I'm making a page on my hiking site about Tents and Shelters. I want that to be the name of my page, now what if I want a different keyword that is going to have lower competition?
Not really sure what you are asking. You will find that you will get ranked for different keywords within an article besides the one you intended. Pick one keyword phrase for each article.
No, you should use the same keyword for the title as you do in the content. What I am saying is, even though you have a keyword you write an article around, Goggle usually finds other keywords that you haven't even meant to use. It's a good thing!
There is some truth to this, but I believe Google looks at the title of the page, and sees "Picking the best tent." It then goes on to make sure all the rest of the text is tent related. If it just looked at word density, "and," "it," and other conjunction words would screw every ones SEO up. I may have misread your post, and meaning, and I am sorry if this is the case.
what would your recommendation be for each page then, I don't want to have each one of my drop down pages be something completely different like it would be on a list of my blog post, if that makes sense
Yes it will affect the keyword for the page. You want it in your title and description. First 160 words
See more comments
I'm making a page on my hiking site about Tents and Shelters. I want that to be the name of my page, now what if I want a different keyword that is going to have lower competition?
Think of a website like a book. The title should have a keyword in it, such as tent. Then your H1 tags are like chapters, using your example, I would put "How to Pick the Best Tent" in an H1 tag. Then you fill the paragraph with naturally reading content. Write it like you were talking to a human, not just stuffing it with keywords. According to MOZ, Google no longer uses keyword density as a ranking factor, but I bet stuffing keywords in the text will make Google throw a fit, as it becomes hard to read with "tent" in every sentence.
Also explore long tail key words, like "Picking the best tent" or "setting up a tent."
Not really sure what you are asking. You will find that you will get ranked for different keywords within an article besides the one you intended. Pick one keyword phrase for each article.
No, you should use the same keyword for the title as you do in the content. What I am saying is, even though you have a keyword you write an article around, Goggle usually finds other keywords that you haven't even meant to use. It's a good thing!
There is some truth to this, but I believe Google looks at the title of the page, and sees "Picking the best tent." It then goes on to make sure all the rest of the text is tent related. If it just looked at word density, "and," "it," and other conjunction words would screw every ones SEO up. I may have misread your post, and meaning, and I am sorry if this is the case.
what would your recommendation be for each page then, I don't want to have each one of my drop down pages be something completely different like it would be on a list of my blog post, if that makes sense
Yes it will affect the keyword for the page. You want it in your title and description. First 160 words
See more comments
When I write a post or a page underneath where it has the section for keywords, do I want to put my keywords there. Or will simply putting them in the title and having them in my c
You do not need to add keywords in SEO part, this is obsolete and some theme do not have this or it can be deactivated. In SEO part you add meta title and meta description. Keyword you use title, meta title, meta description, and in first paragraph, eventually at the end of the post as well. But you may like to use it also in figure name. Have a look here:
http://justmythinking.com/how-to-improve-page-rank
Hi Jovo
Just wanted to say thanks for the article! It's so informative and easy to understand! Very helpful indeed for a beginner like me. Cheers.
See more comments
Do I need to put keywords below my postpage?
When I write a post or a page underneath where it has the section for keywords, do I want to put my keywords there. Or will simply putting them in the title and having them in my c
You do not need to add keywords in SEO part, this is obsolete and some theme do not have this or it can be deactivated. In SEO part you add meta title and meta description. Keyword you use title, meta title, meta description, and in first paragraph, eventually at the end of the post as well. But you may like to use it also in figure name. Have a look here:
http://justmythinking.com/how-to-improve-page-rank
Hi Jovo
Just wanted to say thanks for the article! It's so informative and easy to understand! Very helpful indeed for a beginner like me. Cheers.
See more comments
My wife has adsense on her blog, she used my regular email for it and all, but should I go through that to request having adsense on my site or should I use my WA and my site email
Hi,
If your ultimate aim is to sell your sites some where down the track then everything separate now will save you a lot of head ache later.
Steve.
she thinks if I do it early on, and I get denied then it might have an effect on her adsense
okay cool. she used my info for her adsense. so idk If I can make another or what. I know she couldn't do it with her or something. I'm not sure.
but thank you for the help
See more comments
Should I sign up for a new adsense account or use my wifes?
My wife has adsense on her blog, she used my regular email for it and all, but should I go through that to request having adsense on my site or should I use my WA and my site email
Hi,
If your ultimate aim is to sell your sites some where down the track then everything separate now will save you a lot of head ache later.
Steve.
she thinks if I do it early on, and I get denied then it might have an effect on her adsense
okay cool. she used my info for her adsense. so idk If I can make another or what. I know she couldn't do it with her or something. I'm not sure.
but thank you for the help
See more comments
I should have been charged $19 I was charged $47 twice whats going on?
See more comments
I just signed up and I was charged $47 twice! what do I do?
I should have been charged $19 I was charged $47 twice whats going on?
See more comments
Think of a website like a book. The title should have a keyword in it, such as tent. Then your H1 tags are like chapters, using your example, I would put "How to Pick the Best Tent" in an H1 tag. Then you fill the paragraph with naturally reading content. Write it like you were talking to a human, not just stuffing it with keywords. According to MOZ, Google no longer uses keyword density as a ranking factor, but I bet stuffing keywords in the text will make Google throw a fit, as it becomes hard to read with "tent" in every sentence.
Also explore long tail key words, like "Picking the best tent" or "setting up a tent."
okay awesome thank you.
-Mark