No matter who you are or how much
you pay for website advertising, free search engine
traffic is probably responsible for a big part of your
business. So why make your website so hard for search
engines to figure out?
Luckily, it seems like in the recent years people have
paid attention to SEO, moved their sites over to CSS,
abolished 'table' and 'font' HTML tags, started using
the H1 tag around their titles... and in general, moved
the main content of their site as close to the top of
the HTML document as it can go.
'But Robert,' you tell me, 'I have a bunch of fancy
JavaScript and CSS at the top of my site that I don't
want to get rid of.'
That's ok, you can keep it. Just stash it away in another
file. By that I mean... if you were lazy and included
your CSS right in the HTML document like this:
(style type='text/css') (!-- CSS code in here --) (/style)
Copy all that text out and delete it from the HTML page.
Remove the 'style' tags and the '(!--' and '--)' stuff.
Open a new text file, paste the text from the clipboard
in, save the file as 'layout.css' then save and upload
to your web server.
Now, back on your HTML page, place HTML code like this:
(link rel='stylesheet' href='http://www.example.com/layout.css')
When someone loads your page in a browser that tells
them to look to the URL http://www.example.com/layout.css
for the CSS info. But when the search engines crawl
your site they will see a nice, clean, simple layout.
You can do the same thing with JavaScript. Say these
are your 'script' tags:
(script language='JavaScript' type='text/javascript')
(!-- JavaScript code in here --) (/script)
Do the same thing, copy the JavaScript code but NOT
the 'script' tags themselves or the '(!--' or '--)'.
Erase the original from the HTML page. Paste the stuff
you copied into a new text file and call it something
like: 'functions.js'
Upload functions.js and in the spot you had your JavaScript
code use this:
(script language='JavaScript' src='http://www.example.com/functions.js')(/script)
One important thing to remember is that NO JavaScript
code can be placed between the 'script' tags if you
use the 'src' parameter like that.
So remember: use H1 tags, use meta description tags,
and use CSS, but make sure you include your JavaScript
and CSS stylesheets in separate files otherwise there's
no point.
About The Author: Robert Plank - Visit http://www.AffiliateBattlePlan.com/
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