Hi, While going through 2011 ranking factor of SEOmoz (http://www.seomoz.org/article/search-ranking-factors), i came across 2 terms - page level keywords and domain level keywords. What is the difference between page level keyowrd and domain level keyword? And how domain level keyword should be used?
Page level keywords are the keywords found on the individual pages of a site, such as in the title, header tags and content. Domain level keywords are those found in the actual domain itself. Having your main targeted keyword in the domain is the best practice although not as important as it used to be.
Hi, I understood the meaning of the Page Level Keywords, little bit confusion about the Domain Level Keywords, like take an example my site domain is Webmarketing.com, and here the domain keyword would be Webmaketing. Please reply me on the same. waiting for your post. Thanks
Indeed, your definition is accurate, and it was evident from the terms itself (domain level and page level), but that is not the issue i am grappling with. My Issue is as follow: How do you identify domain level keyword? Can long-tail work as domain level? and if yes, how do you optimize your website for domain level keywords. I believe just adding "domain level keywords" to meta data and title tag will not be sufficient to get the website optimized for the keyword. And if the content of the homepage is not static, as on the page level, how will one optimize the domain for domain level keywords? I wanted to get answers to such questions when posing the question in the first place. Anyway thanks for taking time out to reply to the thread.
Domain level keywords are those keywords that are for the main domain or those that are used on the main home page. Page level keywords are those keywords that are used for the specific pages reserved for them deeper in the architecture.
Well, Even i am grappling with the similar question. I'll be really thankful if any one can please answer it
I hoped that someone will answer this question, but instead people are just defining the two terms here, as if that information is something which is not easily available on the Internet