Hi, I am currently trying to SEO my website to take full advantage of my niche. I don't want to use the most common keywords just yet to alarm my competition, so I am optimizing every one of my main product splash pages (all different manufacturers). I have a few questions on how I should properly do this. Example products are Hand Tools, and Safety Equipment. All of these are products of manufacturer "A". I am wondering if this is how I should structure my keywords. Manufacturer Page's Keywords: "A" "A" Hand Tools "A" Safety Equipment "A" Connectors Hand Tools' Page Keywords "A" "A" Hand Tools Safety Equipment's Page Keywords "A" "A" Safety Equipment ---- Or is this how it should be done ---- Manufacturer Page's Keywords: "A" "A" Hand Tools "A" Safety Equipment "A" Connectors Hand Tools' Page Keywords "A" "A" Hand Tools "A" Safety Equipment "A" Connectors Safety Equipment's Page Keywords "A" "A" Hand Tools "A" Safety Equipment "A" Connectors I want to maximize the effect of the keywords, and I am fairly certain I read that using keywords on any page boosts that specific keywords weight a slight amount. Which method is correct? Thanks for all of your help in advance.
You can find more variation of keywords on keyword suggestion tool then check the traffic of each keywords.
I didn't ask for related keywords, I was wondering how to structure my meta-tag keywords. I read, however, that the meta tag has very little, if any at all, weight on PR's.
You are correct! Meta is almost dead, especially with the big G. Some people still use them however just in case Google decides to add more weight to it one day, then they will be prepared. I know people who have completely got rid of them altogether and do just fine. Anyways.... To answer your original question. The first structure that you suggested in your post would be the way that I would do it, otherwise it is just sort of a duplicating effect. Good Luck with your site!
Sorry, also wanted to tell you that the less keywords you have per page, the more weight or power that is given to each keyword. So it would make sense to put them how you suggested in the first example because you are not using as many per page. Good Luck!
Do you want the truth? I wouldn't use either approach. First, someone mentioned above that one keyword per page works better. They are right! But they didn't tell you the rest of the story. Let's take your keyword "Safety Equipment" for example. If I do a Google search on that keyword I find that there are 11 million competitors for the term "Safety Equipment". Safety Equipment = 11,000,000 competitors For more than I want to compete against. "Industrial Safety Equipment" brings us down to 144,000 competitors. Much better but still to high. "Industrial Safety Equipment Store" brings us to 2,290 competitors and an excellent niche target audience. Some have asked me if that isn't to few results. The answer is no for two reasons. 1. Those that find you based on a targeted long-tail keyword will likely be much more interested in your information than those who visit through an untargeted general word within you topic. 2. The big secret here is that most people don't do Google searches with quotations. So the search that returns 2,290 results for the phrase in quotes returns 1,120,000 results when quotes are removed. So you are actually targeting a grand total of 1,122,290 while being extremely targeted with your keyword selections. I've only touched the tip of the ice-berg here and would gladly share more information if you like, just ask. SEOGuy SEO-And-Beyond.com
1.) You have to chose right keywords form google keywords tool 2.) Choose most popular keywords for your niche and some less popular 3.) Insert your key phrases into the text of your site. But remember each key phrase must be repeated no more than 2% in the 1000 symbols text. Well thats work for me...