| January 27, 2000 |
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Many real estate web designers use "frames" to minimize regular site maintenance chores like updating a link, adding a holiday theme or changing vital contact information. Frames allow the webmaster to make changes once and... voila! The change is reflected across your entire site. The other major benefit to using frames is the ability to provide visitors with access to other content while preventing them from leaving your web site. This is particularly useful when providing access to a national MLS like realtor.com or homeseekers.com where, if you don't keep visitors on your site with your contact information in front of them, chances are the listing agentwill secure the lead. Yet, despite the benefits, there is a serious downside to using frames. In many cases, frames block the search engines from spidering your site and indexing all the pages on your site. In the past month, we have reviewed over 100 real estate web sites. We checked four things:
If your site is currently designed around frames, there are three ways to fix this problem:
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