Making Your Website Robot-Friendly
Robot Friendly? What is a robot and why should I make my website friendly to him?
Robots (also called spiders) are programs developed by Google and other search engine companies which visit your website daily and gather information from your site. These are welcome guests and must have access to your site if you want to appear well in the search engines.
Not all websites are robot-friendly. How is that? The worst websites are those which do not have any content at all. They may appear to have content (in images), but there is no actual text on the page. Some of these websites are nicely designed and have text in the graphics. However, robots are not human and cannot read text in graphics. See this nicely designed site. It only has text in the pictures. If you were a robot, you would see nothing! That is unfortunate.
We have clients that used to have websites such as these. They paid good money for a nicely designed site, only to have it never do anything in the search engines. We are able to take sites like the one above and maintain the design, yet give the robots some content that they can read.
What about Content?
Your first page is most important. If you prevent robots from getting to the content on your first page or your first page has content, but the menu is all images, you are asking for trouble.
First, is your site made in such a way that your main content is not on the first page? Have you heard of a “splash” page? It is either a graphic animation or timed initial page that lacks in content. Here is an example of a site with a splash page. Notice that after 5 seconds, the initial page goes to the most content-oriented page. While this is not the worst example, it is not good. The robots do not wait 5 seconds. They will either travel through the links on the first page or bounce right off the site. The only thing salvaging this site is that they have a link to the home page on their splash page.
Second, I find home pages with decent content. However, the links to internal pages are all graphics or complicated scripts. Robots cannot follow graphics and still stumble through the scripts. Here is a website that virtually blocks the robots from crawling into the internal pages. These things are not always noticeable to those who do not know coding. However, a webmaster should be able to identify them. In this particular example. The look can remain exactly the same if they just used some robot-friendly coding for their links.
Third, do you have a lot of content on your site? Many people do not like to see content on their site. Many people devour the content and will read through it all. From the statistics/analytics that I have seen, most people spend at least 3-4 minutes reading through the material. Do not be afraid of content. It is the ONLY way you will get good rankings and tons of traffic. One of my favorite examples of a site which has tons of traffic and is one of the most prominent dating sites is www.match.com. When you go to their site, you will see primarily graphics. Scroll down the page. Notice the content? This is huge!
Let’s visit another highly competitive website, www.myweddingfavors.com. Scroll down their page. Look at all of the links to all of the internal pages. This site is HUGE on content.
Content is for your visitors first, robots second!
Let’s face it, robots do not purchase your products. They simply crawl your content. The more content you have, the more traffic you will gain. Give the robots plenty of content. However, when you write your content, do so in a way that it sells your product or gives your visitors the information they seek. So, when you have content on your site, think about your visitors then the robots.
This week (September 2, 2008), Google released Google Chrome. It is a new browser that will compete with Internet Explorer, FireFox and Safari. Here is a quick overview of what I think about Chrome.
RSS Feeds: What are they and how do I use them?


So, you own a PC, a generic computer saving you hundreds of dollars over the Apple Macintosh. This post is not about bashing Macs, I like them, but it is about demonstrating a new development in the world of website editing that makes my life a whole lot easier (and of some of my clients).
