WebPGProsoftware.com
http://www.web-position-gold-pro-software.com

WebPosition Gold 4 is a search engine software program that optimizes web pages, submits to top search engines worldwide, and tracks your search engine rankings and web site traffic.

Optilinksoftware.com
http://www.optilinksoftware.com

OptiLink is a link analysis tool for checking, monitoring, analyzing, predicting, and spying on your competitors' web page links, to reveal how web pages achieved their high search engine rankings, and find Super Affiliates and link exchange partners.

Webceo.com
http://www.webceo.com/

Web CEO is a suite of search engine marketing tools in one software program, including a keyword generator, web page optimization analyzer, auto and manual submitter, ranking monitor, top-ranked web page analyzer, HTML editor, FTP client, and traffic counter and analyzer.

AWSPsoftwaretool.com
http://www.axandra-web-site-promotion-software-tool.com

Internet Business Promoter (IBP) is a search engine software program that compares 75 ranking factors on the top 10 ranked sites for the keyword phrase and search engine (from 250+) of your choosing, and produces a 36-page checklist of recommended optimization advice to improve your rankings.

SPGenerator.com
http://www.spgenerator.com/

SmartPage Generator , by Armand Morin , is a software program that generates doorway pages based on the top search engine ranking principles outlined by Stephen Pierce in his book, "The Whole Truth."

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Search Engine Work

The term "search engine" is often used generically to describe both crawler-based search engines and human-powered directories. These two types of search engines gather their listings in radically different ways.

Crawler-Based Search Engines

Crawler-based search engines, such as Google , create their listings automatically. They "crawl" or "spider" the web, then people search through what they have found.

If you change your web pages, crawler-based search engines eventually find these changes, and that can affect how you are listed. Page titles, body copy and other elements all play a role.

Search Engines Work

Human-Powered Directories

A human-powered directory, such as the Open Directory , depends on humans for its listings. You submit a short description to the directory for your entire site, or editors write one for sites they review. A search looks for matches only in the descriptions submitted.

Changing your web pages has no effect on your listing. Things that are useful for improving a listing with a search engine have nothing to do with improving a listing in a directory. The only exception is that a good site, with good content, might be more likely to get reviewed for free than a poor site.

"Hybrid Search Engines" Or Mixed Results

In the web's early days, it used to be that a search engine either presented crawler-based results or human-powered listings. Today, it extremely common for both types of results to be presented. Usually, a hybrid search engine will favor one type of listings over another. For example, MSN Search is more likely to present human-powered listings from LookSmart . However, it does also present crawler-based results (as provided by Inktomi ), especially for more obscure queries. The Parts Of A Crawler-Based Search Engine

Crawler-based search engines have three major elements. First is the spider, also called the crawler. The spider visits a web page, reads it, and then follows links to other pages within the site. This is what it means when someone refers to a site being "spidered" or "crawled." The spider returns to the site on a regular basis, such as every month or two, to look for changes.

Everything the spider finds goes into the second part of the search engine, the index. The index, sometimes called the catalog, is like a giant book containing a copy of every web page that the spider finds. If a web page changes, then this book is updated with new information.

Sometimes it can take a while for new pages or changes that the spider finds to be added to the index. Thus, a web page may have been "spidered" but not yet "indexed." Until it is indexed -- added to the index -- it is not available to those searching with the search engine.

Search engine software is the third part of a search engine. This is the program that sifts through the millions of pages recorded in the index to find matches to a search and rank them in order of what it believes is most relevant. You can learn more about how search engine software ranks web pages on the aptly-named How Search Engines Rank Web Pages page.

Major Search Engines: The Same, But Different

All crawler-based search engines have the basic parts described above, but there are differences in how these parts are tuned. That is why the same search on different search engines often produces different results. Some of the significant differences between the major crawler-based search engines are summarized on the Search Engine Features Page . Information on this page has been drawn from the help pages of each search engine, along with knowledge gained from articles, reviews, books, independent research, tips from others and additional information received directly from the various search engines.