Search Engine Optimization 101

Search Engine Optimization 101

Your website may be top notch but what’s the use of an online presence if no one can find it? In this quick start guide to search engine optimization we’ll review an assortment of tactics to increase your page ranking.

A word from the Author

Before we start looking at these techniques, just know and understand this: don’t expect overwhelming changes to occur over night. Getting higher ranks on search engines through SEO is a meticulous process and takes times to obtain positive results. Don’t be too hasty and more importantly, don’t resort to black hat SEO techniques. It may give you almost instant results but in the long term, the search engine is probably going to flag and blacklist you. You don’t want that. Take it slow, be earnest and wait for the results.

What is SEO?

Search Engine Optimization is the process of increasing the number of visitors by achieving a high position within search results when relevant keywords are searched for. It is common knowledge that people rarely look passed the second or third page of the search results. Optimally you’ll want a first page position or even the first result in the first page. However, to accomplish this, you’ll need to optimize and code accordingly.

Choose the Right Keywords

Choosing the right keywords can be painless or extremely tricky depending upon the scenario. You’d want to avoid the generic ones since it is going to be extremely difficult to optimize for them. Try to pick keywords that are just as specific as they need to be. For example if you are a freelancer based in Melbourne, your optimal keywords would be freelancer Melbourne or web development services Melbourne. Going for the generic freelancer or web development keywords isn’t going to do you any good.

Research your keywords. Know which ones are probably going to be searched for most and go from there.

Focus on the Content

Content always comes first. It doesn’t matter if you perform some dark voodoo to get your site the top place in the results. You’ll still need solid content to back that up since the visitors are going to be leaving pretty quickly if they don’t find what they are looking for.

Having good, relevant content is the most important aspect of SEO. Your content needs to be suitably useful for the people who you’d want to find your site. You need the content to make sense to the reader. The content needs to appeal to people and make them come back for more.

Having original content is very important. Don’t expect to just copy-paste some text from another site, throw in some keywords and call it a day. You need lots and lots of original content with the keywords in the content itself. If people searching for jQuery come to your page, they expect something related to jQuery to be found on your page. Throw in relevant keywords within the content of the page. But don’t just spam them sporadically like with tweeting. Your keywords need to be in the appropriate position and of appropriate density. Throw too much keywords around in the content and you are going to be flagged for spam.

Just as important as having original content is having regularly updated content. Fresh content will bring in people and bots alike which in turn will let you get your site indexed with much more frequency which will in turn return fresher results to the search results. But don’t update just for the sake of updating. Bots have little incentive to come back if all the updates you perform are only marginally incremental. Just try to have something fresh for the visitors and you should be alright.

Get a Proper Domain Name

This is a hard to obtain part. If at all possible, get a domain name with the keywords in the domain name itself. www.webdevelopmentaustralia.com is going to have a lot more weight with search engines than www.somecompany.com. Obtaining a domain with the proper keywords should be difficult though.

Domains with the keyword as part of it do look ugly but keep in mind that keywords in the domain name carry very great weight.

Create Pretty URLs

Using a URL scheme where parameters are passed as a query string through the URL make it difficult for search engine spiders to look through your site. More importantly, when you are passing the session ID as part of the URL you are essentially creating a separate URLs for each session with almost the same content. This is probably going to get you penalized for duplicate content. We’ll talk about that later on.

Human readable, bot parsable URLs are generally preferred over traditional parameter filled URLs. www.somecompany.com/games/2009/callofduty6 is generally preferred to www.somecompany.com/index.php?cat=game&year=2009&name=callofduty6. When crafting pretty URLs try to avoid days, months and years. www.somecompany.com/blog/seobasics is preferred to www.somecompany.com/blog/2009/09/09/seobasics

Dish out Relevant Page Titles

The text within the title tags: the text that is displayed on your browser’s title bar is amongst the most important elements of a page. Actually I’d venture so far as to say it’s the most important part of your page after the actual content itself.

Make sure the title is unique for each page and contains relevant keywords. With regards to the title’s structure itself Page Title -> Site Name is vastly preferred to Site Name -> Page Title. There are no reasons for you to feel the title needs to be as terse as possible but on the other hand don’t try to make it too long. 60 characters is the accepted limit.

Also whilst using keywords in your title text, please don’t try to spin it too much. If the search bot sees too many keywords, you are going to be flagged for spam. Remember, the title text is what appears on the search engine result page. You need to convey as much information as possible without sounding too spammy.

