10 Basic Rules
for Where to Place Your Keywords
by Craige Stacey
First of all, Google and most other search engines do NOT look at
the META keyword tag. Many people say not to bother with it, but
I use the META keyword tag and I place my keyword phrases in it.
Here’s why. I use this tag to help me remember what keyword
phrases I am optimizing the page for. You’ll find this to
be a big help later when you have a lot of pages and have forgotten
what keyword phrases you were trying to optimize the page for in
the first place.
For the META description tag, keep your most important keyword phrase
near the beginning of the sentence and make this tag a full sentence.
Do NOT use bold or italic keyword phrases in the first sentence
on the page, but DO use your most important keyword phrase in the
first sentence, but not the first word.
By all means, use your keyword phrases in your headings, (H1, H2
and H3).
Start putting keyword phrases in bold in the second paragraph.
Put your keywords or keyword phrases in italics a few times AFTER
the first usage of the keyword. Never let the first usage of your
keyword phrases be in Italics.
Use keywords in ALT tags.
It’s very important to get other sites to use your most important
keyword phase for your page in any inbound links. Of course, you
are not in control of how other sites link to you, but work hard
to get them to use your keyword phrase. Most sites will link to
your home page, so give them the most important keyword phrase you
are optimizing your home page for.
When you are linking from any page back to your home page, use your
most important keyword phrase in the link. When your home page is
linking to any other page, use the keyword phrase in that link that
the other page is being optimized for.
Don’t plan on getting much (if any) help by putting keywords
or keyword phrases in your left Nav panel. Google likes keywords
in full sentences. Putting the sentence in a paragraph is even better.
By the way, a sentence according to Google is three or more words
starting with a capital letter and ending with a period or other
punctuation. Stop words such as:
“I,” “a,” “the,” and “of”
do NOT count as one of your three words.
Follow these rules and your Web site will make a big jump in its
relevancy for your keyword phrases. Following these rules will NOT
boost your PageRank.
To be #1 or even in the top 10 on the search engines your relevance
for a given keyword phrase is much more important than your PageRank.
For example, you could have a PageRank of 10 and still not show
up in the top 100 sites when someone is searching for “peanut
butter sandwiches” unless of course, your page is optimized
for (and has a high relevance for) the phrase “peanut butter
sandwiches."
One final point: Use your keyword phrase in an H1, H2 or H3 headline
followed by a keyword-rich paragraph and then repeat this with another
H1, H2 or H3 headline and another keyword-rich paragraph. And of
course repeat this again.
Use this format in addition following the 10 rules above and you
will have a page with a high relevance for your keyword phrases.
Don’t try to optimize a page for more that two or three keyword
phrases and always optimize for keyword phrases and NOT keywords.
After all, the keyword is included within the keyword phrase. Most
people don't search for just one word any more anyway.
I have seen pages rank #1 with keyword densities form 1% to 20%,
but I usually try to have a keyword phrase density of between 2%
to 6%. Sometimes I go up to 10%.
Craige Stacey has been studying search engines optimization as a
hobby and has achieved some very good search engine positions in
the past for subscription
software.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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