Idea to increase visits : what do you think ?

Discussion in 'Google' started by binduck, Nov 16, 2005.

  1. #1
    Excuse me for my poor english :D and let me know what do you think about this ? It seems to work in some small test I've done.

    *Languages supported by Google language tools : English , Spanish , German , French , Japanese , Portuguese , Italian
    *Your website’s main ( native ) language is one of the above , so only search queries performed in that language will bring users to your pages.
    *Surfers could understand also other languages than their native’s one or than the one used in search queries, but for facility and habit they use the one they mostly undestand .

    The goal of php website translator is to allow search engine users to find your website between the results of search engine queries made in a language different from the one used in your pages . Using this tool you'll increase also the number of keywords related to your website .

    php website translator uses Google language tools to translate your pages in all supported languages. Obviously resulting translations are not perfect, often wrong, so it's not good to show them to users but these could be used to feed search engine bots and to get more visitors each day.

    The idea is to create a link on the home page of your website to a tree of translated pages and to show it only to search engine bots. A search engine bot will find in that page X more links to translated trees ( where X is the number of languages supported by Google language tools ) and it will spider the true tree ( in the main ( native ) language ) , the translated trees and adds them to search results ; in other words you give new keywords to the search engine increasing the chance that someone finds your website .

    When a real surfer finds a link of one of your translated pages in search engine results and tries to reach it , his browser will be redirected ( by php website translator ) to the corresponding page in the main language .

    The full article is here: http://ardoino.altervista.org/blog/index.php?id=51
     
    binduck, Nov 16, 2005 IP