How Do Search Engines Work
It is
the search engines that finally bring your
website to the notice of the prospective customers. Hence it is
better to know how these search engines actually work and how
they present information to the customer initiating a
search.
There
are basically two types of search engines. The first is by
robots called crawlers or spiders.
Search
Engines use
spiders to index websites. When you submit your website
pages to a search engine by completing their required
submission page, the search engine spider will index your
entire site. A ‘spider’ is an automated program that is run
by the search engine system. Spider visits a web site, read
the content on the actual site, the site's
Meta tags and also follow the links
that the site connects. The spider then returns all that
information back to a central depository, where the data is
indexed. It will visit each link you have on your website
and index those sites as well. Some spiders will only index
a certain number of pages on your site, so don’t create a
site with 500 pages!
The
spider will periodically return to the sites to check for
any information that has changed. The frequency with which
this happens is determined by the moderators of the search
engine.
A
spider is almost like a book where it contains the table of
contents, the actual content and the links and references
for all the websites it finds during its search, and it may
index up to a million pages a day.
Example:
Excite, Lycos,
AltaVista and Google.
When
you ask a search engine to locate information, it is
actually searching through the index which it has created
and not actually searching the Web. Different search engines
produce different rankings because not every search engine
uses the same algorithm to search through the indices.
One
of the things that a search engine algorithm scans for is
the frequency and location of keywords on a web page, but it
can also detect artificial keyword stuffing or
spamdexing. Then the algorithms analyze the way that
pages link to other pages in the Web. By checking how pages
link to each other, an engine can both determine what a page
is about, if the keywords of the linked pages are similar to
the keywords on the original page.
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