Massive Articles

Find the Article or Book you were Looking for

Random Facts

If you're a woman weighing more than 200 pounds and like to wear shorts, don't go to Ridgeland, South Carolina and eat onions in a restaurant or public place. It's specifically against the law for a woman over 200 pounds and attired in shorts to be seen eating onions in a restaurant or any public picnic.

Articles & Books

Home | Cars | Finance & Business | Cellphones | Collectibles | Internet & Computers | Education | Self Improvement and Motivation | Environment | Family | Food & Drinks | Gadgets and Gizmos | Gardening | Gifts and Gift Baskets | Government | Health | Hobbies | Home Improvement | Kids and Teens | Legal Matters | Marketing | Music and Entertainment | Online Business | Parenting | Pets | Pets & Animals | Recreation and Sports | Religion | Site Promotion | Paranormal | Astrology | Literature | Travel | Women |

Famous Birthdays

1895-07-12
R Buckminster Fuller, architect (invented geodesic dome)

Historic Events

1938-01-16 William Pickering pioneer American stellar spectroscopist dies

Quote on Knowledge

Hall, Joseph: "Seldom ever was any knowledge given to keep, but to impart; the grace of this rich jewel is lost in concealment."

Massive Articles / Site Promotion

Source Code: Places You May Not Have Thought To Put Keywords

We all know it's good practice to put in-context keywords into page titles, meta tags and alt tags. But here are a few places you may not have thought about. Tables - You're most likely familiar wi...

Bookmark this Article

Google Bookmarks StumbleUpon Digg Windows Live Facebook Ask Technorati del.icio.us Netscape reddit Furl BlinkList

Source Code: Places You May Not Have Thought To Put Keywords

 by: Courtney Heard

We all know it's good practice to put in-context keywords into page titles, meta tags and alt tags. But here are a few places you may not have thought about.

  1. Tables - You're most likely familiar with what a table tag looks like. They generally look like this or some variation, right? There are actually two areas within a table tag that keywords can be applied to. The table ID and Summary. A table tag written in this manner will look more like this .

  2. File Names - HTML, images, CSS files, php scripts, cgi scripts, asp scripts, java apps, video clips, sound bites, and every file you use to create your web site can be named using keywords that apply to the web site content. Making sure these titles also apply to the purpose of the file itself is also very important, especially if the file type can be indexed by search engine bots, like php and flash. If the name of the file has very little to do with what the file contains, it will have little to no affect on your keyword density.

  3. Reference Tags - A normal reference tag looks like this . A title can be added to this tag making it look like this . This can also be applied to mailto: reference tags. Because this text will be seen by web vistors when they hover their mouse over the link, it's good practice to keep it relevant and to-the-point. Never sacrifice user-friendliness for more keywords. You may get lots of traffic with the keywords, but without user-friendliness, that traffic will leave displeased.

  4. Comment Tags - I thought everyone knew this one, but I haven't seen many sites out there making use of it. Comment tags are generally used to remind us of what the following or preceding code does, like little HTML post-it notes that can only be seen in the source code. They look like this where everything between the "" is the comment or note we're leaving ourselves. Used wisely and in moderation, this can be yet another opportunity to add keywords to your site's source code.

All of these areas are good areas to add keyword density to your site, but they all must be used with caution. Everything in these areas should be in context, meaning they should relate directly to what a web visitor will be seeing. They should also be used in moderation. Strings of keywords in a table summary tag will surely start raising some flags at the Googleplex. It won't be long now before Google and other major search engines start keeping a closer, more critical eye on these areas. The most important rule of thumb to go by when designing and optimizing any web site, is to keep it user friendly. A pleased and impressed web visitor is the best web site optimization and will surely lead to your site's success.

About The Author

Courtney Heard is the founder of Abalone Designs, an Internet Marketing and SEO company in Vancouver, Canada. She has been involved in web development and marketing since 1995 and has helped start several businesses since then in the Vancouver area. More of Courtney's articles are available at http://www.abalone.ca/resources/.

courtney@abalone.ca