13 Ekim 2013 Pazar

Meta etiketleri Mastering için komple rehber

May 2, 2013 Comments


If you were ever going to tell a "back in the day" story about SEO, it would have to include a discussion of meta tags. Long before links were built, before content was king and before social was sharable, meta tags were optimized. Meta tag optimization is the original SEO.


But gone are the days when throwing long lists of keywords into a couple of meta tags could move your site to the first page of Alta Vista, Excite or Webcrawler. For that matter, gone are Alta Vista, Excite and WebCrawler. Todays SEO isnt the SEO of, well, your slightly older sibling. While there is still some value to optimizing your meta tags, it just isnt what it used to be.


The meta description is intended to be a short summary of the content of a web page. Where the title tag is very limited, a meta description gives you a bit more space to summarize each page. Think of your meta description as a web pages 10-second elevator pitch - that is, if your web page was in an elevator and someone asked it what it does for a living.


The meta keyword tag is was intended to be a way to tell the search engines which keywords your page should rank for. Imagine SEO being so easy as telling Google, "Hey, rank this page for mortgage broker," and Google replies, "As you wish." Back in the day, keyword meta tags were filled with long lists of keywords as "SEOs" tried to work in ever possible keyword they want to rank for, regardless of the particular relevance for that page.


Like the meta description, the keywords are encased in the meta code, found in your pages section of your code:


The meta description tag frequently accompanies that title tag in the search engine results pages. With the pages title generally being the clickable link, the meta description falls below that, providing additional information for the searcher. Highlighted below are three examples of meta description tags in the search results.


meta description in search results


Google is pretty inconsistent in how, or if, it displays the meta tag in the search results. In the first image above you can see pretty much the full description displayed. In the second example you can see what happens when the meta description is too long to fit. Finally, in the third image, Google has chosen to only display the first line of the meta description and then filled the remainder of the space with information it assumes is relevant to the searcher. (I would take issue with this assumption!)


Unfortunately, neither the meta description or meta keyword tag do anything to help improve your search engine rankings. Both of these tags are completely ignored when it comes to Googles ranking algorithm. Some suggest that Bing still use these tags, but the degree of value they add to improving your rankings is pretty minimal.


Without any ranking impact, what good are these tags? Its all in the display. And since only the meta description tag is displayed anywhere, that means, its the only tag that really provides you any genuine benefit.


The displayed portion of the meta description in the search results is instrumental in increasing click thru rate from the search results to your website. Think of it as the "assist" to the title tag. Where the title is shorter and cant be as detailed, the meta description provides a bit more context for the searcher to see what information they will get on the page.


Many searchers (I use the word "many" figuratively, as Im just making crap up, assuming there are more people out there like me) will often place more prominence on the description information than the title info. Since the title is often optimized for the main phrase for the page, the meta description will provide more "long tail" context for that phrase that the title cannot be optimized for. This gives the searcher a broader perspective of the page.


Since youll never know how much of the meta description will be displayed in the search results (it can vary for each keyword searched), you want to maximize the first several words. In the third example above you can see that only the first handful of words is displayed. Dont miss an opportunity to get your message across by fluffing up content in the front of your meta description. Get to the point.


Crafting a good meta keyword tag isnt rocket science. Since its a 99.9% useless tag for external search engines, you can leave it off the page all together. Putting your keywords into the meta tag is like advertising to search engines and your competitors that youve optimize the page for those keywords. However, since some sites use this tag for internal site search, there can be some value for including it.


Dont waste too much time trying to figure out how best to create a keyword tag. Commas, spaces, length, context, phrases or whatever doesnt really matter. As long as your internal search (and supposedly Bing) can read the words, youre in good shape.


how to craft a meta description tag


Your meta description tag requires a bit more work. Remember, this (usually) shows up in the search results so you want to make it count for clicks, even if it doesnt count for rankings. To write a good meta description there are a few ground rules to follow:


150 Characters: Google will display up to about 150 characters of your meta description. This is almost 60% more space than the title tag allows, giving you the opportunity to include more keywords and/or calls to action.


Use Keywords Early: Since its possible that your meta description will be severely truncated, you want to get your keywords as near to the front as possible. Feel free to add extended qualifiers and keyword variations throughout, as good sentence structure allows. Dont stuff it with keywords, but instead go after some longer-tail words that might be part of any search phrase.


Unique for Each Page: If you are writing a meta description tag for each page (and you should), it should be unique. Dont be lazy and copy/paste the same meta description from page to page. Write something that is relevant for that page only, even if the pages content is similar to other pages. Either way, create a description that speaks to the content of the page that isnt duplicated anywhere else.


Be Compelling: Above all else, your meta description should be a compelling statement. Use proper sentence structure rather than trying to throw in as many keywords as possible. It should read well and, ultimately, entice the visitor to want to click into your site. The better it reads, the more searchers will click, if the information matches their search intent.


While crafting a great keyword tag is impossible (like having a great appendix - ultimately it has no purpose and nobody cares if its there until something goes horribly awry), crafting a good meta description tag can be the difference between being noticed and getting overlooked as the searcher clicks on your competitors results. Crafting a good tag should take about 5 minutes per page, and its well worth the time.


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