Tweak the Meta Elements

The meta elements used to matter eons ago when search engine bots were less sophisticated and relied on the meta description and keyword attributes to help them. When this was taken advantage of by spammers, search bots started giving less importance to meta elements.

Having said that, it doesn’t hurt to include the meta description element. This is the text used in the description of your site. Try to limit yourselves to 200 characters, keep it simple, grammatically correct and include relevant keywords. Keep the descriptions unique for each page.

Optimize the Page Structure

Layouts vary. Positions of your sidebar or navigation vary too. But with respect to the core markup itself, it’s best to put your main content as close to the body tag as possible. If your other elements have to be placed before the content, use CSS to position it before the content instead of moving the markup itself before the content.

Footers are wonderful places to link to other content on your site. Don’t just ignore your footer. Place links to recent posts or popular posts in the footer. Having said that, try to not make it look like a link farm.

Use Appropriate Tags

Use the appropriate tags when developing a site. The heading tags are widely under used. People are instead using generic div tags to encapsulate important information. This is wrong. Strictly looking at the markup alone, the heading tags lets us see the informational hierarchy of the page and this applies for the bots too. Use h1 for the title of the post, h2 for each section’s heading and so on.

If you are including some code, use the pre tag. If you think some information is important feel free to make it bold. Bots tend to place value on bolded text just like we immediately see what the bolded text. As always, use it sparingly. You don’t want to be flagged for spam.

Craft Proper Links

When creating links, try to stay away from the generic read me text. It’s not very SEO friendly. Try to include a part of the child link’s title to the anchor text itself. This is not as hard as it sounds. For example, instead of using read more, use read more about seo. It doesn’t take that much time to change but yields a lot of SEO benefits.

While linking to page on your site, try to make the anchor text as focused as possible. Portfolio is a better candidate than What I’ve Done. The latter sounds more catchy but the former represents better SEO.

Link Internally


Courtesy of Opera

Don’t be scared to interlink the pages in your site. If the number of pages is small, putting it all up on the navigation bar is the way to go. If yours is a big site with a ton of pages, just put all the main category pages on the navigation bar. One way or the other, make sure your pages can be found through links on your site.

Thinking outside the box, you could just as easily include a popular post section on each page. This way you get the interlinking SEO needs and at the same time your visitors can get to see some of the popular posts on your site. It’s a win-win situation.

Make your site Accessible

Remember, search engines are meant to bring people to your site. Which means your site is primarily for human parsing. Design with them in mind.

Include alt attributes for all images on your site. This is not only good practice but also a necessity if you want valid markup. If it’s appropriate include relevant keywords in the alt text. Remember, search bots can’t really look at a picture and decide whether it’s relevant or not. Appropriate keywords lets it make that decision. As always don’t go overboard on the text. Keep it simple and to the point.

Please don’t hide your content behind obnoxious JavaScript or Flash. Spiders can’t go through those to get to your content. And without content, the entire point of your site fails. Miserably. Avoid this unless you absolutely have to.

Avoid Duplicate Content

Google is very strict about duplicate content and severely penalizes sites which do so. This is regardless of whether the content is on different domains. If the same, exact content appears on different pages, the page last indexed is going to be penalized.

This is mostly common sense: don’t have the same content on each page. The footer text can be repeated with no penalties but not if your footer text is big enough to qualify as an article.

Also, your site may dish out alternative print capable pages which might be seen by the search engine as duplicate content. In this case, use robotx.txt to disallow indexing on these pages.

Use robots.txt

Create a robots.txt file to allow/disallow spiders from certain parts of your site. You just create a file named robots.txt and place it at the root of your web site and all co-operating spiders will respect the rules you’ve mentioned in the file.

You can do everything from disallowing all bots from accessing a specific folder to disallowing bots from a specific search engine. Read up more about it here.

Create a Site Map


Courtesy of Opera

A site map lets the search engine know about the existence of pages it might not have discovered through spidering through your site normally. Ideally, you should create a normal HTML site map for your users and an XML site map for the search bots. If at all possible, link both.

Avoid Frames

I can’t say this enough: frames are bad. Both from a web developer perspective and a seo perspective. Content inside frames are virtually invisible to search engines.

