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Web Marketing: Avoid Flash Pages to Stay Visible to Search Engines

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Updated:  
2016-03-26 16:13:02
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Adobe Flash is a great way to create beautiful, interactive animations for your web marketing site. Unfortunately, search engines can’t read Flash animations for the following reasons:

  • Search engines don’t have the Flash plug-in. Remember, search engines visit your website as a super-simple web browser. Flash is a plug-in that viewers have to add to their web browsers — without it, they can’t see any of your Flash content. Search engines don’t have that plug-in built into their software, so they typically can’t read any of the content.

  • Flash compiles links, fonts, and structural information differently than a typical HTML page. So even if a search engine does manage to read the content, it may read it as gibberish.

  • Flash is often used to load multiple pages of text, videos, and other motion graphics onto a single HTML webpage. That creates the same problems as Ajax, by hiding all but the very first snippet of information from visiting search engines.

  • Flash doesn’t work on any of Apple’s iOS devices, including iPads. Do you really want to cut yourself off from all those users?

You can still use Flash animations. The old Portent Interactive homepage is a good example.

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You might be using Flash in a way that could hurt your SEO efforts. Pay attention to the following warning signs:

  • Visitors click from page to page on your website from within Flash, without actually going to a new page.

  • When you view the page using Yellowpipe Lynx Viewer, you see a blank page, or your page doesn’t show large amounts of text.

  • Your designer can’t look you in the eye when you ask whether the website is SEO ready.

Designers often use Flash because it’s the only way they know to get just the right fonts on the web. However, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are advanced enough to let designers get almost the same look and feel with a regular HTML page.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

John Arnold is a renowned marketing trainer and speaker as well as an entrepreneur and small business advisor. Arnold continues to train and advise small business owners as a Constant Contact regional development director.

Michael Becker is the managing director of North America at the Mobile Marketing Association. Becker has written more than 80 articles on mobile marketing and is an adjunct professor of mobile marketing at Golden Gate University.

Marty Dickinson is the president of HereNextYear.com, a company that combines writing, speaking, and internet strategy to help clients become recognized authorities in their fields. Dickinson also works as a business consultant to web designers and SEO specialists.

Ian Lurie has been a digital marketer for over 25 years. He created and sold the digital agency Portent, Inc. and provides consulting and training services.

Elizabeth Marsten is the senior director of strategic marketplace services for Tinuiti. Marsten has experience in Google AdWords, Microsoft Ads, Amazon Advertising, Facebook, and other platforms.