This may be several questions loaded into one, but here goes...
Basically I just want the search engine to return relevant results. For the purposes of our business, the terms in the title tag are absolutely the most critical, and we have taken great care in selecting those terms. So here is where I get puzzled.
www.residential-landscape-lighting-design.com/search/search.asp
Run a search on "mood lighting." You will see that the first result contains this term only once, in the footer. And the footer has been excluded, using the ZOOMSTOP and ZOOMRESTART tags. (See page source.) So that alone makes no sense to me. But then you have to go down to result #18 before you get anything close to relevant. (And we boosted the importance of the Title tag to the maximum, +5)
Now search "mood lights." Here the results are much better overall, though some are still puzzling. But you see results 4, 5 and 6 all have the exact term of the previous seach "mood lighting" in the Title. Why didn't these appear in the previous search?
So if you have any suggestions about why the search engine is still searching the footer (and in fact giving it a great deal of weight), or why the results are coming out so skewed, or how to improve all this, please let me know!
thanks,
--
Aaron Lozier
www.rlldesign.com
aaron@rlldesign.com
Basically I just want the search engine to return relevant results. For the purposes of our business, the terms in the title tag are absolutely the most critical, and we have taken great care in selecting those terms. So here is where I get puzzled.
www.residential-landscape-lighting-design.com/search/search.asp
Run a search on "mood lighting." You will see that the first result contains this term only once, in the footer. And the footer has been excluded, using the ZOOMSTOP and ZOOMRESTART tags. (See page source.) So that alone makes no sense to me. But then you have to go down to result #18 before you get anything close to relevant. (And we boosted the importance of the Title tag to the maximum, +5)
Now search "mood lights." Here the results are much better overall, though some are still puzzling. But you see results 4, 5 and 6 all have the exact term of the previous seach "mood lighting" in the Title. Why didn't these appear in the previous search?
So if you have any suggestions about why the search engine is still searching the footer (and in fact giving it a great deal of weight), or why the results are coming out so skewed, or how to improve all this, please let me know!
thanks,
--
Aaron Lozier
www.rlldesign.com
aaron@rlldesign.com
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