You
Have More Websites Than You Think You Have: The Importance
of Deep Submission
By: Donald Nelson
If I ask you how many web sites do you have? You may
say “One, yes it is www.mycompany.com “
or “two” in case you have a second organization
or company. When I first began promoting my web sites
I was, like most people, only thinking in terms of one
web address, the url of my main page. And I thought
that this main page was a difficult one to promote because
it was the index page of a magazine that covered a wide
variety of fields (environment, arts, science, politics,
spirituality, etc). How could I optimize a page for
so many keywords, which market could I focus on?
It was only after discussing the subject with another
web master, who had a similar site, that I learned that
the diversity of all the inner pages of my site was
a huge asset. Each of these pages was like a mini-website,
and capable of attracting a multitude of visitors using
a variety of keywords. Part of my ignorance at that
point was due to a lack of accurate tracking data. I
had a simple tracker on the main page that told how
many visits that page was getting, but I had no idea
of what was happening deeper inside the site. Then I
was able to get access to the raw access logs of the
site and using a log analysis tool I began to see the
real picture of what was happening.
I saw that the main page was getting one third of the
total traffic of the site. I found out that one article,
“The Causes of Tropical Deforestation” was
a big hit and consistently getting a lot of traffic.
Other articles were also quite popular, but covering
completely different subjects. It was then that I realized
that I had not one web site, but more than 100 web sites.
What does all this mean in terms of design, optimization
and submission? It means that one has to realize that
people may well enter your site through the “side
door” or the “back door” and you have
to prepare accordingly.
For design, it means that the structure of your pages
and navigation system should invite the people who enter
from the inner pages, to make it to your important pages
(about us, main page, or your order page!). For optimization
it means that you should take more care about the placing
of keywords, description and title tags on all the pages.
Have you ever seen websites where the blue line at the
top of the browser is showing the title of the page
to be “New Page”? Even very good designers
become a little bit sloppy on the inner pages, and though
they do usually manage to put a proper page title on
those pages, they seldom take the trouble to write separate
meta tags for the keywords and descriptions. But as
I learned, these pages are an asset and can be optimized
and promoted to gain more traffic.
The first thing that I did was to redesign my navigation
system to take advantage of this traffic and make sure
that those who entered through the back door would visit
the important departments of the magazine. I also put
a newsletter sign-up form on all the inner pages, and
to this day these pages are bringing in a steady stream
of subscribers to the magazine’s e-mail bulletin.
The next thing I did was to make sure that the inner
pages had proper meta tags, and finally I did a deep
submission of the whole site.
What is a deep submission and why is it necessary?
When you submit the main page of your site to a search
engine, the search engine sends a “spider”
to look at your page and put the data on that page in
the search engines index. Sometimes the spider will
follow the links on your main page and also pick up
some of the inner pages (Google, for example is very
good at this) but sometimes they don’t go deep
enough into the site and only one or two of your pages
are indexed. To get the other pages indexed you have
to submit them all separately, just as if they were
other web sites. However, if you have 100 pages you
can’t submit them on the same day to one search
engine. That would be regarded as spamming. If you submit
one url per day per search engine you will not get into
any problems.
So, think about your site more deeply. Your inner pages
are mini-websites and if prepared and promoted properly
they could increase your traffic and your sales dramatically.
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