More disturbingly, even if one frame of the page gets indexed and is returned as result the result would take you to just the frame without all of its supporting frames inside the parent document. Frames cause undue confusion to people and virtually stop spiders from crawling through your site. Unless you absolutely have to, don’t use frames.

Reduce Code Bloat

And by this I mean 2 things:

Move your JavaScript and CSS to their own separate files. Spiders have no business with them and it is best practice to remove them from the core markup. Create separate files and include them later.

No presentational markup. This is not only SEO friendly but also best practice. Your HTML markup is no place to define how the content should look and similarly the bots have no reason to know how your site is programmed to look. Format the document to your heart’s content in your CSS and leave the markup pristine and clean.

Avoid using a Flash Only Navigation

This is common sense but a lot of designers and developers tend to overlook this. Bots can’t crawl through flash based content and if the only navigation is flash based, the bot has nothing to crawl through.

If your entire site is flash based, it makes sense to create a text only version for spiders and bots to crawl through and find your content. It’ll take extra time to create that but without a text version to fall back on your site will be virtually invisible to search engines.

Use a Common Domain Naming Scheme

Decide on a common naming scheme and stick to it. Personally I prefer www.somename.com but others may like http://somename.com. Decide on a format and stick to it. Use URLs of this format while linking other pages on your site.

Also decide on a whether trailing slashes are required or not. Search engines considers www.somename.com/seo and www.somename.com/seo/ to be different URLs and there is a possibility you are going to be penalized for duplicate content. To get around this, modify your .htaccess file to redirect to the format you like with a 301 redirect. This tells the bot that the page has been moved permanently.

Submit your Site

If your site is newly hatched and hasn’t been indexed yet, it’s a good idea to get the ball rolling by submitting it to search engines and inspiration galleries. This not only let the search engines get to your site early but also brings in a ton of new traffic and back links.

Do not resort to link submitters unless you absolutely trust it. A lot of these submit your links to a number of link farms, an activity which might get you penalized. Just stick to the big search engines and galleries.

Check for Broken Links

Nothing stops spiders dead in their tracks quicker than broken links specially in the home page. Check thoroughly for broken links to ensure the bots have something to start crawling through your site.

Create a proper 404 page in case the search engine leads the visitor to an old URL. Include appropriate links in the error page.

Get Linked by Peer Sites

This is the massive step that is going to take you a lot of time to get right. Ideally, you’d want a lot of sites linking to your site and your posts . Each link to your site is considered as a vote to your site by the linking site. Getting inbound links from sites catering to the same user base is extremely vital since the current way of ranking relies on the fact that if a lot of sites link back to you then the site must contain relevant information.

Unfortunately, this is a long, arduous and never ending task and only one thing can assure you this: good content. Provide good content and sites will automatically start linking to your content. The more sites link to you, the higher your rank is going to be.

Do not resort to illegal means to get back links. This includes link farms and so. Doing anything like this is going to get you kicked out pretty quickly. Accepted means of getting back links includes reciprocal linking where a site places a link to another site in exchange for that site linking back to the original site.

The way I prefer is to write for Net Tuts. Each article I write nets me a back link and Net Tuts being as large as it is, these contribute heavily to my rankings. Plus it brings in a ton of interested new visitors. :)

Use Appropriate Tools

Tools like Google Analytics helps you analyze and track a number of data including from where your traffic comes from, which pages visitors look at, how much time they spend at each page, how many pages and so on. Use this data to fine tune your site.

Don’t forget Google WebMaster tools. It lets you look at the search queries which bring visitors to your page, whether the spider encountered any error while trying to crawl through your site, which sites link to you and more. Invaluable when you are trying to optimize.

Avoid Black Hat Techniques

I can’t say this enough: don’t try to cheat. Sooner or later, most probably sooner than you think, you are going to be caught and kicked out with no chance of getting listed again. This includes legit sounding techniques like link farms or cross linking to keyword stuffing and keyword dilution.

Just don’t do it.

Wait for the Results

At this point, you’ve hopefully done everything right. The only thing you need to do is sit back, generate some quality content and wait for the rankings to increase. Be patient, this doesn’t happen over night but it definitely happens once you have the basics nailed down.

Continue Learning

These are of course only the tip of the huge iceberg that is search engine optimization. Here are some links to get you started:


Siddharth is Siddharth on Codecanyon
Tags: seo
Note: Want to add some source code? Type <pre><code> before it and </code></pre> after it. Find out more
  • Evan Jones

    Hooray for SEO articles! Good introduction for beginners.

