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All searches on the Web are being done via keywords, so it is
probably the most important requirement to make sure that your
documents contain all the keywords that are likely to be used to find
the document. Two distinct strategies can be outlined in this respect.
- The first idea that comes to mind is simple: The
more keywords you cram into a page, the better. Indeed, you can
never predict what particular keywords will come to users' minds, so
it's always a good idea to think about all possible synonyms,
variants, generic inclusive terms, subterms, and related concepts
for all the main subjects of your discourse.
Besides, remember that the keywords can be entered
in a different grammatical form, such as plural instead of singular for
nouns. And of the major search engines, only Alta Vista provides the
"wildcard" notation to look for "table" or "tables" by specifying
"table*". So, you'd better see to it yourself by including both
forms in your document. (This problem is especially serious for
languages other than English; for example, a verb in Russian may
have up to 235 distinct forms. Therefore, most Russian search
engines, such as Aport
mentioned earlier, by default employ word inflection algorithms
allowing to automatically match all word forms.)
Finally, if your main keyword is a relatively common
word (such as "search"), it is likely that practiced search users
will employ the phrase searching feature to query for word combinations
(such as "search engines") rather than single words. Therefore, make
sure that your document contains the most common collocations of the
main keyword with closely related nouns, adjectives, verbs, and so on.
- However, one might think about an opposite to the
strategy of maximizing "keyword coverage" just described. Remember
that one of the factors in results ranking, as implemented by major
search engines, is frequency, which is computed as the number of
keyword occurrences divided by the document size.
One consequence of this calculation is that if two documents
contain the same keyword (located at the same distance from the top
of document), the one that is smaller in size will get a higher ranking.
This gives you a clue: Select one of the root (introductory) pages on
your site and try to make it as compact and concise as possible, so
that it presents just the essence of your content with only the most
common keywords. This page will get a boost with respect to
searches for these keywords, thereby attracting more hits to the
entire site.
Thus, the best you can do is combine these two approaches by
setting up both sorts of pages on your site: those with maximum
keywords coverage and those with maximum relevance with respect to
main keywords.
By the way, these two keyword strategies correspond to the two
types of search queries, specific and general searches.
Some search engine users are looking for very specific
information; they use rare keywords, phrase searches, and various
advanced features such as Boolean operators. It's these "power users"
that your keyword-rich pages should appeal to.
Other users, however, just need to find a good resource covering
some fairly general topic; they enter a couple of simple keywords, get
an avalanche of results, and browse the first several links found. For
such general searches, web directories (such as Yahoo) usually perform
better than search engines; however, a lot of users still employ search engines for the task. The
relevance boosting technique described above could be useful in
attracting such users to your site.
You might be interested to see what keywords are entered most
frequently by search engine users, to better align your
keyword spectrum with the public preferences. Unfortunately, this
information (which would be immensely interesting from other
viewpoints as well) is considered top-secret by major search
engines---they never reveal their "top ten search words" lists for
the (rather well-grounded) fear of spamming.
WebCrawler allows only a peek at the flow
of search queries in real time, as they're entered on the search
page. However, minor search engines are usually less obsessed
with confidentiality, and some of them show their search statistics
(for example, a Russian search engine called Rambler presents its list of the top 100 search
words).
The final piece of advice concerning keywords is rather obvious:
Always check your spelling. Spiders, in contrast to human readers,
cannot "overlook" spelling errors, and you risk missing a good share
of your potential audience by misspelling some important keyword. It
is especially relevant given that in most cases you add your keywords
into a META tag after the document itself is written,
edited, and probably spell-checked.
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