Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Unit Notes BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Topic 1 – Review website content and use © Copyright, 2017 by TAFE NSW - North Coast Institute Date last saved: 09/9/11 by Emma McAuley Version: 1.0 # of Pages = 43 Copyright of this material is reserved to the Crown in the right of the State of New South Wales. Reproduction or transmittal in whole, or in part, other than in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act, is prohibited without written authority of TAFE NSW North Coast Institute. Disclaimer: In compiling the information contained within, and accessed through, this document ("Information") DET has used its best endeavours to ensure that the Information is correct and current at the time of publication but takes no responsibility for any error, omission or defect therein. To the extent permitted by law, DET and its employees, agents and consultants exclude all liability for any loss or damage (including indirect, special or consequential loss or damage) arising from the use of, or reliance on, the Information whether or not caused by any negligent act or omission. If any law prohibits the exclusion of such liability, DET limits its liability to the extent permitted by law, to the re-supply of the Information. Third party sites/links disclaimer: This document may contain website contains links to third party sites. DET is not responsible for the condition or the content of those sites as they are not under DET's control. The link(s) are provided solely for your convenience and do not indicate, expressly or impliedly, any endorsement of the site(s) or the products or services provided there. You access those sites and use their products and services solely at your own risk. Page 2 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Table of Contents Getting Started with BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website ................... 4 1 Review website content and use ......................................................................... 6 Determining Basic Requirements ........................................................................... 6 Updating or creating a functional website. ............................................................. 7 Optimise your website with Search Engines .......................................................... 8 Activity 1 – Determining requirements.......................................................... 12 A closer look at understanding Meta Tags ........................................................... 15 Activity 2 – Understanding Meta tags (record your answers here) ............... 15 Advanced Terminology: ....................................................................................... 16 Check Your Understanding .................................................................................. 16 References:............................................................................................................ 17 Page 3 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Getting Started with BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website The unit will help build an understanding of data analysis, reviewing website content and updating and maintaining websites. Reading notes The notes for this unit are in 3 parts: Part 1: Review website and content use Part 2: Update Website Part 3: Carry out non-technical maintenance Using the Unit Notes Icons and symbols are used throughout the guide to provide quick visual references. They indicate the following: Icon Meaning Icon Meaning ACTIVITY: An activity is listed to be completed ACTIVITY: A Learning activity requiring some physical action WWW: A web link is listed REFLECTION: A point is to be considered and thought about more deeply IMPORTANT: A pivotal point is detailed SEARCH: A particular item / book etc needs to be found and applied Page 4 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Glossary of Terms Web standards Facebook Web standards make web development easier. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) creates the web standards. Facebook users can create and customize their own profiles with photos, videos, and information about themselves http://www.sharpened.net/glossary/definition/facebook Keywords Keywords are words or phrases that describe content. They can be used as metadata to describe images, text documents, database records, and Web pages http://www.sharpened.net/glossary/definition/keywords Browser A Web browser, often just called a "browser," is the program people used to access the World Wide Web. It interprets HTML code including text, images, hypertext links, JavaScript, and Java applets http://www.sharpened.net/glossary/definition/browser Search Engine They index millions of sites on the Web, so that Web surfers can easily find Web sites with the required. By creating indexes, or large databases of Web sites (based on titles, keywords, and the text in the pages), search engines can locate relevant Web sites when users enter search terms or phrases. http://www.sharpened.net/glossary/definition/searchengine Optimise Make a website optimal; get the most out of; use best; "optimise your resources" Page Rank PageRank is a link analysis algorithm, named after Larry Page and used by the Google Internet search engine, that assigns a numerical weighting to each element of a hyperlinked set of documents with the purpose of "measuring" its relative importance within the set. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PageRank Meta Tag This is a special HTML tag that is used to store information about a Web page but is not displayed in a Web browser. http://www.sharpened.net/glossary/definition/metatag Page 5 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website 1 Review website content and use Determining Basic Requirements The technological world of today is in constant change and it should be a top priority to ensure all online technologies such as websites, You Tube® videos and social networking sites are maintained to today’s high web standards as recommended by W3schools website. This is a website that advises developers on the correct way to code. View it here http://www.w3schools.com/web/web_standards.asp This is a never-ending job, so understanding the basics of websites and what requires to be updated (as a minimum) would be advantageous to any business wishing to stay ahead or at least on top of these changes. You will learn how search engines rank pages and what special techniques you can do to optimise a site. These techniques include internal optimisation. Why do you think website updating is never-ending? Think about search engine requirements, look and feel (branding), products and information