Meta
Tag Recommendations:
Meta
tags once held the distinction of being the primary realm of SEO
specialists. Today, the use of meta tags, particularly the meta
keywords tag, has diminished to an extent that search engines no
longer use them in their ranking of pages. However, the meta
description tag can still be of some import, as several search
engines use this tag to display the snippet of text below the
clickable title link in the results pages.
In
the image to the left, an illustration of a Google SERP (Search
Engine Results Page) shows the use of the meta description and title
tags. It is on this page that searchers generally make their decision
as to which result to click, and thus, while the meta description tag
may have little to no impact on where a page ranks, it can
significantly impact the # of visitors the page receives from search
engine traffic. Note that meta tags are NOT always used on the SERPs,
but can be seen (at the discretion of the search engine) if the
description is accurate, well-written and relevant to the searcher's
query.
Search
Friendly Text
Making
the visible text on a page "search-friendly" isn't
complicated, but it is an issue that many sites struggle with. Text
styles that cannot be indexed by search engines include:
-
Text
embedded in a Java Application or Macromedia Flash file
-
Text
in an image file - jpg, gif, png, etc
-
Text
accessible only via a form submit or other on-page action
If
the search engines can't see your page's text, they cannot spider and
index that content for visitors to find. Thus, making search-friendly
text in HTML format is critical to ranking well and getting properly
indexed. If you are forced to use a format that hides text from
search engines, try to use the right keywords and phrases in
headlines, title tags, URLs and image/file names on the page. Don't
go overboard with this tactic, and never try to hide text (by making
it the same color as the background or using CSS tricks). Even if the
search engines can't detect this automatically, a competitor can
easily report your site for spamming and have you de-listed entirely.
Along
with making text visible, it's important to remember that search
engines measure the terms and phrases in a document to extract a
great deal of information about the page. Writing well for search
engines is both an art and a science (as SEOs are not privy to the
exact, technical methodology of how search engines score text for
rankings), and one that can be harnessed to achieve better rankings.
In
general, the following are basic rules that apply to optimizing
on-page text for search rankings:
-
Make
the text on-topic and high quality
- Search engines use sophisticated lexical analysis to help find
quality pages, as well as teams of researchers identifying common
elements in high quality writing. Thus, great writing can provide
benefits to rankings, as well as visitors.
-
Use
an optimized document structure
- the best practice is generally to follow a journalistic format
wherein the document starts with a description of the content, then
flows from broad discussion of the subject to narrow. The benefits
of this are arguable, but in addition to SEO value, they provide the
most readable and engaging informational document. Obviously, in
situations where this would be inappropriate, it's not necessary.
-
Keep
text together
- Many folks in SEO recommend using CSS rather than table layouts in
order to keep the text flow of the document together and prevention
the breaking up of text via coding. This can also be achieved with
tables - simply make sure that text sections (content, ads,
navigation, etc.) flow together inside a single table or row and
don't have too many "nested" tables that make for broken
sentences and paragraphs.
Keep
in mind that the text layout and keyword usage in a document no
longer carries high importance in search engine rankings. While the
right structure and usage can provide a slight boost, obsessing over
keyword placement or layout will provide little overall benefit.