Flash and SEO: Like Oil and Water
We often deal with clients that are planning to "revamp"
their sites with Flash, with SEO having already generated
tremendous gains in their sales. The thing that we most dread
to hear is that they've hired an experienced "Flash designer"
that will be taking their websites to the "next level."
Unfortunately, that "next level" is often the basement - at
least in terms of SEO results.
The bottom line here is that a site built entirely in Flash
still faces huge obstacles. While there have been recent moves
from Google and Yahoo! to try to index the content from
combined Flash/SEO sites, those moves have not yet, from my
experience, translated into SEO results or success (at least
when compared to html sites).
We should make a distinction here between embedded Flash and
sites built entirely from Flash. For example, a site that
contains Flash elements but still contains basic html elements
will not overly suffer, as the Flash element (usually a movie
in a box on the homepage or elsewhere) is externalized. A
search engine spider will generally not try to parse through
any files that have been externalized in the code - they will
only index the code that is readily apparent on the source
page. However, from an SEO results perspective, there are still
major issues with sites that are built entirely in Flash, and
SEO is normally the first thing that suffers.
First of all, the URL generally never changes no matter
where people navigate on the site. As any decent SEO
practitioner will tell you, every page of your site is a
potential entry page for a search engine. With a site built in
Flash, SEO suffers even more as you only have one potential
entry page, which is the main URL. This cuts off dozens,
hundreds, or thousands of potential pages that could otherwise
be indexed in Google and Yahoo! (and all other engines). When
your only potential entry page in the search engine listings is
your home page, it is very difficult to target a wide
assortment of keyphrases, potentially eliminating SEO results
or rankings.
Content is another very large issue. Search engines rank
pages based upon a number of criteria, but one of the most
important to SEO results is the text that they can "understand"
on individual pages. At present, search engines read primarily
html text (although some also read text in the PDF format) -
which means that if you decide that you want to use a rare and
fancy font that must be displayed in graphic form (since the
visitor may not have that particular font available on his or
her computer while browsing), the engine will not read the text
and therefore will not know what the page is about, which could
harm SEO results.
Naturally, this also includes any of the text included in
Flash. While Yahoo! and Google have recently announced enhanced
capabilities in reading content within Flash, I have not
personally seen that translate into great SEO results for
competitive keyphrases.
One other emerging aspect is that as search evolves, more
and more people are looking for information while they are away
from their computers. Many mobile devices are currently
incapable of displaying Flash content, although recent moves by
Adobe to make "Flash Lite" available may change this. However,
it remains to be seen whether people that are seeking
information on a mobile device will even want to navigate
through Flash, especially if they can get the information that
they seek from a fast-loading html page. In my opinion, lean
html content will be at a premium when a company is trying to
target a mobile audience.
| Despite the difficulties, it is
not the intent of this article to assert that
Flash and SEO will always be incompatible -
merely that it is the state of the current
situation. You can find many differing opinions
on mixing Flash and SEO on the internet, but
the true test is to try to find a Flash site
(that is to say, a site built entirely in
Flash) that you admire and see if it ranks well
in SEO results for 50+ competitive terms that
are related to the specific business (in Google
or Yahoo!). In my experience, such sites that
combine Flash and SEO are nearly impossible to
find. If anyone out there knows of one, please
let me know. |
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Flash can be, and often is, used for great effect on the
internet, in interactive kiosks, and in many other
applications. I'm not from the "any Flash is bad" school,
although I do think that many Flash practitioners tend to get a
little carried away and often ignore basic usability issues.
However, sites built entirely in Flash with SEO elements are
still, again in my opinion, like oil and water - Flash and SEO
are obviously individually useful, but they don't mix well.
Until they do, I will continue to advise my clients not to
build sites entirely out of Flash - or, at the very least, to
have an alternate html option for search engine and user
preference purposes. At the end of the day, many clients are
surprised to find out how many visitors actually prefer "old
school" html.
Article provide by Medium Blue 2008 About the Author Scott
Buresh is the founder of Medium Blue (www.mediumblue.com), a search engine
optimization company.
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