requirements. Record your answer here… Page 6 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Websites need updating because content such as images, text content, links, metadata, layout and colours (branding) are in constant change. Business requirements, search engine requirements and new technologies could be the difference between making or breaking a business. The internet is all about customer acquisition. Attracting and keeping customers poses a challenge to many businesses. Customers are often loyal to businesses that provide a better level of service in today’s competitive global marketplace. Updating or creating a functional website. A functional website must be one that customers can find and this must be considered in your business to be a very strong marketing tool. You must integrate multiple marketing strategies to help assist with this. Page 7 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Optimise your website with Search Engines “A website is only as valuable as the number of people who visit it”. Optimising a website means, simply, how to attract lots of people to your site. Internal optimisation means making small modifications to your site. If this is done well, your page rank will increase and then you will “rank” higher in search engine results. Normally, people use search engines to search for products or services and follow the listings on the pages usually starting at the top three to five listings, then glancing to sponsored ads to the right. Therefore, the higher you are the more hits you will get (Google_Inc, 2008). The top 3 (highlighted) ads and ads on the right are “paid” listings. “Natural or organic” unpaid listing, such as TAFE, appear below these. This is the position you want your business to have. Page 8 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Let’s look at a practical example of internal optimisation A business might be named: “Emma’s vintage records” So the domain might be: www.emmasvintagerecords.com.au The focus is: Online-only record sales, price guides, articles, information Size: Small <250 pages The following Search Engine (SE) tips would help optimise this businesses website. Create an original and informative page title for each page This <title></title> tag in html coding tells users and search engines what the topic of the page is. Html code: It displays in a browser’s window at the top and in the tab The title also displays in the first line of search engines results – here is a created snippet from Google™ for the above business. Page 9 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Create a description for each of your pages using the description <meta tag/>, As you can see in the above snippet, a description meta tag is what Google™ might use to display in your search results. “Might” means that Google™ also can choose relevant sections of our page’s visible text if it matches queries of searches. It is good practice to place meaningful descriptions on each of your pages using this tag (Google_Inc, 2008). Jargon explained According to (Felke-Morris, 2009) a meta tag in web terminology is a self-contained html tag that is placed in the header section of a webpage. These should follow the <title>tag. Meta tags help optimise your site so it is crucial that you include them. Common meta tags are called “keywords” and “description”. The use of Meta tags has also grown in recent years to include Dublin core Meta tags, these advanced tags work like a library catalogue system to store important data about the information contained on each page. The standard syntax is: <meta name =”keywords” content=” your keywords,” <meta name =”description” content =”my description” Making a good description tag: Summarise the pages content accurately Inform and interest viewers Make each page has a different description tag Make sure descriptions, match the keywords likely to be used as search terms that customers use Don’t write descriptions that don’t relate to the page content Don’t use generic descriptions like webpage or page Don’t only place keywords in the description tag Include Keywords using a keyword Meta tag Some search engines use these keywords to help classify your content. These must be relevant and appear also in your body text (in your page content). Page 10 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website <meta name =”keywords” content=” keyword1, keyword2, etc” Including keywords is experimental and requires CONSTANT attention. Some keywords may work and some may not i.e. vintage cars may work better than antique cars (Laudon & Traver, 2010). Helpful Hints –keywords Highly specific multi-word phrases may rank better than single keyword or double keyword phrases. So instead of creating a keyword like ‘gym’, you may want to long tail your keywords with a niche phrase like “women’s gym northern rivers Lismore” Ensure your keywords used in your Meta tags and descriptions, match the keywords likely to be used as search terms that customers use. i.e. lamps or lights? Ensure your keywords and page title match words on the home page. i.e. “pepper” your page with keywords that ACCURATELY describe what you sell or do. As a general guide this should be around 5% Please read more at: http://www.seoworks.com.au/seo-tips-ideas/three-steps-to-optimising-pagesfor-long-tail-keywords/ Google AdWords provides a handy Keyword Tool that helps you discover new keyword variations of your website. Google Webmaster Tools also provides you with the top search queries your site appears for and the ones that led the most users to your site. Other practical internal optimisation tips Heading tags should be 3 to 6 word phrases that contain your important keyword phrases. The most important one is <h1>. jhkhjg Don’t use single keywords in your alt text (for images). Alt text should describe the image it is attached to. Certainly include a keyword phrase if it makes sense. Ensure all your image code uses the attributes tag (alt text). This allows you to specify text for the images that a search engine will index and use. This text also shows if for some reason the image cannot be displayed. Page 11 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Include as many references in your text as possible to the subject matter of “likely” searches. Advanced techniques Watch your page file sizes Don’t make a page larger than 30MB Smaller pages also load faster which your visitors will appreciate. Activity 1 – Determining requirements The JavaJam website is under review and one of the main issues concerning the client is the use of keywords and phrases. The website is not updated and there are many errors in content, title tags, spelling and some links do not even work. View the website here.. JavaJam Your first job is to undertake the following