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How To Valuate Your Page Elements By Stephen PittsIt might seem elementary, but there isn't much study around the value of the various HTML page elements in search engine results pages (SERPs). For SEO professionals there are always discussions about what is and isn't indexed and used as a value for search engine rankings. In fact, it has been discussed at length as to if Yahoo indexes the Meta keywords element and uses it as a ranking factor, then it was confirmed that Yahoo does index the Meta keywords, but that it has the lowest value for ranking purposes with this statement from Yahoo: What changed with Yahoo's ranking algorithms is that while we still index the meta keyword tag, the ranking importance given to meta keyword tags receives the lowest ranking signal in our system. Words that appear in any other part of documents, including the body, title, description, anchor text etc., will take priority in ranking the document - the re-occurrence of these words in the meta keyword tag will not help in boosting the signal for these words. Therefore, keyword stuffing in the keyword tag will not help a page's recall or ranking, it will actually have less effect than introducing those same words in the body of the document, or any other section. However, when no other ranking signal is present, unique words that only appear in the meta keyword tag section of documents can still be used to recall these documents. So, with this in mind, I started thinking through what elements are important on a page and what of these have the most value or may have none at all. I spoke to other SEOs and took an informal survey of what is thought of being the most valuable elements and which one's are considered more important as the others. Here are the eleven elements that keywords should be used to rank well, in the order of importance based upon my own assumptions and links to each of these pages: • Page Title • Heading 1 • Heading 2 • Heading 3 • Body Copy (tied with all other versions of the body copy) • Body Copy - Bold • Body Copy - Italic • Body Copy - Bold & Italic • URL • HTML Sitemap (no ranking value for anchor text) • Meta Description (no ranking value but still important) • Meta Keywords (no ranking value) • XML Sitemap (no ranking value) So, to find out what is real and what is assumed, I tested it. Here are the details of the test (here are all of the specific details): - Choose a three word keyword phrase (methodical verbal induction) - none of the words could be contained in any other page on the domain - Create a unique page with the keyword chosen and insert said keyword in the particular element to be tested (published on 12/09/09) - Link the pages from only one source (my HTML sitemap) - Wait for Google, Bing and Yahoo to index each of the pages - Test the rank of these pages by using the site command with the keyword and variations of the keyword to find the most important element Notes about the test Google was the first engine to index each of the pages with Yahoo following right behind. Bing did index four of the pages pretty quickly, then four more of the twelve, but after monitoring it, Bing dropped the eight pages from their index, so now, I cannot test Yahoo for the ranking factors. I have lost my patience and executed the test across Google and Yahoo only. So, before you loose total interest in this test, here are the results of the test (sans Bing): Continue reading this article.
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