Step 4 - Page Optimization
Introduction
In recent years the search engine optimizers have started to use the buzzword "SEO
copywriting" to describe the process of incorporating keywords into web page elements in
order to attain higher search engine ranking. This has resulted in a cult like mysticism about
what search engine copywriting really is.
It's true, writing for the engines is a little bit different from writing for a human reader
without any consideration for keywords or the search engines, but there are no hard rules
carved in stones. Earlier we have talked about keyword grouping and keyword mapping to
pages. When you are writing your web pages keep a strong mental note etched in your mind
about the "keyword focus" of the page and how the main keywords tie into the content you
are writing. It's easy to go off track and start focusing on keyword repetition alone, but you
are only going to hurt your conversion rate and turn away your website visitors with a web
copy that "smells" too artificial and repetitive. Write your web copy with emotion and
enthusiasm. It's guaranteed to grab your visitors attention, and we all know the first 5
seconds are crucial to engage your visitors attention.
How to please your visitors and the search engines with
your web copy?
Writing optimized web content for the search engines is relatively easy providing you already
know a fair bit about the subject matter at hand. At the very beginning of this lesson we
would like to list a few golden rules.
-Writing for the search engines doesn't mean you have to change your
writing style substantially by forcing keyword repetitions and forgetting about
the fact a human reader came to your website looking for information about your
products and services. Don't turn them away with web copy that appears unnatural
and spammy.
-Readability and persuasive content comes before any keyword count or
keyword density scores. If you web copy reads like a machine wrote it, it will
make no difference even if the number of unique visitors to your site doubled or
tripled.
-Emphasize benefits instead of features. Tell your website visitors how your
solution will be a god send to their problems detailing the specific benefits your
products or services offer.
-Write in blocks of 10-12 sentences with H1-H3 heading tags separating
main logical sections. This will make your visitors attention more focused and
guaranteed to increase the length of time each visitor spends on your site.
-Strike a conversational tone but refrain from slang words or jargon like
verbiage. You are writing foremost for your human visitors and not the search
engine crawlers.
-Write at a level an 8th grader could easily read and understand. There are a
number of readability scoring systems for you to test your writing style with. The
most known are the Flesch/FleschKincaid readability test to find out how complex
your web pages are to read. We suggest you test your web pages readability scores
at Readability.info by uploading your Microsoft Word document or putting your web
pages online.
-Read expert articles and tips about copywriting for the web. You can never
learn enough about writing content for the web. Beside the obvious tips we can give
you to spell check and proof read your page before putting them online, there are a
number of experts who share their writing secrets for free with anyone interested.
One of our favorite sites to get invaluable copywriting advice is Copyblogger.com
The best written web pages are those that satisfy the website visitors need for clearly
written, informative and persuasive content. At the same you must achieve a level of
keyword saturation by using lexically related phrases often enough to let the search engines
know what your content is about. This is why proper keyword optimization and the art of
writing persuasive content are critically important for all pages of your website.
Repeating keywords too many times or using them unnaturally will make your web pages
unreadable and will ultimately turn your website visitors away. This type of aggressive
optimization may even have a negative affect on your search engine ranking due to an overoptimization
penalty given to web pages suspected of keyword spamming. On the other
hand, if you don't use the keywords often enough your web pages will lack a keyword focus
and the search engines may assign a lower "on-page" ranking score to your web pages.
What is the secret of writing winning content for the
engines and your site visitors?
Consider the chart below illustrating three different website's keyword density scores. Which
one do you think would be ranked higher based on "on-page" ranking factors alone? The
answer is not as simple as you may think. A page with the lowest keyword density could still
outrank the other two pages if the page Title tag and other HTML elements are better
optimized. This ultimately proves you can't rely on keyword repetition alone to beat your
competitors' pages on the search engines.
The optimum keyword density range varies by search engines, but as a guide aim
for a 3%-10% range in the body text as illustrated by the green highlighted area.
Since each search engines use a different "on-page" ranking score it is hard to tell which
website would rank higher based on keyword repetition alone. Although there are some
common factors to consider, optimizing web pages naturally increases the number of times a
keyword is repeated on a web page. Measuring how often a keyword is repeated is known as
keyword count sometimes referred to as keyword occurrence. Closely tied to the keyword
count is the keyword density, which is a ratio between the total number of indexable words
versus the number of times the keywords are repeated on a web page.
