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Areasmoke |
web site promotion on Google by keywords: CHEAP DISCOUNT CIGARETTES, L&M cigarettes,
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Search Engine Optimization and web site promotion
Step 3 - The Meta Tags
The fabled Meta tags are important to getting good rankings, and on many
search engines, the page title (often truncated) and the Meta Description
tag are what gets displayed.
Meta tags go in the {HEAD} section of the HTML page (the same section as the
{TITLE} tag). The Meta Description tag should contain a short description of
the web-page. Guess what? You've already written one for the {TITLE} tag! So
just edit that to make it totally human readable (and perhaps a little
shorter), and you're done. The format of a Meta description tag is simple.
It looks like this:
{META name="description" content="whatever you want to place here"}
So, in our example, we might use:
{META name="description" content="Real Estate in Wilmington, North
Carolina - Buying, Selling & Renting of Houses, Homes, Apartments,
Commercial Property and Office Space"}
My advice on the length of this description is keep it between 100 and 200
characters. Remember: the description tag should be written for humans to
read. It should not be a list of keywords!
The other Meta tag is the Meta Keywords tag. What you do is take your
keyphrases, and enter them in the order you think is most appropriate,
separated by commas. Don't repeat a keyphrase, and don't repeat any
individual word more than 5 times or so. This may mean that you can't use
some of your better keyphrases.
The reason why you don't want to repeat any particular word more than 5
times is that some search engines may penalize you for doing this. Search
engines aren't as sensitive to keyword repeating as they used to be (most of
them ignore extra repeats), but play it safe. The exception is common
"noise" words like "the", "in", "a", "and" and so on. Most search engines
ignore them. Leave them in, but don't worry if you have more than 5 of any
of them.
If you've got a lot of keyphrases that really are relevant to your site, the
best thing to do is build "theme" pages devoted to a particular keyphrase or
set of keyphrases. This is good for you, good for your visitors, and
appreciated by the search engines. Use the most important keyphrases on your
homepage.
Some people get confused about whether to use commas between phrases, and
whether to capitalize keywords. The truth is, some search engines pay
attention to the commas, some don't. But the ones who don't treat them as
"white-space". So just use commas as appropriate, but don't waste a
character putting a space after the comma. Similarly, just capitalize words
as you might expect people to normally use them. Most search engines will
ignore the capitalization, but it can't hurt to help out those that make
note of it.
If you want to get really fancy, play the cunning comma trick. The search
engines that don't pay attention to commas sometimes pay attention to
sequences of words. So if you can put two keyphrases together with a comma
between them, and the last words of the first keyphrase coupled with the
first words of the next keyphrase make up one of your keyphrases, then
you've gotten 3 keyphrases for the price of two! Normally, however, this is
difficult, so don't waste too much time over it.
Keep your keywords meta-tag length between 200-400 characters.
Unfortunately, this means you may not be able to include all of your key
phrases in your meta keywords tag even if you don't repeat a word too often.
The theme pages concept deals with this also. After pruning away, our sample
keywords tag might look like this:
{ META name=keywords content=real estate in wilmington north carolina,buying
real estate in wilmington north carolina,selling real estate in wilmington
north carolina,renting real estate in wilmington north carolina,real estate
broker in wilmington north carolina,new hanover county,south-east north
carolina,house broker,apartment broker,home sales,apartment rental }
Step 4 - The first paragraph
The first paragraph of your page should recapitulate and expand upon
everything in your title and meta tags. You need to have all those
keyphrases in it. However, since this is going to be read by people, it
needs to be written with them in mind. This is where you introduce yourself
to your visitors, so you want to make a good impression.
Try to put this first paragraph as close to the {BODY} tag as possible.
Avoid putting graphics or other HTML in front of your first paragraph as
much as you can. I don't have a banner ad on my homepage for this reason.
Also, use the {H1} or {H2} tag to emphasize your opening sentence (but make
sure it looks tasteful!). Bill Phillips might use the following opening
paragraph:
{H2}Are you interested in buying, selling or renting real estate in
Wilmington, North Carolina?{/H2}{BR}
If so, you've come to the right place. My name is Bill Phillips, and for the
last 10 years, I've specialized in helping my clients find the perfect home,
apartment or commercial space in beautiful New Hanover County. Please allow
me to be your guide.
Step 5 - Don't Go Overboard - and whatever you do, don't put up spam pages!
You clearly want to have your important keyphrases on your page more than
once, because this is what gives the search engines a clue as to what your
page is really about. But you don't want your keyphrases to appear too many
times, because that might make the search engines think your page is a spam
page trying to rank highly for a particular phrase.
The question then becomes, how much is too much? And the answer is, nobody
knows for sure, and it's going to be different from search engine to search
engine. Rumor has it that Google likes pages with less than 13 repeats of a
keyphrase, for example.
My advice is to try and keep the number of repeats of important phrases down
to 10 or less; this means all instances, in title, meta tags, and the text
of the page. Sometimes this simply isn't possible, because the phrase is so
integral to your topic, so don't get paranoid about this. Just keep it in
mind.
There are certain classes of sites and pages that the big guys consider
spam, and either won't list, or will penalize. The major indexes consider
the following kinds sites to be spam and will not list them:
- Affiliate sites with same or similar content but a different site designs.
- Mirror sites. Submitting mirror URLs to different categories is also
considered spam. Multi-- lingual sites are acceptable as long as the URL
resolves to the appropriate language.
- Sites that use redirects or any type of bait-and-switch practice. Using
frames to hide a real URL, commonly referred to as "poor man's cloaking," is
also considered spam.
- Sites whose sole purpose is to drive traffic to affiliate links or sites
that contain these types of links.
- Sites without original content.
- Sites that are repeatedly resubmitted (over 5 times) without being
accepted.
In addition, the major search engines are actively penalizing/banning sites
that employ the following techniques:
- Web pages that are built primarily for the search engines and not your
target audience, especially machine-generated pages.
- Pages that contain hidden text and hidden links.
- "Great quantity and little value" pages.
- Link farming and link spamming, particularly free-for-all (FFA) links.
- Cloaking, a practice in which the search engine and the end user do not
view the same page.
- Sites with numerous, unnecessary host names (i.e. poker.abc.com,
blackjack.abc.com, etc.).
- Excessively cross-linking sites to artificially inflate a site's apparent
popularity.
- Affiliate spam.
People who repeatedly submit spam sites to the big guys have not only been
blacklisted, but in some cases, their previously submitted (and legitimate)
sites have been removed. So be nice to the Indexes, and they'll be nice to
you. And credit where credit is due: Chris Sherman's SearchDay Newsletter is
the place to find out what works -- and what doesn't -- with the search
engines.
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The article below has been reprinted with permission from
www.selfpromotion.com.
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