Meta Title Descriptive Keyword Tags
Title Tag
Perhaps the most important tag on a web site, as far as search
engine rankings go, is the < Title > tag. This tag provides
the description that appears at the top of the browser window
in order to let an Internet user know where they are. Because
this tag is also used as the official "Title" of
your web site in most search engine results, it also provides
one of your best chances to entice a web surfer to visit your
site. For both search engine optimization and marketing purposes,
the Title tag should be a richly-written, keyword dense sentence
that accurately describes the content of that particular web
page.
A common practice is to use the Title tag to list the name
of the company or web site. Not only does this tell the visitor
very little about the content of that particular page, it
also does nothing to tell the spider what type of content
your page contains. Each and every page of a web site should
have a unique hand written title. The Title tag should be
focused on describing the content of that particular web page
in a keyword rich manner.
For example, the title "Joe's Sandwich Shack" for
a deli in Manhattan is unlikely to be either informative to
the casual surfer, or to deliver keyword rich text for the
search engine to rank your site for. A much better title would
be "New York City Deli Sandwiches & Desserts - Joe's
Sandwich Shack" The new description not only provides
keyword rich content to the spider, it also offers a much
more detailed description to potential customers browsing
through search results.
Meta Keyword Tag
Once thought to be the golden key to high search engine rankings,
the importance of the Meta Keyword tag has dropped dramatically
over the last few years. Although most major engines no longer
make use of the Meta Keyword tag, it is still worthwhile to
include it for the smaller engines that do.
Using the same exact Meta Keyword on every page will get
you nowhere. Each page should have a customized tag that reflects
the content of that page. It's also important to remember
that you should only be targeting a few phrases per page and
that only those targeted phrases should be included in your
tag. (Aim for 8-12 words total.)
There remains some level of debate on the use of commas within
the Meta Keyword tag. I've found that leaving the commas out
provides the most opportunity for multiple phrases with minimal
words. Search engines will read a string of text and will
break that string up into phrases as needed to provide search
results.
Working off of our deli site above, let's consider that Joe
wishes to optimize for the following phrases:
New York City Deli
Deli Sandwiches
Sandwiches & Desserts
If you planned to use commas in your Meta Keyword tag, you
would need to structure the tag as follows:
< Meta Name="Keyword" Content ="New York
City Deli, Deli Sandwiches, Sandwiches & Desserts ">
If you remove the commas and allow the search engines to
break up the text as they see fit, you can cut three words
out of your description, thus upping the keyword density within
the tag. For example:
< Meta Name="Keyword" Content="New York
City Deli Sandwiches & Desserts ">
It should be noted that several search engines
are believed to penalize the rankings of sites that include
irrelevant keywords within these tags. Even if this is not
true, remember that adding the keyword "Brittany Spears"
to a site about Jewish Genealogy is unlikely to either help
out your rankings, or, to bring in targeted visitors.
Meta Description Tag
Although it has fallen out of favor, much
like the Meta Keywords tag, the Meta Description Tag still
holds some sway over the major search engines. When used by
the engines, this text is usually the basis for the description
of the site on search engine results pages. A proper Meta
Description tag should provide a brief, accurate, keyword
rich description of the site's content.
Again, building on Joe's deli site, a proper description
should look something like this:
< META NAME="DESCRIPTION" CONTENT=" New
York City Deli specializing in mile-high sandwiches, freshly
prepared desserts, and other kosher treats." >
Note that no search engine will display more
than 250 characters of the Meta Description tag, so it's best
to keep this one brief and to the point. One of the best ways
to go about crafting this tag is to create the description
that you will be submitting to the major directories and then
us that for your Meta Description as well.
|