| Sep. 30 2006 at 2:57 AM |
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This is
basically a link to an article that initiates the discussion on how
important are meta-tags in SEO. I know lots of people advise building
up those tags, but perhaps it's worth rethinking.
The article is called "Death of a Meta Tag," and worth reading in the context of a growing interest in SEO.
Craig Landes
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Defining the undefinable. "There are 10 kinds of people in the world---those who understand binary numbers and those who don't." - Unknown
International Society of Curmudgeons
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| Sep. 30 2006 at 11:36 AM |
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thanks for the link Craig, interesting.
Rich LowQuotesDirect.com -
Mtg rate quotes, Find a Realtor, Insurance quote
"Helping people live their lives"
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| Oct. 02 2006 at 7:34 AM |
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Meta tags are extremely easy to game, and as a result it's widely accepted that their effect in search engine ranking algorithms is minimal to none - that article is from 2002, so as you can tell this has been the case for some time. Moving beyond that issue, there are even situations in which using the tags can be detrimental, as Google and other engines can potentially penalize you for duplicate content, and one potential indicator could be identical meta tags across your content.
So unless you're going to go to the trouble of carefully analyzing each page and assigning a distinct meta keywords tag for each, you may just be better off leaving it out of your code. As for the meta description, it may still be worthwhile developing distinct tags for each page, as they can, in some cases, be pulled into the text that shows up for your site in a search engine results page (the text below the linked title is sometimes pulled from the meta description).
chuck fuller
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| Oct. 02 2006 at 4:41 PM |
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Chuck wrote: as Google and other engines can potentially penalize you for duplicate content, and one potential indicator could be identical meta tags across your content.
Amen to duplicate content!, I just had a case like this one about two weeks ago with one of my clients web site.. I resolved the issue, and moved forward with the Web Site.
Edgar Monroy
Web Developer / Owner / Consultant
When starting your own business the need to "know-how" is greater than money!
http://www.nuevolution.net
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| Oct. 03 2006 at 8:16 AM |
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Yeah, that can be a huge problem for a lot of sites, and addressing it can have a measurable impact on search rankings and traffic. I'm sure you'll see effects soon if you haven't already Edgar.
chuck fuller
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| Nov. 10 2006 at 9:28 AM |
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My experience shows slop marketing by plastering page after page with random keywords within the meta tags. It will hurt rankings. If the technique is used carefully, it will help. The keywords, title, and description alone need relevancy to the specific page and not the site.
Steve
Computer Repair in St Louis and Saint Charles
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| Nov. 12 2006 at 4:09 AM |
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Agreed: It's all
about how each page has explicit relevant content. That's the main
problem, actually, of SEO writing---to find different content on each
page, all related to the main site, but covering different key phrases.
Key phrases trump metatags almost always. But it can't hurt to at least have valid key words in the metatag area, I think.
Craig Landes
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Defining the undefinable. "There are 10 kinds of people in the world---those who understand binary numbers and those who don't." - Unknown
International Society of Curmudgeons
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