  • http://laranzjoe.blogspot.com lawrence77

    gonna read… ;)

    Thanks for the tut…

  • http://dustinlakin.com Dustin Lakin

    Great post, thanks for creating such an in depth article. A good reference to use while creating a new website.

  • http://www.khwebdesign.net Kent

    “Craft Proper Links” – this one is key! I had a site which was following all of the other rules in this tut except that one and it was only performing moderately. Shortly after crafting proper links the site jumped up within the top 5 search results on most search engines. Do not overlook this step!

  • Mohammad Atif

    Excellent work .. Very descriptive ..

  • http://dealrobo.com NetChaos

    Nice to SEO articles on nettuts. Would like to see an SEO article from a developer perspective.

    • http://www.ScottMunn.com Scott

      Considering this article talks much about crafting proper URLs, avoiding code bloating, following accessibility standards and using proper page structure, I’d say this is extremely developer-focused.

  • http://www.davehanas.com Dave Hanas

    Great article. I agree with just about everything you said. I do, however, have one comment on the flash issue.

    While I agree it’s good practice not to build flash-based navigation, flash-based sites are indexable by Google (http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2008/06/improved-flash-indexing.html) and have been for about a year. Building a text only version of your site only for spiders and bots runs the risk of getting penalized by Google for duplicate content.

    A better idea to consider is to use SWFobject, or another SWF replacement method.

    Thanks again for the great article!

    • Niklas Br

      It is only indexable by Google though. Your internal search engine (Such as WordPress’, Drupal’s or other CMS’s), Bing, Yahoo or other search engines will have trouble understanding the navigation.

  • http://www.freshclickmedia.com Shane

    Is this the first article on nettuts about SEO? I can’t remember there being another.

    Interesting article. From what I’ve seen, SEO requires ongoing work, and there are no quick fixes, no silver bullets.

    Though I did see an ad the other day from a local design company that ‘guaranteed first page google results for every site they produced’. :)

    • Jonathan

      I always wonder about people who make guarantees like that. As this article points out, and even Google themselves, there are no magical little tricks when it comes to this stuff.

      I have personally being doing a lot of reading on this topic recently. It’s something our clients are asking about – some of them have been enticed by people making crazy guarantees. In fact, one of them actually made changes to a client’s site, which included adding hundreds of keywords to the bottom of the page in a small font.

      Seems to come down to one main thing – you need to have content people are interested in.

    • http://net.tutsplus.com Jeffrey Way

      I think there might have been one other, but I can’t remember.

    • http://blog.davidrojas.net David Rojas

      Yep, I wrote one not long ago, but it was published on Themeforest.

      • http://www.designforsite.com Lee Lonitz

        Hi guys, sorry to be late to the conversation on SEO 101 here! Yeah, any company that “guarantees” you top ranking is fooling you. Multi-billion dollar Google depends heavily on advertising revenue and, thus, wouldn’t make it *that* easy for SEO firms to know the secret to their algorithm (which changes more frequently these days than before).

        I’ve gotten numerous clients telling me about the same question as you guys and I always respond that the best way to go is to NOT game the system but play by the rules for the best return on your effort (and money) in the long-run. It would really *suck* for a client to sink, say $5000, for black hat efforts to be ‘guaranteed’ first-rank for maybe 30-60 days, only for Google to discover being gamed and yank the rank from the client’s website.

        The article above has a lot of good info and definitely underscores the point that SEO takes good content, time and a lot of effort to get up to and stay at the top. If someone promises you top-ranking for little effort, you can probably be guaranteed one thing: an empty wallet.

  • http://webmuch.com Aayush

    Great tips for beginners….It’ll be good to have more articles on SEO…I wonder what the big firms that guarantee good rankings do, except for linking….

    great read anyway….

    thanks!!

  • http://www.jlapitan.com jlapitan

    nice article.. tnx!

    just want to share another link about SEO

    http://www.seowizz.net/2009/03/seo-tutorials.html

  • AK

    kewl

  • http://butenas.com Ignas

    Great job! I like to see more about SEO. Keep working! :)

  • http://www.fatlizardmedia.com Juan C Rois

    Great article Siddharth, many thanks!
    I constantly find myself writing code non stop, only to realize later that I have to go back and change things just because I did not kept in the back of my mind how important SEO is.
    Especially now that websites come out left and right. One important thing to remember is that you are not only trying to get Google (and others) to index and rank your site but also try to make your site beat other sites for that precious 1-10 search result.
    Agree with the author, Don’t try to cheat, because in my opinnion you’ll only hurt yourself in the long run and could cause Searc Engines to make it harder on everybody else.