For example, one keyword found in a 10 word HTML section is equal to (1/10) *100 = 10%
however, if the same keyword appeared once in a 15 word HTML section, its density would be calculated as (1/15) *100 = 6.6%. As you can see, the higher number of words found on
the page, the lower our keyword density will be due to the diluting effects of the other text
surrounding our keywords.
What is the ideal keyword density?
Here is the short answer, there is no such thing. The optimum density varies greatly from
engine to engine. However, in our experience, creating web pages with an average of 3%-
10% keyword density in the body text ensures the search engines "understand" what the
web pages are about.
What you need to keep in mind is, repeating keywords on a web page beyond what seems
natural and easily readable is counterproductive and can result in hurting your search engine
ranking and your visitor retention. You should start aiming for a 3% keyword density range
first and later tweak your web page content to increase keyword concentration if necessary
without sounding too repetitious to the web searchers.
Follow these simple on-page optimization rules for keyword placement and you'll be creating
web pages the search engines can truly fall in love with.
-Use plural forms of the same words wherever possible. You could sometimes
use the plural forms of your keywords only in the body text and still rank well for
the singular version as well. The same is usually not true in reverse, so use plural
forms when it makes sense without hurting readability.
-Use lexical tools to incorporate related key phrases and synonyms to
improve the latent semantic indexing score. One of best tools to use for this
research is the Google Keyword Tool. The Google Keyword Tool gives you an option
to search for synonyms and best of all it can also show you a relative search volume
for each keyword phrase. Another excellent keyword research tool is Clusty. Here is
an example of a query executed on Clusty with the keyword "seo,” on the left hand
side of the screen you'll see many related key phrases such as "submission,”
"tools,” "search engine position,” etc.
-Use keyword modifiers such as: "help,” "tip,” "guide,” "buy,” "shop,”
"discount,” "affordable" etc. These words form the "glue" between your words.
It's important that you research your top ranking competitors' pages and look for
the "hidden glue" between their words and use the some of those words in your
own content.
How do search engines see keywords?
Can the search engines "see" and index everything the human eye can see? Let's use a well
known online diamond retailer as an example to prove they can't. Bluenile.com is the number
one ranking website for the keyword phrase "diamond engagement rings" on Google. Now
let's examine the Google version of their home page indexed a few days ago. Google has a
neat feature to highlight keywords in cached copy of a web page that was used in a search
query.
Refer to the screenshot below, and open the cached copy of Bluenile.com's home page in
Google.
The Bluenile.com search engine listing on Google
Below we have added a screenshot of the Bluenile.com's page title and Google's cached copy
of their home page to better illustrate their "on-page" keyword optimization. Google has
highlighted the individual keywords we have used in our search query "diamond engagement
rings" As you can see the keywords appear in the title, web page body and internal links.
The search keyword phrase "diamond engagement rings" is highlighted in the
Google cached page of Bluenile.com
Proving the search engines can't index all text visible to
the human eye
What the human eye can see and what the search engines can "see" are two different things.
We are so used to seeing text near images that we sometimes forget the search engines
can't extract text from images. Let's try to prove this with our example of the Bluenile.com
website.
To get a glimpse into what visible text the search engines can see, follow these steps:
-Open the Bluenile.com website in your default browser. Go to your default
browser's Edit menu and click on the Select All menu option (Keyboard Shortcut
CTRL+A)
-Go back to the Edit menu and this time click on Copy (Keyboard Shortcut
CTRL+C)
-Open Notepad or any other plain text editor ( MS Word or other Rich text
editors will not work since they may also import images and other formatting)
-Click on the Edit menu in your plain text editor and click on Paste
(Keyboard Shortcut CTRL+V)
The text you have just captured on your clipboard with the copy command is the visible text
which the search engines can index.
Did you notice how all the text that was embedded on the images was not copied to the text
editor from the Bluenile.com home page? You should take note of this, and never place
important keywords in your image files or flash content.
The visible text captured from Bluenile.com home page
Beyond the visible HTML page elements, search engines also can recognize keywords
inserted in META tags Image or Link attributes such as ALT tags and HREF Title tags, which
are not visible on the web pages. We will fully explore these keyword optimization options in
later lessons.
