Google wants you to get listed as fast as possible! To
help them do this, Google has released a new program, called Google
Sitemaps (BETA). Basically, you create a sitemap of your site, using
the XML format defined by Google, and you tell them where it is.
Google then uses the information in this sitemap to find all the
pages on your site faster. Much faster!
This is what Google has to say about their new system:
About Google Sitemaps
Search engines such as Google discover information about your site
by employing software known as "spiders" to crawl the web. Once the
spiders find a site, they follow links within the site to gather
information about all the pages. The spiders periodically revisit
sites to find new or changed content.
Google Sitemaps is an experiment in web crawling. By using Sitemaps
to inform and direct our crawlers, we hope to expand our coverage of
the web and speed up the discovery and addition of pages to our
index.
If your site has dynamic content or pages that aren't easily
discovered by following links, you can use a Sitemap file to provide
information about the pages on your site. This helps the spiders
know what URLs are available on your site and about how often they
change.
A Sitemap provides an additional view into your site (just as your
home page and HTML site map do). This program does not replace our
normal methods of crawling the web. Google still searches and
indexes your sites the same way it has done in the past whether or
not you use this program. A Sitemap simply gives Google additional
information that we may not otherwise discover. Sites are never
penalized for using this service. This is a beta program, so we
cannot make any predictions or guarantees about when or if your URLs
will be crawled or added to our index. Over time, we expect both
coverage and time-to-index to improve as we refine our processes and
better understand webmasters' needs.
Also, you can submit updated Sitemaps as your URLs change, but you
don't have to, as the spiders will periodically revisit your site
(and will use the frequency information you provide in your Sitemap
as one of the factors in how often they revisit) and look for new
pages.
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