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SEO_and_the_Title_Tag
| SEO and the Title Tag
Overview
The Title Tag not only communicates the theme of your web page
to the human visitors but is also considered very important by
the Search Engine crawlers. The Title Tag is the most important
of all Tags. Almost all crawler based search engines use the
Title Tag to gather information about the page. Search engines
use your Title Tag to evaluate the page's relevance to its
content, inbound links, outbound links, alt tags, and a host of
other factors. A carefully constructed Title Tag can have a
large positive impact on your page's ranking with the search
engines.
In addition, the Title Tag is the hyperlinked text title that is
displayed in the search engine results page. This is the
hyperlink a user clicks on to go to your web site. The Title Tag
is also used as the text when you ‘bookmark' a page or add a
certain web page to your ‘favorites' list in your browser.
Since the Title Tag plays a vital role in your site's ranking,
you need to pay a lot of attention to the words that appear in
the Title Tag and the order in which they appear. Put your
important keywords at the beginning of the Title Tag. This can
have the added benefit of making those words appear in bold in
the search engines result pages. Develop a crisp Title Tag that
includes your most relevant keyword phrases for that page. The
keywords in the Title Tag are given a high value when it comes
to the search engine trying to figure out what your page is
about.
It's important to be highly focused. You should use the same
keywords not just in your Title Tag, but also in your page
content, Meta Description, and Meta Keywords Tags as well. If
the keywords in your Title Tag don't appear in the page content,
then avoid using them.
Specific Resources
From Google's Guidelines for Webmastershttp://ww
w.google.com/webmasters/guidelines.html
Design and Content Guidelines:
Make a site with a clear hierarchy and text links. Every
page should be reachable from at least one static text link.
Offer a site map to your users with links that point to
the important parts of your site. If the site map is larger than
100 or so links, you may
want to break the site map into separate pages. Create
a useful, information-rich site, and write pages that clearly
and accurately describe your content. Think about the
words users would type to find your pages, and make sure that
your site actually includes those words within it. Try
to use text instead of images to display important names,
content, or links. The Google crawler doesn't recognize text
contained in images. Make sure that your TITLE
and ALT tags are descriptive and accurate.
Check for broken links and correct HTML.
If you decide to use dynamic pages (i.e., the URL
contains a "?" character), be aware that not every search engine
spider crawls dynamic pages as well as static pages. It helps to
keep the parameters short and the number of them few.
Keep the links on a given page to a reasonable number
(fewer than 100).
From MSN Webmaster
Help
About your site description
As the MSN Search web crawler MSNBot crawls your site, it
analyzes the content on indexed pages and generates keywords to
associate with each page. Then MSNBot extracts page content that
is highly relevant to the keywords (often sentence segments that
contain keywords or information in the description meta
tag) and constructs the site description displayed in search
results. The page title and URL are also
extracted and displayed in search results.
From Yahoo Search Help
Yahoo! Search ranks results according to their relevance to a
particular query by analyzing the web page text, title
and description accuracy as well as its source ,
associated links, and other unique document characteristics.
Comprehensive article by Jill Whalen From
HighRankings.com
Read the complete article at: http://www.
highrankings.com/allabouttitles.htm
What Is a Title Tag?
The title tag is one of the most important
factors in achieving high search engine rankings.
A title tag is essentially an HTML code snippet that creates the
words that appear in the top bar of your Web browser.
The title tag belongs in the section of your source code, and is
generally followed by your Meta description and Meta keywords
tags. The order of these tags is not critical, so don't worry if
your HTML editor places them in a different position.
Some Web site design tools and content management systems (CMS)
automatically generate the title tag from information you
provide. You may have noticed Web pages that are labeled "Page
1," "Page 2," or "Home Page" in the browser title bar. You'll
often see titles like these being used by beginning Web site
designers who simply don't know how to use their software or
their title tag for maximum benefit.
About the author:
Dave is a full-time Search Engine Marketing Manager. He also
runs SyteSurge, a web site dedicated to search engine
optimization and search engine marketing.
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