About Specific Keyword Density
Ranges
With the decline of meta-tags, keyword
density ranges have become very important.
They’ve also become very controversial.
Here’s the thing: you want a high enough keyword density—at least
7%--that your keywords rank highly in the bigger search engines, such as
Google, Yahoo, DogPile, and HotBot.
But, as we discussed, you don’t want your
keyword densities so high that they turn your content into over-hyped
gobbledygook, nor do you want to raise a red flag when the spiders come
crawling over your content. If your
keyword density is 20% or more, the search engine will most likely red-flag you
for “keyword stuffing” and penalize you by moving you down in the search
results.
Thus, keyword density ranges are
controversial. To make things worse,
different search engines have different algorithms. One of them might thing an SEO keyword
density of 18% is fine, another may not.
The only way a search engine can figure out
just what your page is about is to search for the keywords you use. Those
keywords don't necessarily have to be right there on the page—they can be in
the title and in links that will lead to the page. Having said that, though, keywords that
appear on your page are certainly the most common way that search engines use to
decide what your page is all about. Keyword density refers to the ratio of
keywords to the total number of words on the page.
Now I want you to look again at the
paragraph above. There are 95 words total, and I used the word
"keywords" exactly five times. The keyword ratio for the paragraph,
then, is 5 divided by 95 times 100, or about 5.26%. Easy math, correct? You bet.
But how much does that stuff matter?
Well, it’s not a matter of life and death,
but it’s pretty important. You see, when
a search engine compares two pages to figure out which one ought to rank
higher, keyword density will factor into it—usually pretty significantly. In fact, all other factors being equal (which
is pretty much impossible, but let's pretend), the page with the higher keyword
density will generally rank higher.
However, simple as Keyword Density is, it
can also get really complex in a hurry. Do plurals or other stemmed variations
of your keyword count as keywords? Should stop words, which are those common
words you see all the time like "a" or "the," be ignored
when calculating density?
Should you include off-page content, like
meta tags and titles, in your calculations? What about keyword frequency or keyword
proximity or keyword prominence? And
like I’ve said before, bear in mind that if your keyword density gets too high,
search engines just might realize it and penalize your page.
But now, hold on. Even though keyword densities are getting to
be a complex science with lots of complicated algorithms, you can do it!
Keyword densities really are not rocket
science, so don’t fall into the trap of making things more complicated than
they need to be. Go to Google and search on "keyword density." The first three pages should be ones that
provide about 20 or 25 different tools for calculating KWD.
Now all you have to do is pick one that
feels user-friendly to you and use it to optimize your web page, noting the
results. Now try something else: run a Google search on your keyword, and run
the analysis on the first ten sites.
Take a good hard look at the results. From this, you should get a good idea how your
page will compare with the ten top ranking pages in Google, at least in terms
of keyword density.
Here’s the thing that frustrates people,
though: if you go and do that with three or four different KWD tools, you will no
doubt come up with different numbers, but the graph of those numbers will look very
similar. Don’t worry about it, because the numbers aren’t the most important
thing. You only care how they compare to
each other.
Something else you'll probably discover is
that keyword density is not a very good indicator of rank. The top ranking page
may have a much lower density than the page at number ten, for example.
Why does this happen, when you work so hard
to get your keyword density high? It
happens because KWD is only one factor among many. It's important to a good
ranking, but it's not the be-all and end-all of a good ranking. What you really
want to know from your analysis is the range of density values that rank well.
Chances are good that if your page is below that range, getting on page one to
compete with the big dogs will be tough, and if you're above that range, the
search engines may think you’re “keyword stuffing” and you’ll be penalized.
Just remember, though, the numbers are guidelines you should know, not
carved-in-stone rules that forever define your fate. Experiment!
You may hear self-proclaimed website gurus
say that keyword density should always run between two and eight percent or
whatever the current numbers being quoted in forums across the Internet happen
to be. That’s partly true. Those numbers are probably fairly accurate
for most keywords. They’re based on averages and it’s always good to stick
close to an average.
But there’s a problem. Here’s how the problem goes: the most
commonly used letter in English is the letter “E.” If you wrote a ten word
sentence, it would be much easier to use the letter E five times in that
sentence than it would be to use, say, the letter Z five times. Letters aren’t
an even distribution. Neither are
keyword. Big shock, huh?
Remember what I said earlier about not
sounding awkward in your content? Well,
the biggest thing about keyword density is that it must read well and sound
very natural to a user. It’s useless to
get a page one ranking if your content is very lame.
Like the letter E, some keywords are easy
to use a lot of while still sounding natural. For instance, if your keyword was “grass” on a
site about lawn care, it wouldn’t be hard to use “grass” a lot.
But some keywords just don’t lend
themselves to being used a lot—like “quince.”
(It’s a type of fruit.) Here’s
the choice to be made: you can use an average range, which will work well most
times, or you can spend time analyzing the top ten pages to find the best range
for that particular keyword and be sure you're not trying to optimize for a Z
or a quince.
Frustrated?
Don’t be! It isn’t that
hard. If you’re still confused, check
out a competitor's page in Google's cache (which highlights the keywords for you)
to get a good visual feel for density.
Another good tip is to perform a “real
person sanity check” on your content. Reading
your optimized content out loud several times, and try to get a natural flow
that will make the copy draw users who will come back. Then take a hard look at your content. If you can substitute a keyword for a pronoun
without loosing your flow, do it.
For instance, if your keyword is “hammock”,
instead of a sentence saying, “I love to lie in it,” say, “I love to lie in my
hammock.”
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire