Search Engine Themes
The concept of themes was first brought up
by Brett Tabke, webmaster of Search Engine
World and a search engine optimization
expert, in an article discussing search
engine themes published in his
newsletter. He claimed that search engines
are now widely using "themes" as a key part
of their ranking system, and that adapting
them is an important aspect of search engine
optimization.
What exactly does this theme stuff mean?
The answer is pretty simple. The common,
traditional point of view is that search
engines rank pages separately. The theme
thinking is that search engines have now
begun to rank sites instead of pages, that
they combine all the pages in a single site
into one big "page". This would mean that
optimizing a single page for a single
keyword would no longer cut it - you'd have
to optimize your whole site instead of just
that one page.
To optimize your site for themes, you'll
need to weed out content that is not related
to your site's main subject. If you have a
site about pets, but there's also some pages
about Formula 1 driving on the site, you'll
need to move the F1 pages elsewhere so that
the SE's recognize your site as being highly
relevant to the keyword "pets" (and other
pet-related keywords) and that the F1 pages
don't confuse the ranking system. You'll
also need to make sure that your most
important keywords appear not just in one
highly optimized page, but in all of the
pages on your site, in all of your META
tags, in your content and often in your
headings and titles.
Does this stuff really work? I'm not sure.
Brett seems to be serious about this, and he
should know what he's talking about when it
comes to promotion. Also, some other people
have also reportedly been successful by
converting their sites into "theme-based".
Because of these reports, I decided to try a
little experiment of my own.
I added a H2 tag at the top of each page
and used CSS to reduce the size of the tags.
Each H2 tag was identical, short (ab. four
words) and contained the keyword I was
hitting at in the beginning of the tag. I
had the keyword in every title of every page
(the page titles were partly similar to each
other, but not completely). I made sure that
the keyword appeared in most of the META
tags on my pages and at least once or twice
in nearly every article. I also used the
keyword in the link text of just about every
page. The site used in the experiment had
around 30 pages, every page was submitted to
the engines and verified that it did indeed
get into the database.
That, I figured, was the way I should
nail the theme algorithm. So I went ahead,
submitted and.. got killed. I focused my
search engine optimization experiment on
Altavista and Google. On Altavista, I did
not see any positive effect at all, but
since AV has recently been pretty unfriendly
towards me, I didn't lose much. On Google,
not only did I fail to see any positive
results, but I lost some nice rankings that
were delivering pretty good traffic. To sum
it all up, this experiment left a bad taste
in my mouth.
Before anyone starts jumping to any
conclusions, I'm not saying Brett and
everyone else is wrong and I'm right. I'm
saying that my tests failed to show any
positive results with the approach I used.
My testings weren't very extensive, and it
is possible that I misunderstood what Brett
was trying to say, or that I just overdid it
with the H2's. It's also possible that the
engines have dropped or greatly altered
their 'theme'-algorithms since Brett first
reported about it in the summer. I wish the
results of this experiment would have been
different, but I feel that I have to 'call 'em
as I see 'em', even if I don't like what I
see.
But even as the experiment failed, I do
think that the principal thinking behind
'themes' is sound, and might well be
something that will gain weight in search
engine algorithms in the future.
So, my recommendation about the subject
would be: If you're going to convert your
site into theme-based, don't just jump in
head first. Do some experiments, and if you
decide to use the 'theme'-approach, don't
risk everything on it: In addition to using
the theme-approach, optimize every page well
for a different keyword. |