|
Search Engine Articles
Thinking of Creating
Gateway or Doorway Pages?
by Jill Whalen (The Web Whiz) Written May 2000
How many of you think the best and/or only way to get top placements on the
search engines is to create gateway pages (aka doorway pages or bridge pages)?
If you raised your hand, you are certainly not alone, but you are also mistaken!
If you check out most search engine positioning companies' Web sites, you will
find that most of them promise to get you high rankings by creating gateway
pages for your site. These are pages that the positioning companies create
independently of your current pages, which they load with keyword phrases then
submit to the search engines.
Many of these companies use automated programs such as WebPosition Gold (WPG),
which features a template that the company fills in with the "proper" amount of
keywords and other text. The program's Page Generator function then generates a
page that supposedly will rank high for a particular engine.
These positioning companies will even go to the trouble to create different
gateway pages for each search engine, using the WPG Page Critic function. This
tool tells Webmasters what keyword density each engine supposedly wants to see
(based on past results), and how many times you should put particular keyword
phrases into the text and meta tags of the gateway pages.
Are Doorway Pages and Gateways Pages Worth the Effort? Sounds like a lot of
unnecessary trouble, if you ask me. Consider this: Each and every search engine
wants to see the same thing -- Web sites that are filled with good, useful
content. All engines base their ranking algorithms on this.
For certain, there are slight variations in the number of times a keyword should
appear and/or how many words should be on a page, as WPG's Page Critic tells us.
But generally speaking, these numbers are not going to make or break your
ranking.
If I paid attention to these automated programs, I'm sure I'd find out that most
of my clients' sites have an "incorrect" keyword density for specific engines.
The program would tell me that certain pages have too many keywords, and that
others don't have enough. My answer to that is: hogwash!
In reality, these pages rank high for numerous keyword phrases regardless of the
"proper" keyword density, because they are filled with great content.
If you already have a Web site, and it's more than one page, then you have your
own built-in, natural gateway pages. Each and every page of your current site is
a doorway to the rest of your site.
To be sure, there are sometimes technical reasons why each page of a site cannot
be a gateway. However, there's no excuse for having your main page be so
technically challenged that the search engines can't find it and read it.
With your main page as your jumping-off place, you simply create other
informative (static HTML) pages that link from the main page to the rest of the
site. These are not gateway pages in the original sense of the word, because
you're linking to them from your main page, and you actually want people to
visit them. These pages should give useful information about your site, your
business, and the people who run it; and of course, these pages should be easy
to navigate.
Gateways and Doorways can be a Costly Lesson Creating gateway pages that are not
linked to the rest of your site and don't provide important information about
your site are not necessary, and may even harm your site's rankings.
The main thing typical gateway pages do is create clutter in the engines. What?
A search engine optimization specialist who is worried about cluttering the
engines? You bet!
I have to use the engines as much as the next person, and I'm as frustrated by
the lack of good content and hard-to-find Web sites as everyone else is. There's
no way that I want to contribute to that, and for this reason, I have always
advocated against using gateway pages.
I'm probably one of the few search engine placement experts who is extremely
happy that many search engines such as AltaVista are starting to take a stand
against gateway pages by not allowing them and by deleting them from their
databases. Believe it or not, this development has put a number of search engine
placement companies suddenly out of business. However, if they were doing it
"the right way" to begin with or were willing to learn the right way, they'd
still have a lucrative business.
Repeating My Mantra ... Again!
Those who know me and my other articles on this subject know my mantra, which
always bears repeating:
If your site has content that naturally uses your relevant keyword phrases, and
you follow simple guidelines on how to create your titles and meta tags, your
Web site will rank high.
No gateway pages necessary. No separate pages for separate engines. No keyword
density percentage numbers to give you a headache. (They always give me one!) In
the simplest terms possible: You do not need to reinvent the wheel! Use your
current site's pages to the greatest advantage, and high rankings will come to
you on a silver platter!
I'm sure some of you are shaking your heads and asking, "What if my site doesn't
have much useful content or doesn't use my keyword phrases effectively?
Shouldn't I create gateway pages that do this?"
The answer to this is quite simple. Fix your site! If your site doesn't have
useful content that naturally utilizes the keyword phrases for which you should
be ranking high, then it's missing the essential elements of a good Web site and
needs to be altered accordingly. Not only is this a solid search engine
strategy, but it's also important for getting people to click further into your
site and ideally, for making some sales.
When it comes to providing good content for high rankings, you should focus
mostly on your main page. However, all major inside pages should also be edited
as necessary to ensure that each key area of your business is well represented
in the search engines. If you design your Web pages with these things in mind,
high rankings will be sure to follow.
Contact Jill Whalen by e-mail at jill@highrankings.com, or by phone at
508-309-3037.
=========================================================
Jill Whalen of High Rankings is an internationally recognized
search engine optimization consultant
and editor of the free weekly High Rankings Advisor
search engine marketing
newsletter
She specializes in search engine optimization, SEO consultations and seminars.
Jill's handbook, "The
Nitty-gritty of Writing for the Search Engines" teaches business owners how
and where to place relevant keyword phrases on their Web sites so that they make
sense to users and gain high rankings in the major search engines.
==========================================================
|
|