Web Site Basics

Web Site Basics

By Clare Lawrence 8th June 2004

The web or internet is an exciting place, but can seem very daunting to the novice web designer.

You want to get a web site up and live, how is it done, and how can it be done cheaply?

Domain Names

The first step is to select a domain name, try and choose a name that is easy to remember, short, and if possible one that describes your website.

Nearly all the obvious domain name have gone, so you may need to use your imagination!

There are many domain name registration services such as my own site www.discountdomainsuk.com on the web. All domain names are created by the Top Level Domain providers such as Nominet in the UK so there is no great advantage in paying over the top for your domain name. Look for a company that offers telephone support, e-mail only can be frustrating.

Web Hosting

Next you will need some space on the web to publish or host your website. If you have a broadband or ADSL connection, you can use this to host your own site. It does of course mean that you can’t switch off your machine.

To point a domain name at a site hosted in this way you need to have a static IP address and look for an IP pointing option in your domain name registrars control panel. This is usually called the domains Zone Records.

Mostly everyone uses a third party hosting company; once again there are loads to choose from including my own service at www.discountdomainsuk.com

Select the hosting package that best matches your requirements and budget. It’s usually best to start with a basic package than upgrade, hosting companies make most of their money by selling you space which you then don’t use.

Your hosting company will provide you with a username and password to allow you to FTP, File Transfer Protocol your site to the hosting space.

If you’re using a hosting company other than your domain name registrar, you will need their Primary and Secondary DNS or Domain Name Settings, which take the form of domain names e.g.

Ns1@asdasdasd.co.uk

Ns0@asdadadsa.co.uk

Web Design

A great package to start out web designing is MS FrontPage; it follows the format of the rest of the Microsoft office suite and is very reasonably priced and easy to pick up.

Once you’ve progressed with FrontPage then a more professional and sophisticated package to try is Macromedia Dreamweaver.

Once you have designed a site then simply select the publishing option, enter the domain name, your user name and password, and your site will FTP to your web-server.

Summary

That’s all there is too it. Getting a website up and live can be done in a matter of minutes, its worth mentioning that a new domain name and DNS changes can take up to 48 hours to get picked up by the worldwide DNS system.

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KeywordRich Domain Names

Keyword-Rich Domain Names

By Jill Whalen – 6/27/2002

The myth of using keyword-rich domains for SEO purposes has been perpetuated for way too long, and quite frankly I’m tired of seeing it written about as if it’s an all-important SEO factor.

See for Yourself

Perform some searches in any spidering search engine and sure, you may very well find keyword-rich domains in the top spots. But upon closer inspection, you’ll see that the same keywords are also in the Title tags of those sites. Title tags *are* very important to high rankings; I daresay that they’re as important as body copy. Many see the keyword-rich domain name, and assume that’s what is causing the high ranking. Yet it’s much more likely that the high ranking is a direct result of the Title tag and/or the body text, along with the other usual SEO suspects.

Look at the Links

And let’s not forget about off-the-page criteria. The reason why some sites are in the top of the results isn’t always readily apparent by just looking at the site in question. Some rank highly simply because there are keywords in the hyperlinks pointing to the site. Google is especially susceptible to this phenomenon, which has been dubbed "Google Bombing" in the Web Blog world. If enough sites link to a site using the specific keyword phrase in the hyperlink, it can have a dramatic effect on rankings. David Gallagher recently interviewed me for his Business 2.0 article entitled "Top of the Heap," where he wrote about his quest to become the number-one site in Google for the phrase "David Gallagher." All he did was ask everyone who read his Web Blog to link to his site using his name in the hyperlink. Once the "Google Dance" for that month was finished, he was number one!

And no, his site does not have "David Gallagher" in the domain name. (As an aside, the sites he was up against were fan sites for the actor David Gallagher from the TV show "Seventh Heaven." You can read David’s article — and my quotes — in the July 2002 Business 2.0 print magazine.)

What About Directories?

With directories such as Yahoo!, it may appear as if keywords in the domain name make a big difference to rankings. After all, the directories are not spidering the words on your pages and don’t have much to go on to determine your position. But you know what? My very unscientific research shows that in actuality, keywords in the Yahoo! title are the more likely reason for top rankings. Remember, those that purchase keyword-rich domain names very often name their site the same thing as their domain name, and submit that phrase to Yahoo! as their title. For instance, a site with the domain of keyword-domains-r-us.com would probably be titled, "Keyword Domains R Us." As with the spidering engines, the words in the title are likely to be what’s boosting those sites in the Yahoo! results, not the domain name.

What the Engines Say

Just to be sure I wasn’t leading you down the wrong path, I asked Tom Wilde, General Manager of Search Services at Lycos, if domain names factored into their ranking algorithm. He told me that they are a factor in the Lycos algorithm, but since they’re so open to being abused, they’re a very small factor. He confirmed that the Title tag and the body text copy were given much more weight than the domain name. However, for those of you who just don’t feel comfortable unless you have keywords in your domain name, Tom did tell me that using a hyphen between the keywords would be your best bet for getting them recognized as separate words.

Don’t Worry About It

Since I’ve optimized hundreds of sites without ever purchasing keyword-rich domain names (and always get high rankings), I’m sticking with my "don’t worry about it" stance! Like the Meta keyword tag, domain names are definitely not something to obsess over. I recommend purchasing the domain names that work best for branding reasons. To me, YourCompany.com name makes a whole lot more sense than your-keywords-here-so-you-can-rank-high.com, no matter how you slice it!

Contact Jill Whalen by e-mail at

jill@highrankings.com, or by phone at 508-309-3037

Article Source: http://www.articlealley.com/http://www.articlealley.com/keywordrich-domain-names-3.html

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