Just a test question. Can be ignored.
I was going to ignore this question but I didn't want to fail the test. Or does answering it fail the test?
When you ask a question here at Wealthy Affiliate, fellow members will get back to you quickly. :)
Just a test question. Can be ignored.
I was going to delete this thread but on second thoughts, I'll leave it up and see where it goes.
I was going to ignore this question but I didn't want to fail the test. Or does answering it fail the test?
When you ask a question here at Wealthy Affiliate, fellow members will get back to you quickly. :)
Say my initial phrase in WA Keyword Tool is;
"How can I train my dog to sit"
In the results, one of the keyphrases is;
"train dog sit"
Is this gramm
This is about stop words. Search engine ignores them. But they are not here for search engines, they are for visitors. See more here: How to choose SEO keywords QSR and USR, and stop words, again About misleading keywords and parameters
It's always worth testing a keyword manually to see what search engines actually return for it.
Use an incognito tab in Chrome or similar and search both with and without quotes.
You'll nearly always find that with ungrammatical keywords, search engines actually return the grammatically correct version, which means it would be impossible to rank for the ungrammatical version.
Thanks for reply. I'm confused by this though as the stats for "How can I train my dog to sit" and "train dog sit" are precisely the same in both Jaaxy and the WA tool.
Surely in this case, I can turn "Train Dog Sit" into a blog post entitled "How to Train Your Dog to Sit" with the embedded keywords [train, dog, sit] or am I missing something important here?
See more comments
Clarify what "keywords must be grammatical" means?
Say my initial phrase in WA Keyword Tool is;
"How can I train my dog to sit"
In the results, one of the keyphrases is;
"train dog sit"
Is this gramm
This is about stop words. Search engine ignores them. But they are not here for search engines, they are for visitors. See more here: How to choose SEO keywords QSR and USR, and stop words, again About misleading keywords and parameters
It's always worth testing a keyword manually to see what search engines actually return for it.
Use an incognito tab in Chrome or similar and search both with and without quotes.
You'll nearly always find that with ungrammatical keywords, search engines actually return the grammatically correct version, which means it would be impossible to rank for the ungrammatical version.
Thanks for reply. I'm confused by this though as the stats for "How can I train my dog to sit" and "train dog sit" are precisely the same in both Jaaxy and the WA tool.
Surely in this case, I can turn "Train Dog Sit" into a blog post entitled "How to Train Your Dog to Sit" with the embedded keywords [train, dog, sit] or am I missing something important here?
See more comments
I was going to delete this thread but on second thoughts, I'll leave it up and see where it goes.