"On-page" optimization matters... but that's not
everything
The above example is a very basic illustration of how keyword optimization works. There are
no hard rules for "on-page" keyword optimization that can be applied to one website which
would guarantee the same ranking results on another. Some webmasters mistakenly believe
that by closely matching the keyword count and keyword density ratios of top ranking
websites, their own web pages would automatically start to move to the top of the search
result list. Nothing could be farther from the truth. As you will later learn, there are many
other external factors that contribute to high search engine ranking that are simply not
visible on a web page. We are talking about link popularity and other "off-page" factors.
Keyword placement techniques... starting at the top of
the page
Before we get into the specific HTML elements where keywords can be inserted, it's
important to first understand what the search engines consider the most important web page
elements in their ranking algorithm.
Just like website visitors, the search engines also consider the visible text on a web page to
be the most important. Naturally the most prominent HTML web page element is the page
title. The page title is a head web page element that is formatted by using the Title tag code
as the Bluenile home page example shows below:
The web page title is visible in the top part of your default browser window and the HTML
source page. See the screenshot below. Consider the title as the heading of an article or
news story.
The well optimized Bluenile.com web page title as displayed in Internet Explorer.
Do you know that the title of every web page becomes the visible link in the search
engine search results pages? That's right, when people search Google, Yahoo! or
MSN they would find the clickable link in the search results is the same as the title
of the page. Just take a look below, do you see any difference? There is none, but if
the title tag is too long the search engines use about 60 characters of the title tag
and cut the rest off.
The Google search results show the Bluenile website home page title in the search
results.
Creating a unique web pages title for each web page on your website is crucial to achieving
high search engine ranking. It may be hard to believe, but there are still about 15 million
web pages returned by Google which contains the word "Untitled" Don't make the same
mistake as those sites, place keywords in your web page titles that match the most often
occurring keywords on that web page.
A simple change to the page title can often result in a dramatic increase in search
engine rankings without any other supplementary changes.
Second in line of importance is the body text. Without indexable website content even the
best written title tags will have no affect on search engine ranking. The key to creating well
optimized web pages is the art of repeating the keywords often enough for the search
engines to "understand" your website content without sounding too spammy or repetitious to
your visitors. In our experience a 300 to 400 word web page copy works best when 2-3
keyword phrases per web page are optimized.
Can you guess what other visible HTML elements are also important to optimize?
If you guessed internal text links, you're right. Incorporating your most important keywords
into internal text links and creating inline text links within the body of your web pages is a
very effective optimization technique to get higher search engine ranking. As a matter of fact
you should have a bottom navigation on every page with the main keywords in the links
pointing back to the site's most important pages.
For example, instead of linking to your home page like this:
A much better and more effective link would look like this:
Optimizing visible HTML elements
We have listed the most important visible HTML elements in order of importance in the table
below. Don't forget the search engines focus on words and phrases that are emphasized with
different text decoration techniques such as heading text (H1, H2, H3) , bold (<strong>) or
italicized text (<em>), so add emphasis to your key phrases but don't over do it.
Did you know the search engines differentiate between the <strong> and <b> tags even
though they produce identical visual display results? We recommend the use of the <strong>
tag to bold keywords over the <b> tag and for italicizing we prefer using the <em> tag over
the <i> tag.
Visible HTML Elements |
| Visible HTML Element |
Important Notes |
Description and Usage Example |
| Website Title |
The words in the title tag of your page also need to exist in the body text and various headings in the actual content of your HTML page. |
Title is the text placed between title
tags in the HEAD section and it is
used to identify contents of the web
page.The Title tag also becomes the
clickable link in the search results
once your pages become indexed.Creating a catchy persuasive Title
tag will increase the click through
rate of your links in the search results.Example: <TITLE>title goes here</TITLE> |
| Each page of your website
should have a unique title tag
targeting various keyword
combinations and phrases |
| Place two to three keywords in
the title that are the most often repeated on the web page including the plural forms. |
| Don't put keywords in the title
that are not contained on the
web page |
| Don't use stopwords or "dead"
word such as "with, the, and, of
or welcome..." |
| Keep the total number of
characters under 60, or 4 to 6
Words |
| The keyword density range
should be between 10%-100% |
| You should use the website or
business name in the home
page title. |
| Body Text |
Body text between 250-400
words work best, but write
freely and don't try to force on
yourself word count rules. |
Body text is the text visible in the
browser. Example: <BODY>this is where
your body text goes</BODY> |
| Create 2-3 sentence long
paragraphs and break them
apart with line or paragraph
breaks |
| Sprinkle your keywords into
body text while maintaining
good readability. Use plural
forms, lexically related term and
modifiers. |
| Incorporate your keywords into
the body text in the top, middle
and bottom of your web pages |
| Use keywords in heading tags to
break apart sections |
| Use keywords in bulleted or
numbered lists where it makes
sense |
| Link to other web pages where
a link to a related subject
makes sense using the
keywords |
| Use strong, bold or italicized
text for emphasizing keywords |
| The keyword density range
should be between 3%-10% in
the body text |
| Link Text (Anchor Text) |
Place two to three keywords in
the link text. As a rule you
should use the first keyword in
the link text that appears in the
title of the linked page |
Link text is the clickable text which
connects one web page to another.Example: <A
HREF="page.html">link text goes
here</A> |
| Refer to the Title tag section for
optimization notes |
| Don't use stop words. |
| The keyword density range should be between 50%-100% |
| Headings H1-H6 |
Insert your keywords into the
heading text while keeping the
total word count under 5-6 |
Headings are used as the topics of
the website's sections.Heading Tags <h1> and <h2> tags
used to emphasize keywords.
Heading tags are a great way to
boost the importance of your
keywords; they are also given more
weight by search engines compared
to regularly formatted text or text
between bold or strong font tags.
Heading tags range from <H1>
(bigger text, signifying more
importance) to <H2>, <h3>,
<h4>, <H2> and <h6> (smaller
text, signifying least importance).
Example: <H1>heading 1 goes
here</H1> |
| Use H1-H3 heading mainly and
keep the logical order of the
heading tags numerical
sequence |
| Don't repeat the same heading
more than once on the same
web page |
| The keyword density range
should be between 50%-100% |
| Strong Text |
Use it to add emphasis to keywords |
Strong text is used for stronger
emphasis and is usually displayed
in bold font. Example: <STRONG>strong text
goes here</STRONG> |
| Don't apply this style to every
keyword occurrence on the web
page |
| Bold Text |
See Strong text notes |
Bold text is used as a font styling
element to signify important words
or sections in the web page.
Example: <B>bold text goes
here</B> |
| Italic Text |
See Strong text notes |
Italic text is used as a font styling
element to point out new terms,
book or article titles etc.
Example: <I>italic text goes
here</I> |
| EM Text |
See Strong text notes |
Em text is used for emphasis and is
usually displayed in italic font.
Example: <EM>em text goes
here</EM> |
| Cite Text |
See Strong text notes |
Cite text is used for citations or
reference to other sources.
Example: <CITE>cite text goes
here</CITE> |
| Abbr Text |
See Strong text notes |
Abbr text is used for abbreviations
which are shortened forms of words
like HTML, FBI or WWW.
Example: <ABBR>abbr text goes here</ABBR> |
| Acronym Text |
See Strong text notes |
Acronym Text:
Acronym text is used for
pronounceable abbreviations like
NATO. It is also used for shortened
forms of word like Inc. for
Incorporated or Lab. for laboratory.
Example: <ACRONYM>acronym
text goes here</ACRONYM> |
| Table Caption |
Use keywords in describing a table's content |
Table caption is used as a short
description of the table's purpose
usually displayed below the table.Example:
<TABLE><CAPTION>caption goes
here<CAPTION></TABLE> |
| The keyword density range
should be between 50%-100% |
| Domain, File and Folder Names |
Place keywords into folder and
file names and separate them
with hyphens |
Most search engines look for
keywords in domain, folder and
web page names.
Example:
http://www.keyword.com/
keyword1/keyword2-
keyword3.html |
| The keyword density range
should be between 50%-100% |
Optimizing invisible HTML elements
One of the most important invisible web page elements is the META description. This tag is
especially important to include and optimize in the header section, as most of the major
search engines use the META description as a partial or full description of the website in their
search results. We can see an example of the META description directly taken from the
Bluenile.com home page by Google and inserted in the search results. Gaining control over
how your website is "described" in the search results can increase the clickthroughs of your
search listings.
An example of the META description directly taken from the page source and placed
under the website title in the Google search results.
We can incorporate keywords into other HTML page elements that are not visible on the web
page, but still can be "seen" and indexed by the search engines. Include keywords in the
HTML sections below. Although optimizing these less important HTML tags will most likely not
result in a great ranking increase, they are nonetheless a suggested optimization task for
websites targeting very competitive keyword phrases.
