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USING META TAGS SUCCESSFULLY....
Web site promotion through search engine placement is free online marketing for
your business. If you're not in the top 20 to 30 spots when a person performs a
search, you are losing over 90% of your potential search engine referral hits.
This information will not only help you gain hits, but "targeted
hits". This makes for much more qualified visitation to your site,
reserving your bandwidth for those who will bring you profit.
Keywords Are Key
Keywords consist of single words of phrases that you tailor your site to
reflect. They are extremely important because these are the words and phrases
that people type into a search engine to find what they are looking for.
Choosing the right keywords is the first step to search engine optimization.
Choose keywords that are customized to your needs. If you have a web site for
a real estate company who does business primarily in New Hampshire, use
"new hampshire real estate" as your keyword phrase instead of
"real estate". You have a much greater chance of top placement and
your visitors are much more qualified. I used this exact keyword example just
last week to get number one placement on Yahoo for one of my clients.
Wouldn't it be nice to know which keywords are the most popular before you
choose them? You can. This is an amazing free tool. Read the instructions below
before you visit this site.
Go to the Search Engine Suggestion Reports from GoTo.com. Enter any term that you wish to research.
You will be shown how many searches were done for that and similar terms for the
last month. Similar terms are typically those that include your actual search
term as a portion.
Using Keywords Successfully
It's always a good idea to have your company name as a keyword, especially if
it is in your domain name. This will help even more if a search engine or
directory editor examines your site.
Keyword Use: Once you know what keywords you will implement, determine how
often they will be used. A good rule of thumb is to not repeat keywords more
than 3 times throughout a single page. Overuse of a keyword is considered
spamming and can destroy your hopes of high placement or, in some cases, any
placement at all.
Keyword Prominence: As important as how often you use a keyword is where it
appears in the text. Try to place over 50% (55% to 75% is ideal) of your keyword
usage in the first few lines of the body text. This is tricky, but well worth
the effort. If, for example, you used "New Hampshire real estate" as a
keyword phrase seven times throughout the page, try to break it down like this:
4 mentions in the first 2 paragraphs - 2 mentions in the next paragraph or two -
1 mention in a paragraph toward the bottom of the page.
Keyword Weight: Your keyword weight can be important to good placement and
very easy to figure out. Simply count each occurrence of the keyword and compare
it to the total number of words on the page. Each keyword or keyword phrase
should represent somewhere between 3 and 10% of the total number of words on
that page.
Rank Higher
Most search engines are different in the way they rank any web site, however
there is one common thread. Most search engines (not directories) rank by
relevance. They use an algorithm (method for establishing search criteria) that
is specific to that particular engine's wants and needs. These algorithms change
every so often and you never know when it will happen.
The reason that each search engine works differently from each other is
simple. They are in competition for hits, just like you. They make money from
selling advertising on their web site, just as you may decide to do when you get
enough visitors. Being unique from the competition is critical to their success.
Now that we have an understanding of keyword selection and placement in the
body of the document, let's take a look at the little bonuses we can get for
strategic use of tags.
Background Information is simply that data that the user typically does not
see as part of the body of the text. We can place keywords in the background to
enhance our placement. This is accomplished through the use of tags.
The three tags that we are concerned with right now are the "Title"
tag, "Alt" tag and "Description" tag. These are also
considered Meta Tags, in case you're familiar with the term.
The Title tag is just as it implies - the title of the Web page. Choose a
title that is very descriptive and concise. Most search engines only recognize
the first 6 words of the title so try not to go over 8 words total.
Another very important thing is to have your primary keyword in the title.
Many search engines will penalize you for having more than one instance of the
same keyword in a title, so bear this in mind. Here's the clincher. This tip
alone can get you placement that's 20% higher than present. Make your title
keyword as prominent (near the beginning) as possible.
The Alt tag is a simple Meta insert that tells the Web browser there is
"alternate" information to be found in this area. A very good example
is placing a message (with a keyword) behind an image. So instead of the browser
reading the word "home-photo.jpg", which probably means nothing, it
can read "Portsmouth New Hampshire home" and give you more credit for
keywords and thus, higher placement.
However, be warned. Most search engines don't like to see too many keywords
in "Alt" tags so try to limit it to between 2 and 4 occurrences.
The last tag of our focus is the "Description". This is very
important because the description is typically what directories judge you by and
what your visitor will see of your site before actually visiting it. This is
your one shot at convincing somebody that your site is better than the other
27,554 matches that came up, and you only have about 25 words (or 150
characters) in which to do it.
Keyword Prominence is again, a great concern here. Try to place your primary
keyword as close the beginning of your description as possible.
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