Congratulations!
You’ve Gotten Visitors to your Site! Now, can
they find what they're looking for?
by: Robin Nobles
As search engine marketers, we spend an enormous amount
of time trying to get targeted traffic to our site.
But, once those visitors get to our site, can they
find what they're looking for? If not, guess what?
We've lost a customer.
Think about it this way. How many times have you found
a site through a major search engine or directory,
only to visit the site and not be able to find what
you're looking for anywhere on the site? What do you
do next? You go back to the search engine and click
on the next site. That site has lost a customer: you.
Helping your visitors find what they're looking for
on your site can cover a great many areas, such as
navigation, user interface issues, and the lack of
a clear "call to action."
But one way around many of those issues is to offer
an onsite search engine, so that once visitors hit
your site, they can easily find exactly what they're
looking for.
The really neat thing about onsite search engines
is that many of them are FREE. Yes, you read right:
free. Of course, that also means that you may have
ads in your search results, which may or may not present
problems for you. However, even if you choose to purchase
an onsite engine, the cost is generally not expensive.
What should you look for in an onsite search engine?
• Good customer support. If you begin to have
problems with the engine, you want to be able to get
help in fixing it.
• Reports that let you know what people are
searching for once they reach your site. Just think
of the GOLD this will tell you! If you don't have
a page that covers a particular topic, make one!
• Ease in setting up the engine. This may or
may not be an issue to you, but if you're like me,
you want something that is simple to set up and maintain.
• An extensive "help" section at the
site that will walk you through setting up the engine
and answer any questions you might have.
• The ability to keep the engine out of certain
areas of your site that you don't want spidered and
available through the search, such as employee areas,
password-protected member areas, etc.
• The ability to spider password-protected areas
so that your member areas can have their own onsite
search.
• The ability to customize search results pages.
• The capability to request re-indexing whenever
you update the site, or even to schedule re-indexing
on a regular basis.
In my training material and resource library at the
Academy, I had an onsite search engine for a long
time. Then, the company folded. Until recently, I
hadn't set up another onsite engine, because the one
onsite engine that I really wanted to use didn't index
password-protected areas. So, I "patiently"
waited for the onsite engine, FreeFind, to add this
to their list of features. When they recently did,
I jumped on it, and now both of my online training
programs have excellent onsite search engines through
FreeFind (http://www.freefind.com).
But why did FreeFind stand out among the others, and
why was it so important to me to wait until they could
index password- protected areas? FreeFind offers some
features that I couldn't find on other onsite search
engines, features that would help me tremendously
with my work.
For example:
• FreeFind will automatically create a What's
New page, after you've any changes to the site. Just
think of how much help that will be for me with my
training material? Between my two programs (beginning
and advanced), I have over 1000 resource pages to
update every single month, and I've been creating
the "What's New" page by hand. Now, it's
automatically created for me.
• FreeFind is the only onsite search engine
that enables your visitors to find the page they're
looking for, then keeps an eye on it for any changes.
Their ChangeDetection (tm) monitoring system lets
your users monitor a page for content changes, then
notifies them when the page is changed. If you set
up this engine on your own site, it will build traffic
by turning casual, one- time visitors into repeat
and loyal visitors who return again and again to look
at changes made to the page that are of particular
interest to them.
• FreeFind will automatically create a Site
Map of your site. This Site Map is an alphabetical
listing of the pages on your site. The Site Map will
be even more valuable to you if you have a regular,
non-password protected site, because it will give
the Web search engines a page of links to spider.
• FreeFind will search across several domains.
So, if your company has numerous domains, your onsite
search engine will cover each of those domains, without
having to set up separate engines.
In Conclusion
Look closely at your site. Is it time to add an onsite
search engine? Is it time to make sure visitors can
find exactly what they're looking for when they land
on your site? Are you losing customers who get lost
and can't find what they want?
FreeFind (http://www.freefind.com) is an excellent
onsite search engine that met my exact needs. However,
to be fair, and because this article isn't meant to
be an advertisement for FreeFind, here are some other
onsite engines that you may want to consider. Look
closely at their features, and find the one that works
best for you.
Other Onsite Search Engines
Atomz: http://www.atomz.com
PicoSearch: http://www.picosearch.com
SiteLevel.com: http://www.sitelevel.com/
FusionBot.com: http://www.fusionbot.com
A listing of numerous onsite search tools: http://www.searchtools.com/tools/tools.html
Copyright 2002 Robin Nobles. All rights reserved.
About The Author
Robin Nobles, Director of Training, Academy of Web
Specialists, has trained several thousand people in
her online search engine marketing (,a href="http://www.academywebspecialists.com"
target=new>http://www.academywebspecialists.com)
training programs. Visit the Academy's training site
to learn more about their online search engine marketing
training (http://www.onlinewebtraining.com) and search
engine optimization (http://www.se-optimizer.com)
software. She also teaches 3-day hands-on search engine
marketing workshops in locations across the globe
with Search Engine Workshops (http://www.searchengineworkshops.com).
Email: RobinN@acws.com This article was posted on
July 1, 2002
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