine, we do not recommend you resubmit the page to that search engine. Track your performance on that engine using Search Engine Tracker, but don't resubmit unless you see your site drop from the database (which occasionally happens) or your site starts dropping drastically in the rankings.

Q: How can I use Search Engine Starter to target only certain engines for submission? When would I want to do this?

A: If your site is ranked quite well in a particular search engine, you normally do not want to resubmit your site to that engine. Search engine optimizers are a superstitious lot and the conventional wisdom is "don't mess up something that is working just fine." Search Engine Starter gives you the flexibility to pick and chose which engines you want to submit to. You can submit to all 100 on the list, or just a few selected engines. This is especially handy if you have customized a particular page for a specific keyword and search engine.

The capability to select which search engines to submit to is a new feature in Search Engine Starter. When you are signing up to submit a site to the search engines, the first step is to give basic information about the site you wish to submit. After you fill out this page, hit the submit button and a page containing a checklist of 100 search engines will appear. You can either do nothing and Search Engine Starter will submit your site to all 100 engines OR you can select which engines you want to submit your site to. It is very easy and gives you, the site owner, full power over which search engines you chose to submit your site. No more blind submissions or crossing your fingers that resubmitting to a particular engine won't get you in trouble.

Q: Can't I just submit my pages to each search engine myself?

A: You are welcome to do so, but plan on it taking a lot of time. Here are the steps involved:

  1. Build a list of search engines to submit to
  2. Visit the first site and browse through the site to locate the submission page for that engine
  3. Enter the URL of your site, your name, select the appropriate category, etc. for that site
  4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 for each of the remaining sites.
(By the way, don't make any typos)

Figuring five to ten minutes for each of the 12 search engines vs. five minutes total to use our tool, our free sample is saving more than an hour of your time. And the subscription version of Search Engine Starter will save more than 8 hours of your time.

Plus, the subscription version of Search Engine Starter will save your site's information for re-submission. That makes it easier when you want to update your listing in the search engines.

Q: I submitted my site using your Search Engine submission tool. I realized I made an error ( or something has now changed on my site). Will you make these changes on the Search Engine?

A: Once your submission has been sent to the Search Engines, your information becomes property of the appropriate Search Engine(s). We cannot change or modify any information with regards to your submission information or URL. You will need to contact the appropriate Search Engine(s) for any administrative changes that apply to your site.

Q: On April XX, 2000, my site was supposedly submitted to all the search engines on your list. I received the confirmation email with the number of days each search engine would take to index my domain. As of today, our site is not listed on any of the search engines. What's the deal? Why isn't my site on the search engine?

A: We are not in charge of the search engines, nor do we have any administrative privileges on them. We are an agent who submits your information to the search engine for placement in their dbase.

How, where and when they place your URL is up to them. Our submission service is designed to save you the user many hours of time filling out your sites information and submitting it to EACH search engine individually. Many search engines have long backlogs and the estimated times they give for getting listed are often best case scenarios. The volume of sites being submitted to the search engines has grown geometrically in recent years and this trend will probably continue. The best advice is to continue to check search engines for your listing and keep submitting weekly until you get listed. You can also try to improve your score on the search engines by running your page through the Page Primer tool. This tool will tell you what you need to do for your page to optimize it for better search engine results. It is a component of Search Engine Power Pack.

If you are displeased in the response time the search engine has provided you will need to contact them directly.

Q: How long does it take for you to submit my site and get it on the Search Engines?

A: These times vary with search engines and directories. The search engines will optimistically report a very short time, but most sites get listed within the following times:

Altavista< 1 - 2 weeks
Excite, Lycos 4 weeks
HotBot 2 weeks
Google 4 - 6 weeks
Infoseek 6 - 8 weeks
Northern Light 2 - 4 weeks
Webcrawler 3 months

The reality is that most search engines and directories are very backlogged and slow to get listings added to their databases. Don't be surprised if you experience waits much longer than these. You may wait over 5 months to see your site get listed on Yahoo!, if it gets listed at all.

We recommend that if your site isn't listed within the time periods above, that you resubmit your site to the search engine where you are not listed.

