*Note: The article presented here is written by authors not affiliated with hashemian.com.
This site is not responsible for any errors, omissions, or objectionable content.
Exercise care before engaging in business with any companies mentioned in this article.

Go to: /articles/2006/11/13/ for other articles.

Description Tag Tips

If your title tag is considered the "headline" then think of your description tag as the "ad copy" below the headline. A good description tag will compel the reader to visit your website.

Google cuts off the displayed description tag at about 150 characters, but may index up to 185 characters. Other engines may go up t o250 characters, but will still only display about 150. Therefore, try to say what you've got to say in 150 characters or less, but feel free to use up to 180, and even up to 250 if you're not concerned with the entire thing getting indexed by all the search engines..

Your description tag is not only "sales copy" for people to read, deciding to click your ad or not, but it's also food for the hungry search engine spiders. There's probably no stronger or more important meta tag than the description tag.

However, one mistake I see a lot is people trying to stuff too much information into their meta description tag, then reusing that meta description in multiple places on their website. Ddon't describe your whole business, just describe the page in question.

For example, let's say you're a contractor, and you provide plumbing, remodeling, and electrical work. You would want to have a completely different meta description tag on each of your service pages. Don't make the mistake of using one description for all your pages.

Use your primary keyphrase in the beginning of your description tag too. This gives a higher "keyword prominence" percentage to the search engines and your site will rank higher. don't OVERuse your keyphrase though, or it can be considered "webspam". Higher then zero keyword prominence is good, but higher still is not always better.

Use natural sounding language, proper grammar, and try to peak interest in the subject. Remember, you want the reader to click your ad, not just to be found. how many times have you skipped over a search result because the two lines of text you see in the SERPS were just gibberish.

Finally, if you're a local business, i would encourage you to put your address, including your zip code in your description meta tag. I usually put it after the 150th character, but complete it before the 180th. the reason for this is that there's strong evidence to suggest that this will help your "local" search results. as more and more search engines are trying t odetermine what their visitors want, local search matters now more than ever.

About The Author

Scott Hendison-Editor, SearchCommander.Com

Scott Hendison is an internet consultant that specializes in search engine optimization and internet marketing. He has written over 100 articles that are available on his website. He has also developed a tutorial area for beginning search engine optimization, at www.searchcommander.com .


Article Topics
Adsense Advertising Bankruptcy Blog Credit Card
Debt Google Ira Marketing Mortgage
Real Estate Rental Retirement Rss Search Engine
Seo Stocks Tax
Recent Articles

Read Financial Markets  |   Home  |   Blog  |   Web Tools  |   News  |   Articles  |   FAQ  |   About  |   Contact

© 2001-2012 Robert Hashemian
Support the effort
Liked this page?
Please consider creating a link to it
from your Web site.

hashemian.com
هاشمیان.com

Home
Blog
Web Tools
News
Articles
FAQ
About
Contact
Financial Markets

Visits: Powered by hashemian.com

Search Hashemian.com