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Search engines ignoring meta description content and showing footer

I have a site that is very simple and has mostly images and a login form and a link to signup. No actual text exist in the body except for the footer which shows the link to usage terms and copyright notice.

My site is currently showing up on search engine results with the footer content showing instead of what I put in the <meta name="description"...> tag. Why is this?

How can I not allow the search engines to index my site with the footer content showing? Or at least show开发者_Python百科 the meta description first? Do I need to put some text in the form of a title attribute or alt attribute somewhere?


As +Filburt pointed out, you could add your site to Webmaster Tools which will offer you valuable information about your site's presence on the web and in the Google Search results. It may also provide you hints about what do we think about your meta descriptions :)

Generally, you will want to

  • write the meta description to be as natural as possible, don't stuff keywords in it,
  • describe the page's content accurately in this tag,
  • and to have a unique meta description for each page.

While we can't guarantee that the meta description that you provided will be used as search result snippets, following the above tips will greatly increase the chance.

Here are some more information about the meta description tag: http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=35264


It works to some extent to use <meta name="description" /> but Google will complain (and choose to ignore it) when every page has the same description.

If you are interested in how Google deals with your site you could sign up for their Webmaster Tools - they offer a good starting point for SEO-ing your site.

You could add content invisible to your visitor but Google checks this and considers hidden content as cheating for page rank because this used to be a common SEO technique.


meta tags were a failure and have been broadly ignored ever since the Google era began picked-up again with enthusiasm.

The problem was, humans would put stale, inaccurate, or irrelevant information in the meta tags. This was fifteen years ago when cataloging the Internet still seemed feasible.

Google came along and decided that what a web page actually says was more useful. Everybody else followed suit shortly after.

Now people are trying human-authored metadata again, they're calling it the "semantic web". My hopes are not high.

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