Invisible HTML Elements |
Invisible
HTML
Element |
Important Notes |
Description and Usage
Example |
META
Description |
Write one or two sentences that
describes the web page, don't
simply list keywords |
Description is the text placed in
the META tag in the HEAD
section and is used as a short
description of the web page's
content.
The META Descriptions are
often included in the search
listings as a brief description of
your site, sometime word for
word, so it's very important to
include them on your pages.
Example: <META
NAME="description"
CONTENT="description goes
here">
|
Place two to three keywords in the
META Description section that are
most often repeated on the web
page |
Don't put keywords in the META
Description section that are not
contained on the web page |
Keep the total number of
characters under 300, or 20 to 40
words |
Ensure every page of your site
contains a unique META
Description |
The keyword density range should
be between 5%-10% |
META
Keywords |
List the first 20-30 most often
occurring keywords separated by
commas |
Keywords are the terms placed
in the META tag in the HEAD
section and are used
specifically for search engines
which look for search terms
that apply to the web page.
Keywords should be separated
by commas.
It's not necessary to include
the META keywords as they
don't have any positive ranking
affect and it will not show up in
the search results listings
unlike the META Description
Example: <META
NAME="keywords"
CONTENT="keywords go
here"> |
Don't put keywords in the META
Keywords section that are not
contained on the web page |
Don't repeat the same keyword
phrase more than once |
Keep the total number of
characters under 255, or 20 to 40
keywords |
Ensure every page of your site
contains a unique META Keywords |
| Link Title |
Place two to three keywords in the
link title. As a rule you should use
the first keyword in the link title
that appears in the title of the
linked page |
Link title is the attribute of the
link and adds information
about the link; it is rendered as
a tool tip in the browser.
Example: <A
HREF="page.html" TITLE="link
title goes here">text</A> |
Refer to the Title tag section for
optimization notes |
The keyword density range should
be between 50%-100% |
Image Alt
Tags |
Place two to three keywords in the
image Alt tag that best describes
what the image is about |
Alt tag is an alternative text
that is displayed as a tool tip in
the browser. It is also used as image description in browsers
that do not support images,
browsers that have image
support turned off, speech
synthesizers and visually
impaired users.Example: <IMG
SRC="image.gif" ALT="alt text
goes here"> |
Refer to the Title tag section for
optimization notes |
The keyword density range should
be between 50%-100% |
Image File
Names |
Place keywords into image file
names and separate them with
hyphens |
Image names are the names of
the image files.
Example: <IMG SRC="imagename-
goes-here.gif"> |
The keyword density range should
be between 50%-100% |
Table
Summary |
Write one sentence that best
describes the table's content. Don't
simply list keywords |
Table summary is used for
describing the table's contents
and purpose to non-visual
media.
Example: <TABLE
SUMMARY="summary
description goes here"> |
The keyword density range should
be between 50%-100% |
Conclusion
-Examine your website code and make sure you get your keywords as close
to the beginning of your page as possible, preferably the in the first 100 words.
Your goal is to put keywords towards the very beginning of your web page since
search engines give those a much higher relevance. The rest of the page should
have keywords near the middle and bottom as well.
-If you have JavaScript at the top of your web pages make sure you move
them toward the end of your web pages, or better yet, create an externally
linkable JavaScript file and place your code there.
-Make sure your website has a site map. A site map is a listing of all sections of
a website with individual links to every page. The site map enables visitors to click
on the site map links and move directly to a specific section on the website, which
improves the site usability. Your site map should be linked from the home page as
the site map assists crawlers in finding and indexing all of your pages and the home
page is usually the first entry page to your site.
-Add a glossary of terms page for the most frequent industry keywords and
their definitions. We have discussed in the competition research lesson how to
find competing sites for your keyword phrases with the Google "define" command.
Now it's time to gain some advantage for your own site by adding a glossary of
terms page of your own.
-After you've optimized your pages, check and re-check each page with the
SEO Studio Keyword Analyzer to ensure you have achieved the desired
concentrations of keyword density and prominence of keywords in each page
compared to your competitors top ranking pages. Keep on repeating the
optimization and tweaking process until you are satisfied with the Keyword Analyzer
report.
-Inbound links to a website most often will have a far greater importance
than perfectly optimized web pages. Don't fuss too much over the perfectly optimized web page, in our experience there is no such thing, as the engines are
constantly changing their methods for scoring page content. Instead, focus your
efforts on building content that other websites will naturally want to link to.