    Thanks for the article.

    • http://www.ssiddharth.com Siddharth
      Author

      I am glad you liked it.

  • http://www.bittrack.it/ Raspo

    This is maybe the best SEO article I’ve ever read.

    …And where did you find those images? They are genius! XD

  • http://www.yorickpeterse.com/ Yorick Peterse
  • http://www.agent-seo.com Jacob Stoops

    Great list of tips. This is a really good starting point for anyone looking to do SEO on their site, or for any SEO pro to brush up on their skill set!

  • http://nathany.com/developer Nathan Youngman

    Fyi, Google is actually are indexing Flash nowadays, using a headless Flash player that Adobe created just for that purpose. If using Flash, alternate navigation is still a good idea though.

    Thx for the article.

    • http://www.ssiddharth.com Siddharth
      Author

      Thanks. I’ll cover this in a future article.

  • http://www.ScottMunn.com Scott

    Thanks for this article, it was great, and though I love the tutorials on here, it’s great to see a very in-depth article on a topic like this.

  • http://twitter.com/serjeniu Sergiu Naslau

    the sad part in seo is that people tend to depend to much on plugins and to little in the actual optimization process. good article.

  • http://www.ScottMunn.com Scott

    Using “pretty” URLs actually isn’t that much better according to Google. This article talks about how a query string such as search.php?q=keyword is far better than search/keyword/ since Google can interpret the query string, recognize that this is a search file, and perhaps even try other searches to index more content. Using clean URLs doesn’t give Google much information on the context of the page.

    http://www.seroundtable.com/archives/018319.html

    Though . . I will say, clean URLs are far better since they’re easier for end users to read and understand, which can be even more important than proper SEO.

  • http://nucleargorilla.com Nuclear Gorilla

    I like the SEO tips.
    Thanks for the pointers.

  • http://ccpmultimedia.com Connor Crosby

    Very nice explanation. I am sort of new in SEOs and this has helped me A LOT! Thanks!

  • Martijn397

    How well does placing links to your own site in the comment sections of big sites work?

    for example: placing a link right here as a comment.

    does this help with link building or doesnt it help at all?

    ps. Great post! learned a great deal!

  • http://www.webhostdesignpost.com/webpost/searchengineoptimizationseo.html WebHostDesignPost

    Cool article, definitely the basics of SEO, each section could be a whole article by itself.

  • http://www.umoor.eu/blog/ umoor

    Nice list Siddharth. Each items could have been populated with some related links. Hope to see some more SEO articles like this one on tuts.

    • chirst burnet

      oh my god,,
      i scared looking up your avatar.
      its really spooky.

  • Ant

    As from customer point, I don’t like very long names in title.

  • http://www.hdesignsplus.com Hooman Asgari

    Finally a new article on SEO from Envato we trust, Now thats something to read more than once.
    Thanks Envato

  • Brett

    Wow, this is a fantastic article. Much needed right now. Thanks for the advice!

  • http://www.rizqtech.net rizq

    Nice !

  • http://technetic.org Paul

    a lot of good points to focus on. very nice. maybe we could see an SEO 102?

    • http://www.ssiddharth.com Siddharth
      Author

      Anything specific you want to see?

  • http://eetemplates.com Marcus Neto

    I just ranted something fierce over at EETemplates.com about yet another email sent from yahoo, gmail or hotmail hawking SEO services to me. I hate these spammers. And lo and behold you all write a kick butt article on SEO. Just linked to it…

    http://eetemplates.com/index.php/blog/comments/moron_seo/

    • http://www.ssiddharth.com Siddharth
      Author

      Heh. As you said in the page linked above, you can’t really just buy a front page spot. You need to put a lot of work into it and actively try to maintain that spot.

  • http://myfacefriends.com Myfacefriends

    nice article.. very helpful…

  • http://jasonstockman.com Jason

    Well written article Siddharth, can we expect SEO 102?

    I’ve found that many people who are new to SEO get discouraged when their site doesn’t rank after 2 weeks and then quickly resort to instant gratification via Blackhat. For anyone considering this path, let me reaffirm here that whitehat SEO techniques are the only option for serious webmasters who are concerned with the long-term.

