2006
DOI: 10.1108/00220410610666484
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Optimising metadata to make high‐value content more accessible to Google users

Abstract: This paper shows how information in digital collections that have been catalogued using highquality metadata can be retrieved more easily by users of search engines such as Google. The research and proposals described arose from an investigation into the observed phenomenon that pages from the Glasgow Digital Library (gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk) were regularly appearing near the top of Google search results shortly after publication, without any deliberate effort to achieve this. The reasons for this phenomenon are… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…Some of these include: providing keyword rich Website content throughout all Web pages (Seda, 2004;Schultz and Fristedt, 2005;Dawson and Hamilton, 2006); using keywords in the title and description meta tags in the Website code (Zhang and Dimitroff, 2005); and keeping the likes of flash, graphics, forms and frames to a minimum (Schultz and Fristedt, 2005;Dawson and Hamilton, 2006). Mentz and Whiteside (2003), Oliva (2004), Seda (2004), and Schultz and Fristedt (2005) recommend a link development strategy whereby other good quality and relevant Websites are used to develop or implement a link back to the company Website.…”
Section: Study Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of these include: providing keyword rich Website content throughout all Web pages (Seda, 2004;Schultz and Fristedt, 2005;Dawson and Hamilton, 2006); using keywords in the title and description meta tags in the Website code (Zhang and Dimitroff, 2005); and keeping the likes of flash, graphics, forms and frames to a minimum (Schultz and Fristedt, 2005;Dawson and Hamilton, 2006). Mentz and Whiteside (2003), Oliva (2004), Seda (2004), and Schultz and Fristedt (2005) recommend a link development strategy whereby other good quality and relevant Websites are used to develop or implement a link back to the company Website.…”
Section: Study Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The existence of search engines is ignored or denigrated." (Dawson and Hamilton 2006) Search engines are the primary means of discovering and selecting digital content (Dawson 2004). The prominence of Google and other search engines among searchers has been noted, as well as increased collaboration between information providers and Google (Tenopir 2004).…”
Section: Search Engine Optimizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As well as enhancing usability and speed of access, chunking content by chapter or section allows title tags to be varied to include the titles of chapters or sections, along with the title of the overall work. This aspect of metadata optimisation is a significant aid to resource discovery via Google, as has been demonstrated by Dawson &Hamilton (2005). The process can be automated for large-scale publication of structured documents, so that it becomes highly cost-effective, although the mechanism for doing this varies according to context and is beyond the scope of this article.…”
Section: Metadata Optimisationmentioning
confidence: 99%