SEO - Google Sitemaps Explained

April 20, 2008 – 7:26 pm

Once again I seem to be writing about . The reason keeps cropping up in these articles is that:

is a always coming up with new ideas to keep one step ahead of the competition.
are the most important way that most webses generate new .
is the most important of the .

One of Googles latest is a method of allowing web- and website owners to create specially formatted sitemap documents that inform and direct the robots. These sitemaps are a quick and easy way to keep your site constantly indexed and updated within the database and to ensure that all of your sites pages are crawled by the robot. The program is called ‘ Sitemaps’ and this is what themselves have to say about it:
Sitemaps is an experiment in web crawling. Using Sitemaps to inform and direct our , we hope to expand our coverage of the web and improve the time to inclusion in our index. By placing a Sitemap-formatted file on your webserver, you enable our to find out what pages are present and which have recently changed, and to crawl your site accordingly. Sitemaps is intended for all web site owners, from those with a page to of ever-changing pages. If any of the following are true, then you may be especially interested in Sitemaps:
? You want to crawl more of your .
? You want to be able to tell when content on your site changes.
What is a Sitemap?
The Sitemap requires the sitemap to be present on your web-server in the form of an . XML is simple code like HTML and it is used to syndicate your content to all . You may have seen it in use for syndicating via RSS to a news-reader. In the case of Sitemaps, the is syndicated to and their software uses it to ensure that the pages of your website are crawled and indexed.
Before the introduction of Sitemaps, website-owners had to rely on the robot to find all of a websites links in order to make sure that all the pages were indexed. The introduction of Sitemaps now gives website owners some control over this process. In additon, the XML format of the sitemap document also gives you control over several key variables.
If we examine a very simple chunk of code from a basic sitemap we can see the variables we now have control over.
http://www.yourdomainname.com/
1.0
2005-07-06T18:00:00+00:00
weekly
This part of code describes one page of a website, so a typical Sitemap document would contain similar chunks of code for every page contained within the website. As you can see each web page has 4 variables:
LOCATION - Simply the URL of the web page.
- A number from 0.0 to 1.0 allowing you to set the of a particular page within your website. This number is a relative setting and relates only to those pages within your site. It allows you to instruct to pay more attention to particular key pages within your website.
LAST MODIFIED - This tells when your were last modified so preventing the robot from having to index pages that haven’t changed since its last visit.
CHANGE FREQUENCY - This allows you to tell how often the content of a page is likely to change. You can set it to never, yearly, monthly, weekly, daily, hourly and always.
Click here for more information on the XML Protocol used by Google Sitemaps
How do I create a Sitemap?
There are a number of ways to create a Sitemap document for your website.
The simplest but least controllable way is to use an online XML generator that will spider the pages in your website, and automatically create the XML file for you. With most you then have to upload the file to your web-server and inform of its presence. There are plenty of these scripts popping up and many of them are completely free. Select this link for a
The main disadvantage to using these online generators is that they need to be recreated each time you add new pages to your website. This won’t be a problem for many website owners who rarely add new pages, but for those who are constantly adding new pages another approach may be better.
If you would like a little more control over the various parameters stored within your Sitemap then a script that you configure and then upload to your web-server may be the answer for you. These are written in various scripting languages such as PHP or Perl and give you more control over your Sitemap. They do require some knowledge of scripting and installation to get them working which is beyond the scope of this article. Many however can be set up to run at regular intervals and not only spider your complete site and automatically generate your XML Sitemaps document but also upload it to the relevant place on your web-server and ping to tell them that the sitemap exists.
Finally you could use Googles own Sitemap generator which is a script and takes a little more knowledge to install and configure on your web-server. It also requires that 2.2 is installed on the server. Select this link for more information on Googles Sitemap Generator
Note: These automatic Sitemap generators work by following the internal links within your website, any orphaned pages that are not linked to will not be included in your sitemap.
How do I submit my Sitemap to ?
Whichever method you use to generate your Sitemaps document, you then need to submit it to . Most of the online generators and scripts will either do this for you or give you an option to do it once your has been uploaded.
First, you should create a Sitemaps Account (which requires you to have a Account). This account enables to provide you with useful status and statistical information. The My Sitemaps page lets you know if there are problems with your Sitemap or with any of the URLs listed in it. Your Sitemaps account will also allow you to re-submit your Sitemaps document when you make changes to it.
Once your Sitemaps account is set up simply use the online forms to inform of the location of your new Sitemaps document and your site will soon be indexed.
Summary
Sitemaps give website owners the opportunity to inform about all the pages of their website. It should ensure that no pages are missed and also allows a certain degree of control over the relative importance of individual pages. Simply generating a Sitemaps document won’t necessarily give you higher rankings within the as you will still be competing with other websites for those top spots. Both on page Optimisation and off-page promotion will still be essential. However, sitemaps make sure all your pages are crawled and indexed quickly by , and may therefore give you a competitive advantage over those websites that don’t have a Sitemap.
Alan Cole runs http://www.pixelwave.co.uk, a one-person web design studio. His aim is to provide cost effective website design production and maintenance by offering professional web solutions that stand out from the crowd. Increasingly his work involves website promotion and Search Engine Optimisation as well as training courses on all aspects of web design and promotion.

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