Q: My site was listed on a search engine last week, but now it's gone. What happened?

A: Periodically, some search engines will purge outdated URL information, and occasionally an active site will inadvertently be removed. We recommend that you check weekly to verify your site is still in a search engine's database and to resubmit your site if it suddenly disappears from the search engine listing or starts to drop in the ratings.

Do not submit your site too frequently (more than once a day), because some search engines will consider this to be "spamming" and may delete your site from their listings. You also do not want to re-submit to a search engine if you already are ranked highly. Leave success alone.

Q: I'm receiving a lot of junk email since I used your tool to submit my site. Did your company sell my email address?

A: No. Some search engines require your email address before they will accept your URL submission. Later, they may send you email information as part of the submission process. We can't control this practice.

Although we provide the information to the search engines that is required to submit your site, We will not sell, trade, or otherwise distribute your email address. See our privacy policy for more information.

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Search Engine TrackerTM

Q: What is Search Engine Tracker?

A: Search Engine Tracker monitors your web site's position on the top 15 search engines. We track multiple keyword search terms and send you a weekly status report that displays your current rank and ranking history. Also, you receive a special alert if your page drops out of the Top 40.

85% of Internet users locate pages through search engines, so listings are critical. However, users are rarely patient enough to scroll through more than 30 or 40 listings. You not only have to get listed, you have to be ranked highly to succeed.

Q: My report is huge! Can I just get a quick snapshot if I don't have time to analyze the report completely?

A: Yes, you can quickly scan your rankings using the Executive Summary report. That will quickly show you your ranking by keyword on the search engines. For more detailed information (including historical data), use the Search Engine Report tool.

You can also customize your Search Engine Report to query only a few search engines or keywords.

Q: How do I know which keywords to track?

A: Unfortunately, there are no set guidelines since the answer is based entirely on your site focus and organization.

  • Think about which keywords visitors will use to find your site.
  • Consider your site's focus and intended audience.
  • Ask your customers or visitors what keywords THEY would use to find you.

Q: Are my keywords case sensitive?

A: Search Engine Tracker is case sensitive when checking your rank in those search engines which are pay attention to capitalization; Search Engine Tracker ignores capitalization when checking search engines that aren't case sensitive.

For example, if you tell us to track both the keyword phrases "Quarter Horse" and "quarter horse," we will report the same results for each phrase for Excite, since that search engine isn't case sensitive. For Alta Vista, on the other hand, these two phrases may have different results, since Alta Vista is case sensitive.

Q: How often does Search Engine Tracker check my site's rank?

A: Search Engine Tracker queries the search engines weekly and sends you a ranking report. If your site drops out of the top 40 on any of the search engines, we will send you a special alert in addition to your regular status report.

Q: There are hundreds of search engines. Why does Search Engine Tracker only monitor 15?

A: We monitor the 15 largest search engines since they account for more than 90% of all web search engine traffic. While it's nice to be ranked in the smaller ones, it is critical that you be listed and ranked in the top engines.

Q: Why don't we track all 100 of the search engines we submit to with Search Engine Starter?

A: Search Engine Optimization is a time consuming job that involves tuning your pages perform well in different search engines and building special pages designed to rank well in specific search engines.

Because of the time involved, it simply isn't cost effective to try to optimize your site for every search engine in existence. Search Engine Consultants typically advise their clients to focus only on the top search engines, which hold the greatest potential payoff.

Q: Do you email my results or do I have to log into the site to check them?

A: You receive a weekly email from us, but of course you can log into your account at any time to view your rankings and other information about your site.

Q: Why does my rank change from week to week?

A: First, since other people are also submitting their sites to the major search engines, another site may displace you. This is a fact of life on the Internet, and a major reason why you should regularly review your page's ranking, revise the pages when necessary, and re-submit them to boost your ranking.

Second, you may have modified pages in your site and changed pages so that they don't score as well in a particular search engine. Even if you don't submit these pages to a search engine, many engines periodically re-index your site, so these changes will eventually reflect on your ranking. This is one reason why, if you have a page that already scores well in many search engines, it's best to leave the page as it is until you ranking starts to drop.

