Guys tell me what is good key word "good bye" or "Good Bye" I just want to know capital or small letter meters or not
For a keyword in anchor text it makes no difference. If you are using it as a subdirectory. .i.e yoursite.com/GoodBye, then the only problem you may have is that if someone types it with lowercase then it will not work.
I tried doing the search for these words using both the mentioned style and the results were almost the same... Regards, RightMan
If you'd like to get better and more taargetted results, think about adding more words. Just a thought. Hope that helps. Dee
For kicks I just looked through the "Traffic Sources -> Keywords" sections for the Analytics accounts of two sites, and I did not see a single capital letter in the top 500 keywords of either site. Not even in quoted phrases that were likely copied/pasted and should have capital letters in them. I have a hunch that Google lowercases querys before looking for results and does case-insensitive comparisons.
It doesn't make any differece from SEO point of view. Its just matter of decorative styles (looks) IMO if you use plain or capital. DON.
It doesn't matter As long as your keyword is relevant to your page, everything will be fine. But If I'm goin' to choose between the two, I prefer the latter 'coz it looks more professional.
it doens't matter, you'll still get the same result from it... but this keyword is weird, are you going to use it?...
From an SEO stand point, CAPS or not, makes no difference. If you like the way one looks over the other use that
I always use small letters for URLS and capitalise my title tags with the first letter of every keyword capitalised.
Capital letters for titles, it doesn't make any difference just that is more catchy! I always use capital letter in titles.
Capitalization makes no difference to Google. Plural versus singular makes a difference, but capital or lowercase won't play a role.
A lot of people say it doesn't matter, but you can experiment this yourself on Google. I typed in "poker" and "Poker", and two different sites showed up as #1.
That's probably because there's a subtle semantic difference. "poker" is more likely to refer to a fire poker than "Poker" which is the name of a card game. Just use good English and proper capitalisation and you'll be fine, but bear in mind most people running searches will just be typing in lower case anyway.