How Many Keywords Are Too Many?
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Article Title:
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How Many Keywords Are Too Many?
Article Description:
====================
You know that these keyword rich articles dramatically help
to boost your search engine rankings. Search engine algorythms
love keyword dense articles and this has been a proven strategy
for some time now. But, how much is too much?
Additional Article Information:
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738 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: Sat Aug 13 19:45:09 EDT 2005
Written By: Matthew Rotterman
Copyright: 2005
Contact Email: notices@keywordtext.com
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How Many Keywords Are Too Many?
Copyright © 2005 Matthew Rotterman
Keyword Text
keywordtext.com/dir.pl/ktc/index.html
Let us suppose that you have a new website that you want to
launch and you have a little knowledge of how Internet search
engines work. You know that these keyword rich articles
dramatically help to boost your search engine rankings. Search
engine algorythms love keyword dense articles and this has been
a proven strategy for some time now. Experienced website masters
have been using these keyword rich articles for a long time.
You decide to find the keywords that are most searched for,
related to the topic of your website. You can easily find these
lists on the search engine websites telling you what people have
been searching for recently in a given area of interest. People
have told you that article lengths can vary but to generally keep
them under 1,200 words so that the readers do not get bored and
feel like they are reading a book. So, now you have your list of
the top 100 keywords that people are searching for in your topic
area and you have decided how long you want the articles to be.
Now you contact a writer to write these keyword rich articles for
you. The writer will likely ask you what density you want to use
on these articles. This is where it gets tricky!
The truth is that people are usually guessing as to what the best
density is to use when writing keyword rich articles. However,
most have agreed that keeping the densities in the neighborhood
of 3-7% is about right. One thing that I have seen people try to
do though is that since they came up with a list of 100 keywords
they only want to pay to have 25 of them written. So they decide
to cram keyword phrases into each article. An extreme case would
be using 4 keyword phrases in a single article. If the article is
1,000 words long and each phrase is 2 words long we are looking
at a total of 8 words. Now lets suppose that the density is 5%
for each phrase. This means that each word of the phrases will be
used 50 times each. 50 times 4 are 200 of the total words in a
1,000-word article. This is 20% of the article dedicated to
keywords and only keywords. This may not sound like a lot, but
when you see it in print you will realize that it is a very large
amount of keywords. This put you from a 5% density to a 20%
density by cramming extra keyword phrases into the article.
The end result is that you may get the keyword density you are
looking for but at what price? The readability of such an article
will be poor to say the least. Even the most experienced and well
qualified writer will have difficulty getting that many keyword
phrases into one article. A writer will be forced to put at least
one keyword phrase in almost every sentence of the article in
order to meet the density requirement.
The idea behind the keyword rich articles is to improve search
engine rankings and to get people to go to your website and
purchase your product or services. If the reader comes there and
sees a poorly written article that is chock full of keywords and
little information, the reader is likely to look elsewhere for
the information that he or she was seeking. Just because you CAN
put a bunch of keywords in an article does not mean that you
SHOULD.
When I do searches on the Internet I steer away from obviously
keyword heavy articles and towards articles that actually provide
relevant information. There is a needed balance between the
density of the keywords and the readability of the articles that
you are having written for your website. If you are ranked #1 in
the search engine rankings but no one visits your site because
there is not valuable content on your website, then being ranked
#1 is rather pointless.
Try not to get caught up in the formulas that people suggest for
keyword densities and always keep in mind that these articles
will ultimately be read by a human being who is searching for
information. If you are able to provide that quality information,
then the reader is more apt to purchase your product or services.
Search engine rankings are very important, but they are not the
cure all.
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