The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study

<br><b>Introduction.</b> In this research project, an empirical pilot study on the relationship between JavaScript(TM) usage and Website visibility was carried out. The main purpose was to establish whethe JavaScript(TM)-based hyperlinks attract or repel crawlers, resulting in an...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: M. Weideman, F. Schwenke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Borås 2006-01-01
Series:Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://informationr.net/ir/11-4/paper268.html
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832570943753420800
author M. Weideman
F. Schwenke
author_facet M. Weideman
F. Schwenke
author_sort M. Weideman
collection DOAJ
description <br><b>Introduction.</b> In this research project, an empirical pilot study on the relationship between JavaScript(TM) usage and Website visibility was carried out. The main purpose was to establish whethe JavaScript(TM)-based hyperlinks attract or repel crawlers, resulting in an increase or decrease in Website visibility. <br><b>Method.</b> A literature survey has established that there appears to be contradiction amongst claims by various authors as to whether or not crawlers can parse or interpret JavaScript(TM). The chosen methodology involved the creation of a Website that contains different kinds of links to other pages, where actual data files were stored. Search engine crawler visits to the page pointed to by the different kinds of links were monitored and recorded. <br><b>Analysis.</b> This experiment took into account the fact that JavaScript(TM) can be embedded within the HTML of a Web page or referenced as an external '.js' file. It also considered different ways of specifying links within JavaScript(TM). <br><b>Results.</b> The results obtained indicated that text links provide the highest level of opportunity for crawlers to discover and index non-homepages. In general, crawlers did not follow Javascript(TM)-based links to Web pages blindly. <br><b>Conclusion.</b> . Most crawlers evade Javascript(TM) links, implying that Web pages using forms of this technology, for example in pop-up/pull-down menus, could be jeopardising their chances of achieving high search engine rankings. Certain Javascript(TM) links were not followed at all, which has serious implications for designers of e-Commerce Websites.
format Article
id doaj-art-1a17cc6d4117437392b4842c4bc9af78
institution Kabale University
issn 1368-1613
language English
publishDate 2006-01-01
publisher University of Borås
record_format Article
series Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
spelling doaj-art-1a17cc6d4117437392b4842c4bc9af782025-02-02T13:25:53ZengUniversity of BoråsInformation Research: An International Electronic Journal1368-16132006-01-01114268The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot studyM. WeidemanF. Schwenke<br><b>Introduction.</b> In this research project, an empirical pilot study on the relationship between JavaScript(TM) usage and Website visibility was carried out. The main purpose was to establish whethe JavaScript(TM)-based hyperlinks attract or repel crawlers, resulting in an increase or decrease in Website visibility. <br><b>Method.</b> A literature survey has established that there appears to be contradiction amongst claims by various authors as to whether or not crawlers can parse or interpret JavaScript(TM). The chosen methodology involved the creation of a Website that contains different kinds of links to other pages, where actual data files were stored. Search engine crawler visits to the page pointed to by the different kinds of links were monitored and recorded. <br><b>Analysis.</b> This experiment took into account the fact that JavaScript(TM) can be embedded within the HTML of a Web page or referenced as an external '.js' file. It also considered different ways of specifying links within JavaScript(TM). <br><b>Results.</b> The results obtained indicated that text links provide the highest level of opportunity for crawlers to discover and index non-homepages. In general, crawlers did not follow Javascript(TM)-based links to Web pages blindly. <br><b>Conclusion.</b> . Most crawlers evade Javascript(TM) links, implying that Web pages using forms of this technology, for example in pop-up/pull-down menus, could be jeopardising their chances of achieving high search engine rankings. Certain Javascript(TM) links were not followed at all, which has serious implications for designers of e-Commerce Websites.http://informationr.net/ir/11-4/paper268.htmlJavascript and Website visibility to search engines
spellingShingle M. Weideman
F. Schwenke
The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study
Information Research: An International Electronic Journal
Javascript and Website visibility to search engines
title The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study
title_full The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study
title_fullStr The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study
title_full_unstemmed The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study
title_short The influence that JavaScript(TM) has on the visibility of a Website to search engines - a pilot study
title_sort influence that javascript tm has on the visibility of a website to search engines a pilot study
topic Javascript and Website visibility to search engines
url http://informationr.net/ir/11-4/paper268.html
work_keys_str_mv AT mweideman theinfluencethatjavascripttmhasonthevisibilityofawebsitetosearchenginesapilotstudy
AT fschwenke theinfluencethatjavascripttmhasonthevisibilityofawebsitetosearchenginesapilotstudy
AT mweideman influencethatjavascripttmhasonthevisibilityofawebsitetosearchenginesapilotstudy
AT fschwenke influencethatjavascripttmhasonthevisibilityofawebsitetosearchenginesapilotstudy