Third, some search engines include a feedback mechanism where search results are weighted based on the number of people who previously found the result relevant. For example, someone searches for "horses" and finds your Web page listed in the top 10 results. If they click on the link to your site, the search engine boosts its score for your page slightly, so that the next time someone searches for "horses" your page will score just a little bit better. Over time this can change your ranking, even if nothing else in the search engine changes. Lycos and HotBot use this feedback mechanism, and more search engines are moving to this approach.

Fourth, each search engine actually consists of several databases residing on several different computers. These databases aren't exact mirrors of each other, and so your site may have one ranking in one database and another, different ranking in another database. This difference can sometimes cause dramatic changes in your ranking. If your site scores very well one week, and then suddenly drops out of the top 40 results entirely, there's a good chance that the search engine's database has changed.

If this happens to you, the best approach is to re-submit your site to the search engine. Periodic re-submission can help ensure that you're pages are in all copies of a search engines database. A good rule of thumb is to re-submit your site once per month.

Q: Search Engine Tracker says my page ranks #10 in a search engine, but when I check it, my page ranks #8. Why is that?

A: This is again caused by the fact that each search engine actually consists of several databases residing on several different computers. These databases aren't exact mirrors of each other, and so your site may have one ranking in one database and another, different ranking in another database.

When someone visits a search engine, the engine determines which database will be used to serve that visitor. If there are significant differences between the search engine's database, two people can visit the site at different times, and see different search results.

Once again, the best solution to this problem is to periodically re-submit your site to the search engine to ensure that the same versions of your pages are listed in each database.

Q: What if I'm not listed on the search engines? Do I still get a report?

A: We only track the top 40 results from each search engine. If your site isn't listed in the top 40 in any search engines, therefore aren't able to show your ranking history. However, we will still send you a weekly report letting you know that you haven't yet appeared in the top 40 in any search engines.

Q: Does Search Engine Tracker help me improve my rankings?

A: No. Search Engine Tracker is a search engine-tracking tool only. However, you can use the other tools in your Search Engine Power Pack to optimize your page for the search engines.

Q: Does Search Engine Tracker give me a report for each keyword so that I know which ones rank the highest?

A: Of course! Search Engine Tracker allows you to track up to 20 different keywords. Your report will list all ranked keywords in the search engines. If a keyword you listed isn't reported, then that keyword doesn't rank in the top 40.

For example, if you want to track the keywords "vegetarian recipes" and "Chinese vegetarian recipes", your report will give you separate ranking information for each of them if they rank in the top 40.

Q: Your Search Engine Starter report shows that the search engines accepted my site, but Search Engine Tracker says my site isn't listed anywhere. Why?

A: Keep in mind that Search Engine Starter can only report whether your site was accepted for submission. Even if your site was successfully accepted, it typically takes several weeks for it to appear in a search engine.

This is, unfortunately, a fact of life when dealing with search engines. We recommend waiting a month for your site to appear, and then re-submitting it if it still hasn't appeared.

Q: Why does my page rank well in some search engines, but badly in others?

A: Each search engine uses its own rules to determine how relevant a page is to a given search query. Since these rules vary widely from one search engine to another, it's virtually impossible to build a Web page that will rank in the Top 10 across all search engines.

In fact, the characteristics that help a page perform well in one search engine may cause it to be penalized in another search engine. In addition, load pages with many keywords may dilute that pages relevance for anyone of those keywords.

This the main reason why Search Engine Optimization consultants often build "gateway" pages. Gateway pages are pages built expressly for submission to a specific search engine. These pages are optimized to perform well in that one search engine, and typically emphasize a single keyword or phrase.

Q: Why can't I get my site in the Top 10 on all the search engines? What is normally considered a success in Search Engine Optimization?

A: Search Engine Optimization consultants consider a page successfully optimized if it ranks in the Top 30 on at least one search engine.

As a rule, if a particular page in your site ranks in the Top 40 on 3-4 search engines, this page is performing very well.

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