Search Engine Results Page- This is the page(and spot) where the site shows up in the search engine like Google, Yahoo or MSN Live for certain keywords (search terms). Example: If you type "Horses" into Google, Wikipedia has a SERP of #1, Breeds of Livestock (www.ansi....) has #2, Horses Horses for sale (www.allabouthorses...) has #3 and so on and so forth. Higher SERP leads to better traffic for your site as many users of Google will click on the high SERP pages 1st. Hope this helps.
Did someone not ask this exact same question yesterday? http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=1002715
This place is a revolving door with the same questions being asked every day, sometimes i wonder if Shawn is just scraping content in here on a keyword list and there's just 3 or 4 real members.
Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/serp.asp Oh hold on - I think I may have got scraped onto the wrong site
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=serp&btnG=Google+Search&aq=f&oq= Look at the first result. After all these explanations could you understand what that means now?
This was the most useful thing i got to know from this thread...i wonder why all the people keep on answering the same thing again and again
I would use define:SERP query on google to find the most relevant definitions People have already answered the question for you @sweetfunny: I think the real people stands at more than 100.
The web pages showing the results of a search engine's search for keywords and pages on which those keywords appear. SERPs for any keyword search may number in the hundreds or thousands. Internet users usually only read the first few SERPs. Websites that appear on the first few SERPs have the highest chance of being accessed by the searcher.