    • http://www.ssiddharth.com Siddharth
      Author

      Since it seems a lot of people are interested about SEO, you can certainly expect more about it.

  • Alizain

    thanks for your brilliant suggestions. I help me a lot to bring me site at top page on Search Engine

  • http://toopixel.ch Webdesign Genève, Toopixel

    Great article here about optimization, this is really the Whitehat 101, I think the linking section would require a self article on itself and there are also plenty of other SEO technics to do for a website. A bit of Greyhat things in a SEO campaign are not too bad also.

  • http://www.foxleymarketingsolutions.com/blog Karl Foxley

    A really nice post and well worth a retweet.

  • http://frankyaguilar.com Franky

    Well done!

  • chirst burnet

    good job…

  • amnesia7

    Great article. Here’s a link to an seo article I found interesting in case its of use to anyone else:

    http://www.soapmedia.co.uk/seo-layout-for-a-webpage/

  • http://svanbergsson.com Siggi Arni

    Good post, its a healthy read for anyone who is into SEO.
    I also recommend reading Matt Cutts blog:

    http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/

    He is mr.SEO at Google and is always posting good tips for proper SEO and Google.

    • http://www.kiran13xtreme.co.uk Kiran

      Matt Cutts blog looks interesting…. and again a great article about SEO I need to start adding stuff i always avoided them but it seems OK

  • http://www.hooktstudios.com Léo Renaud-Allaire

    Interesting read, thanks for the article.

  • http://www.bgdna.com/ technology review

    its really helpful for us

  • http://www.foxyturkey.com Yigit Ozdamar

    Woow i wasn’t know that if i’ll not decide a stable domain name format, it will be a problem for me about SEO.

    Thanks dude.

  • http://pidov.com/ Ivan Pidov

    I totally disagree “Use h1 for the title of the post, h2 for each section’s heading and so on.”

    It’s well known that you can have only one “h1″ tag per page. Now imagine that your home page has two or more articles listed with an excerpt. This means you have two or more H1 tags on one page, which is unacceptable.

    My advice is two wrap the title of your site in H1 tag and the article’s titles in H2 or whatever you think suits best

    All the best,
    Ivan Pidov

    • Chopper Hotdogg

      Correcto.

      The accepted usage should be the header of a page (such as the logo) is H1. This will only ever appear once, no matter which page you are on. Headers/titles of sections should be H2, then sub-titles should be H3.

      So for this page the NetTuts logo will be wrapped in H1, “Search Engine Optimization 101″ should be H2, then all the subtitles (“A word from the Author”, “What Is SEO?”, etc) should be H3.

  • Hasse

    Avoiding Blackhat techniques or not is all a question of the purpose. I do a lot of BH and it’s all depending on the purpose. If I run a site or blog for short time purpose I will get to the top of Google in hard competive niches with less effort and shorter time through BH techniques. It sure won’t stay there for any longer time but if the focus only are to get a site up and sty for a few weeks I wouldn’t care to even bother about WH methods. Keyword stuffing and linkfarming i just plain stupid. Cloaking is ok in many cases but one need to know what one are doing and one need to have the propper tool for it. Else it will result in prblem, unless you run any major site like New York Times which is cloaking and still getting away with it.

    Another point of view should be to look at simple static sites. They often look like crap but do get indexed verry well. If choosing any blog platform, go for WordPress rather then Joomla or any other. They get indexed verry well too and that’s mainly due to a cleaner output of the HTML code. Or rather… Clean code no matter what platform, or if coding the site by hand is probably the best tips anyone can give for sucessfull onsite optimization.

    Thanks for a good article but there are tons of more to write about this subject. Still a good start. ;)

  • http://www.danielwhyte.com Daniel Whyte

    Thanks, i was looking for something like this lastweek, I’m still looking for a more in-depth article on Using relevant tags ie. for different things, as i was always one of those silly people using generic div’s

  • http://webdevebooks.com abhi

    Pretty great and usable techniques !!
    thank you !!

  • James

    Thnx for the post.

  • http://www.mynameisjay.com Jay

    It’s all stuff I continually use in practice, but its always fun to read a refresher article to make sure I’m still in check. Good post!

  • http://www.ballardcreative.com James Ballard

    There’s just no replacement for great content.

    • http://www.ssiddharth.com Siddharth
      Author

      Truer words haven’t been uttered. :)