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> Get Articles > Search Engines and SEO > How to Get FLASH Indexed by the Search Engines

How to Get FLASH Indexed by the Search Engines


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Robin Nobles
RobinNacws.com

Academy of Web Specialists
http://www.academywebspecialists.com








How to Get FLASH Indexed in the Search Engines



by Robin Nobles



Note: The example portions of this article have been removed.

However, you can view the article in its entirety at:

http://www.academywebspecialists.com/newsletters/0702.html



Perhaps you can relate to the involuntary groan elicited by

search engine optimizers when a client presents an expensive new

Web site featuring high quality FLASH movie content.



Of course, the client (or maybe your boss?) is thrilled with the

dazzling presentation, and they rarely fail to mention what a

"small fortune" it cost to produce before adding "it's worth

it!...don't you agree? All it needs now is for YOU to optimize it

for findability in the search engines."



Isn't it funny? ... how they fail to notice the color rushing to

your face as you suppress the urge to scream and opt instead for

the tactful approach, patiently explaining (once again) that

FLASH doesn't score well in search engines.



Don't panic -- there IS a solution!



Here's a solution you can use to get the best of both worlds -

search engine findability and the professional image enhancement

that FLASH can provide.



The strategy involves using an absolute positioning technique

called Z Order within your Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). For this

to make sense, you must first understand what Z Order is.

Microsoft's MSDN (http://msdn.microsoft.com) site explains...



The Z order of a window indicates the window's position in a

stack of overlapping windows. This window stack is oriented along

an imaginary axis, the z-axis, extending outward from the screen.

The window at the top of the Z order overlaps all other windows.

The window at the bottom of the Z order is overlapped by all

other windows.



In non-technogeekspeak, Z Order allows you to place content

partially, or even fully, on top of other content. Since only the

content on top is viewable, it's entirely possible to place an

unintelligible-to-search-engines FLASH movie on top of an easy-

to-index-layer of relevant text content. And, by doing so, your

site visitor sees only the FLASH movie while the engine sees only

your relevant keyword-laden text.



How to create Z Order using CSS



To accomplish the magic it's helpful to first understand what a

very basic CSS using Z Order source code might look like. To view

the basic example, visit the complete article online at:

http://www.academywebspecialists.com/newsletters/0702.html



Source of the example: http://www.htmlref.com/examples/Fig10-

14.htm



Notice that the highest value -- div class="three" -- is the

"window" that lands on top. This is important to understand

because that's how we're going to perform the magic.



FLASH over, RELEVANT CONTENT under = SE indexability



By now you've probably deduced we're going to layer our relevant

content exactly beneath our FLASH movie. By doing so, the site

visitor will see only the FLASH movie in their browser while the

search engine will find, and index, the "relevant content"

because search engines "view" only the source code of the page

(not the browser version) and they index only the TEXT they find

within that source code.



To better illustrate how this might look, we enlisted the help of

Web designer Dave Barry of SmartCertify Direct --

http://www.smartcertify.com/ . Dave was kind enough to create an

example site employing a transparent FLASH movie to help us

visualize the effect. As Dave explains...



"This flash movie was made transparent so you may see the effects

of putting text behind flash. Using Dynamic HTML, you can

absolutely position a flash object right over top of your

existing html code. Search engines see copy and text while

visitors see your dynamic flash movie."



To see Dave's example, visit the complete article found at the

below URL, and look for "Flash Sample." Once there, click

anywhere in the browser window, hold down CTRL and hit "A" on

your keyboard (Ctrl+A = highlight all) to see how this sample

FLASH movie would otherwise "hide" the text were the FLASH not

transparent.



(To view the Flash Sample, visit this article online at

http://www.academywebspecialists.com/newsletters/0702.html )



Dave was kind enough to share with us the source code he used to

create the effect, which can also be found the above URL.



It should be noted this effect works only in browsers that

support HTML version 4.0 or greater. This is only a minor

concern, however, as the vast majority of browsers that are being

used today are compatible.



Yes, but will the Search Engines tolerate the "trick"?



Obviously the most pressing question is whether or not the search

engines will accept, or reject, pages that make use of this

strategy. After all, the possibility of layering irrelevant

content under, or even entirely off the page (by assigning minus

positioning coordinates) is a distinct possibility.



To anticipate how the search engines might view this strategy,

once again, we consider the issues of "intention" and

"relevancy."



Perhaps Stephen Baker, Director of Business Development and

Marketing at FAST, said it best when he remarked, "Our position

is pretty straight forward...it's not the technique that we are

concerned about, it's the intention. If we index the text in Z-

Order and CSS and it's relevant to the content, then we're all

happy. But, as you know, we do have internal systems that trip

wires all of the time. If a particular technique becomes heavily

abused over time, we'll definitely stop indexing information

through said technique."



As we've said countless times before, certain legitimate Web site

enhancements, like FLASH, frames, dynamic content, etc., are a

nightmare for the engines to index. They simply have never done a

very good job on complicated HTML page, and FLASH poses, perhaps,

the greatest indexing challenge of them all.



Regardless, sites that use these upscale tools have as much right

to be found as any others within their selected keyword

categories. Projecting a professional image to your potential

customers is important, and using Z Order within your CSS gives

enables you to obtain that professional image without sacrificing

search engine findability.





Robin Nobles, Director of Training, Academy of Web Specialists,

has trained several thousand people in her online search engine

marketing (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).



Copyright 2002 Robin Nobles. All rights reserved.





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