Using External Coding to Improve Search Engine Placement
If you answered yes to any of these questions your site may be
driving away search engine spiders and losing search engine
position ranking.
As you can imagine search engine spiders have a lot of pages to
get through on the web when they are indexing sites. To improve
their speed and efficiency search engines program their spiders
to give up easily if they have problems with a page or if they
have to wade through too much code to find the relevant content.
This is one of the reasons why it is so important to put your
keywords as close to the top of the page as possible. This way
the search bot will see the keywords before giving up and moving
on to the next page.
But what do you do if you have lots of JavaScript code or CSS
styles pushing your keywords down the page in your coding? You
need to find a way to cut down on all that code that gets in the
way of the search engines properly indexing your page.
We do this by moving the JavaScript and CSS styles off the page
and into external files. This is a fairly easy and straight
forward process and can have the added benefit of making your
pages load faster as well, which the search engines also like.
In many ways CSS styles and JavaScript work in a similar
fashion. You set up functions in a script or formatting in a
style sheet section, and then refer to that section in your html
code. For instance if you have a JavaScript that displays a
clock on your page you would have the JavaScript functions for
the clock listed in your head section, then you would simply
call that function from the place on the page where the clock
would be displayed.
Similarly with CSS you set up your styles ahead of time in a
Styles section of the page head, then you simply refer to the
styles as needed in your html coding. One benefit of this is
that it cuts down dramatically on the amount of formatting code
needed when compared to using Font tags.
If you want to use the same JavaScript or CSS styles on a
different page you could copy all that code onto the new page.
But this would cause two distinct problems, first you would be
adding a lot of code to each page and second if you wanted to
make a change to the JavaScript or CSS styles you would need to
do so on every page that the code had been copied onto.
Both of these problems can be solved simply by using external
files. You create one external file for your CSS and another
file for your JavaScript. These could be named mysite.css for
the CSS and mysite.js for the JavaScript. These files can be
created in any plain text editor or html code editor, they are
nothing more than files that contain most of the CSS or
JavaScript code from the web pages.
With JavaScript you have an opening JavaScript tag, then a
comment tag, then assorted functions and what not, followed by a
closing comment tag and a closing JavaScript tag. Your external
file would start with the opening comment tag, contain all the
functions and such, and end with the closing comment tag. You
would leave both the opening and closing JavaScript tags in the
html page. If you have more than one JavaScript on the page you
can move all the code into one external js file. Simply copy it
into the file in the same order as it exists in the JavaScript
tags on the html page. You will only need the one pair of
opening and closing comment tags.
Once your JavaScript is moved off the page you will need to tell
the web page where to find it. This is done in the JavaScript
tag that was left on the page in the head section. Right now
this will be an opening JavaScript tag placed right up against
the closing JavaScript tag, with no additional code in between.
You will place the reference to the external JavaScript code
inside the opening JavaScript tag like this:
script language="JavaScript" type="text/JavaScript"
src="mysite.js"
Placing CSS styles in an external file is handled in exactly the
same manner. Move the styles into the external file, and then
refer to that external file with your style tag in the head
section of the web page like this:
link href="mysite.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
An added benefit of moving the code into external files is that
you can then change the styles of your whole site simply by
changing the code in the one external file.
Once you have moved the code into external files you will have
greatly simplified the code on each page. This will take you a
long way towards making your pages lean and mean, and very
search engine friendly.
You can find sample external files for this article on my web
site at: www.howtogurus.com/free-articles.html
About the author:
George Peirson is a successful Entrepreneur, Internet Trainer
and author of over 30 multimedia based tutorial training titles.
Read more articles by George Peirson at
http://www.howtogurus.com/free-articles.html Article copyright
2005 George Peirson