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Dec
10
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Taken from other site
Keywords
I.1. Keyword in URL :
First word is best, second is second best, etc.
I.2. Keyword in Domain name :
Same as in page-name-with-hyphens
Keywords – Header
II.1. Keyword in Title tag – close to beginning
Title tag 10 – 60 characters, no special characters.
II.2. Keyword in Description meta tag
Shows theme – less than 200 chars.
Google no longer “relies” upon this tag, but will often use it.
II.3 Keyword in Keyword metatag
Shows theme – less than 10 words.
Every word in this tag MUST appear somewhere in the body text.
If not, it can be penalized for irrelevance.
No single word should appear more than twice.
If not, it may be considered spam.
*Google purportedly no longer uses this tag, but others do.
Keywords – Body
III.1. Keyword density in body text
5 – 20% – (all keywords/ total words)
Some report topic sensitivity – the keyword spamming threshold % varies with the topic.
III.2. Individual keyword density
1 – 6% – (each keyword/ total words)
III.3. Keyword in H1, H2 and H3
Use Hx font style tags appropriately
III.4. Keyword font size
Strong is treated the same as bold, italic is treated the same as emphasis
III.5. Keyword proximity (for 2+ keywords)
Directly adjacent is best
III.6. Keyword phrase order
Does word order in the page match word order in the query?
Try to anticipate query, and match word order.
III.7. Keyword prominence (how early in page/tag)
Can be important at top of page, in bold, in large font
Keywords – Other
IV.1. Keyword in alt text
Should describe graphic – Do NOT fill with spam
- Was part of Google Florida OOP
- tripped a threshold
- may still be in effect to some degree as a red flag,
when summed with all other on-page optimization
- total page optimization score – TPOS).
IV.2 Keyword in links to site pages (anchor text)
Links out anchor text use keyword?
NAVIGATION – INTERNAL LINKS
V.1. To internal pages- keywords?
- Link should contain keywords.
- The filename “linked to” should contain the keywords.
- Use hyphenated filenames, but not long ones
- two or three hyphens only.
V.2. All Internal links valid?
Validate all links to all pages on site.
Use a free link checker. I like this one.
V.3. Efficient – tree-like structure
- TRY FOR two clicks to any page
- no page deeper than 4 clicks
V.4. Intra-site linking
Appropriate links between lower-level pages
NAVIGATION – OUTGOING LINKS
VI.1. To external pages- keywords?
- Google patent
- Link only to good sites. Do not link to link farms. CAREFUL
- Links can and do go bad, resulting in site demotion.
Unfortunately, you must devote the time necessary to police your outgoing links
- they are your responsibility.
VI.2. Outgoing link Anchor Text
- Google patent
- Should be on topic, descriptive
VI.3. Link stability over time
- Google patent
- Avoid “Link Churn”
VI.4. All External links valid?
- Validate all links periodically.
VI.4. Less than 100 links out total
- Google says limit to 100,
but readily accepts 2-3 times that number. ref 2k
VI.5. Linking to Authority
- Some say this gives a boost
- Others say that is absurd.
However, it certainly is the opposite of linking to trash, which WILL hurt you.
OTHER ON-Page Factors
VII.1. Domain Name Extension
- Top Level Domain – TLD
- .gov sites seem to be the highest status
- .edu sites seem to be given a high status
- .org sites seem to be given a high status
- .com sites excel in encompassing all the spam/ crud sites,
resulting in the need for the highest scrutiny/ action by Google.
Perhaps one would do well with the new
- .info domain class. – Nope.
- Spammers jumped all over it – no safe haven there. Not so much, now
- .info sites can rank highly.
VII.2. File Size
- Try not to exceed 100K page size
(however, some subject matter, such as this page, requires larger file sizes).
- Smaller files are preferred <40K (lots of them).
VII.3. Hyphens in URL
- Preferred method for indicating a space, where there can be no actual space
- One or two= excellent for separating keywords (i.e., pet-smart, pets-mart)
- Four or more= BAD, starts to look spammy
- Ten = Spammer for sure, demotion probable?
VII.4. Freshness of Pages
- Google patent
- Changes over time
- Newer the better
- if news, retail or auction!
Google likes fresh pages.
VII.5. Freshness (Amount of Content Change )
New pages – Ratio of old pages to new pages
VII.6. Freshness of Links
- Google patent
- May be good or bad
- Excellent for high-trust sites
- May not be so good for newer, low-trust sites
VII.7. Frequency of Updates
Frequent updates = frequent spidering = newer cache
VII.8. Page Theming
Page exhibit theme? General consistency?
VII.9. Keyword stemming
Stem, stems, stemmed, stemmer,
stemming, stemmist, stemification
VII.10. Applied Semantics
Synonyms, CIRCA white paper
VII.11. LSI
Latent Semantic Indexing – Speculation, no proof
VII.12. URL length
- Keep it minimized
- use somewhat less than the 2,000 characters allowed by IE
- less than 100 is good, less is even better
OTHER ON-SITE Factors
VIII.1. Site Size – Google likes big sites
Larger sites are presumed to be better funded, better organized,
better constructed, and therefore better sites.
Google likes LARGE sites, for various reasons, not all positive.
This has resulted in the advent of machine-generated 10,000-page spam sites
size for the sake of size.
Google has caught on and dumped millions of pages, or made them supplemental.
VIII.2. Site Age
- Google patent
- Old is best. Old is Golden.
VIII.3. Age of page vs. age of site
- Age of page vs. age of other pages on site
- Newer pages on an older site will get faster recognition.
December 23rd, 2009 at 12:31 am
Hello, I just thought I would post and let you know your website layout is really screwed up on the Firefox browser. Seems to work ok in Internet Explorer though. Anyhow keep up the good work.