steps to determine the best keywords that could be used for the website. Step 1: Finish the brainstorm map below for the JavaJam website. Here you need to determine the keywords. Write everything that comes to mind when you think about what the website sells. These are words that customers might use if looking for the site’s home page (try and get at least ten) www..javajam.com.au. ................... Page 12 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Step 2: Open up Google™ and search for three different competitors (use three different search terms or phrases). Write down: What phrase or keywords did you used to search for JavaJams competitors? Step 3: Write down what keywords your competitors have listed in their code in order (right click your mouse and select view source). Keywords are always located in between the head tags near the top of the page. ........................................................................................................................... ........................................................................................................................... Keywords: #1st Helpful Hint – Titles It is important that you decide on a single keyword phrase for each page and make sure that you use this single keyword phrase several times in the main text content of the page ( no more than 7 times) Step 4: Using the information you have researched, determine your primary keywords or phrases for JavaJam index.html (home page) <meta name = “keywords” content = “ /> Determine your page title (no more than seven words starting with your keyword phrase) <title> </title> Page 13 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website #2nd Helpful Hint – Headings Start with your keyword phrase and fit this into a single line to maximise effectiveness – make this similar to your page title What is your page heading? (Imagine you are writing an outline for a newspaper, what are your main points and sub points – this is how you should help you use headings tags appropriately (advanced) <h1> </h1> Avoid: excessively using heading tags throughout the page Don’t put all of the pages text into a heading tag Don’t use heading only for styling text and not presenting structure(Google_Inc, 2008). #3rd Helpful Hint – Content Step 5: Determine what content you are going to include on JavaJam’s index.html (home page) because the content needs revamping. Include as many references in your text, as possible, to the subject matter of “likely” searches Something to think about Write easy to read text Break your content up into “chunks” or divisions to help users find it faster Don’t place large amounts of text on varying subjects onto one page without using paragraphs, subheadings or layout separation (div tags) You should create interest for your customer and make sure that you include your keyword phrase as the first sentence (Google_Inc, 2008). Use language that your USER might use Make your content fresh and unique Page 14 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website A closer look at understanding Meta Tags Meta-tags are commonly used in html websites. These tags are inserted in the source or HTML code in the header section. Some common examples of the meta tag with a NAME attribute include: <META NAME ="keywords" CONTENT="Keywords used by search engines to index your document in addition to words from the title and document body"> <META NAME="description" CONTENT="Provides a short, plain-language description of the document"> Here is an example of the Meta tags “snapped” from the source code of a popular computer website. Activity 2 – Understanding Meta tags (record your answers here) 1. Can you determine which computer store it is? 2. Can you work out what they are selling? 3. What language is it in? 4. What country? 5. What key words do they think are the most searched for if surfers want to buy their products? Meta tags are often used to enhance search engine optimisation by indexing your website through keywords and descriptions, although some of the bigger search engine giants are choosing now not to use these to index your site. Read this article about using meta keyword tag in search engine ranking. Page 15 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website Even though some of the search engines have changed the way they use meta-tags they still need the tags to index information about the webpage. This information can include general fields such as subject matter, content and author, to more detailed fields such as Dublin core tags i.e. DC.Rights. The need for formal meta-tags has developed because information that is available online is massive and still growing. As you will discover meta-tags have now evolved to become a more formal method for describing a page's content and purpose. (Example of cloud based metatags listings) Advanced Terminology: Meta tags with a NAME attribute are used for other purposes, which do not correspond to HTTP headers. This may include the name of the page author, description of the page, or the character set utilised. Here is a partial list of meta NAME elements: Description—A short, plain-language description of the document<meta NAME="description" content="Builder meta tag article"> Keywords—Keywords used by search engines to index your document in addition to words from the title and document body. Typically used for synonyms and alternates of title words<meta NAME="keywords" content="html, meta, web, CNet, Builder"> Author—The Web page author's name <meta NAME="author" content="John Davis"> Check Your Understanding 1. I can now ❒ Review website content and use Page 16 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website References: References (use these resources) A.Gogan, T.Kremer, & J.Mitchell. (2010). SSW Rules to Better Google Rankings Retrieved June, 2010, from http://www.ssw.com.au/ssw/Standards/Rules/RulesToBetterGoogleRankings. aspx Felke-Morris, T. (2009). Web Development and Design Foundations with XHTML (4 ed.). Boston: Pearson Education, Inc. Google_Inc. (2008). Google's Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide (Creative commars licence) Retrieved June 2010, from http://static.googleusercontent.com/external_content/untrusted_dlcp/www.goo gle.com/en//webmasters/docs/search-engine-optimization-starter-guide.pdf Laudon, K., & Traver, C. (2010). E-Commerce 2010 (sixth ed.). New Jersey: Pearson Education Inc. Nielsen. (2009). Trends and Insights Retrieved June, 2010, from http://au.nielsen.com/site/index.shtml S.Thurow. (2007). Keyword order, word count and search engine optimization (SEO) Retrieved June, 2010, from http://www.wordtracker.com/academy/keyword-order-word-count-and-searchengine-optimization-seo Page 17 of 17 BSBEBU401A Review and maintain a website