Choosing Keywords
keywords are the most important feature of a website as it
pertains to SEO, because it tells search engines what your page is
about, as well as acts as a guide for what you hope people will
find you for when they do a search on any search engines such as
Google, Yahoo, Dogpile, Ask, etc.
Keywords should be in two places; in the header part of your
page, which no one sees, and then throughout your website, but most
specifically on your main page. Let's take this one at a time.
In the header part of your page coding, underneath the title,
there are two categories and one should probably have. The first is
a meta tag known as "description", which allows you to write up to
a 250 character description of what your business does. The second
is a meta tag known as "keywords", and in here is where you put
terms that you hope people will find you by when they do searches.
The general rule of thumb is that you should keep that to around
250 characters also, but I've noticed you won't get penalized if
you're a little bit over that. As a point of clarification,
characters also include spaces, so if you're not sure on the count
I suggest you create or paste your phrase into something like
Microsoft Word, do tools, then word count; it'll tell you both how
many words and how many characters you have.
There is one major rule here and one point of contention. The
major rule is to not stuff words into the keywords area over and
over. For instance, if you sell toys, don't do this: toys, toys,
toys, toys, toys, toys, toys, toys, toys,… you catch my drift here.
This will get your page ignored. Also, don't use one word more than
four times if you can possibly help it, no matter how many ways you
can use it, to whit: toys, red toys, blue toys, big toys, small
toys, American toys, lazy toys, educational toys,… and so on. After
you've already used a certain word a number of times, the search
engines are smart enough to recognize it's importance to what you
do, and you can then spend your time looking for other phrases that
you want to highlight.
The point of contention is whether one should separate search
terms by commas or not. It seems to be split down the middle in my
research. I sit on the side that says split them up. If you can key
on certain terms that you know and hope people will use in looking
for your products or services, it just makes your life much
easier.
One final thing. In 2006, Google changed up how they look at
keywords. More specifically, they've stopped looking at keywords in
meta tags unless they have nothing else to look at on your pages.
We'll be talking about content in
more detail later on. However, there are still other search engines
that look at meta tags, and since Google isn't the only search
engine in the world, it still is in your best interest to put them
in your meta tags.
Next comes the keywords people see, which need to be on your
main page. The way the ranking services see things, if what you say
you do is so important, it should be on your page also. I've seen
many pages where someone has keywords within their header, yet you
get to their page and there's nothing there to indicate what they
do. Keywords should be prominent, used early, hopefully often
enough to bring the point home, but not used out of context. If
possible, try to use some of the same phrases you use in the
keywords that are unseen, and highlight them. The percentage of
your keywords that come up per the number of words you have in your
content is known is keyword density.
If you have a page where the only word is "toys" in many
different combinations, your page will eventually be unlisted on
the search engines. Both here and in the header, this is known as
keyword stuffing, and it'll get you nowhere. As a rule, try not to
use a particular term more than 5 times. Yeah, that's sometimes
difficult to do, but just be as cautious as you can.
This means that your initial page should have some nice copy
about what you do, hopefully at least three or four paragraphs or
lists of what you do. You don't want to give it all away on the
first page, but you do want to tell the world immediately what it
is you do. If you're going to spend any real time on a page, this
one is most crucial to your online success.
One more thing you can do is put what's known as alt tags into
any images you have on your page. Basically, it gives you the
opportunity to have another place to put keywords to show people
what it is you do. For a more practical reason, sometimes pictures
don't come through on some browsers for whatever reason, and having
those descriptions helps more people know what it is you do. The
downside of this is that it's being used by more and more spammers
these days to get their emails through your spam filters, but email
spam is a lesson for someone else to tackle. If you have menu
items, like mine on the side, it's best to use alt tags that say
what they are, but for any other images, it could add up,
especially if your page was created with an image background that
was broken up into multiple pieces.
There's more, but I don't want this to become a tome, so we'll
move on from here. Next on our list is link popularity.
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