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what are meta keywords

2007-03-18 02:03:56 · 6 answers · asked by giffoni123 2 in Business & Finance Advertising & Marketing Search Engine Optimization

6 answers

Here is the best explanation of meta keywords on the web http://www.seo-blog.com/keyword-meta-tag.php

2007-03-18 07:08:55 · answer #1 · answered by memetrader 6 · 0 0

Meta keywords are words related to your website that people will type into their search engine. The meta tag keywords are under the head tag in an html document (website page) and is read by the search engine spiders. Finding the right keyword mix for a website is a science in itself. A lot of software, ebooks and websites are setup for just doing keyword research.

2007-03-18 15:25:31 · answer #2 · answered by jeabwjw 3 · 0 0

Meta Keywords are a section in you website on that place if you put the special keyword so your page rank become high for more query you just click the given url below.......
http://www.searchenginerankings.com.au

2007-03-19 01:18:50 · answer #3 · answered by aman v 3 · 0 0

Hi,

I believe you mean Meta tags. This is HTML found on a Web page, but is not displayed by the browsers.


%i18n; -- lang, dir, for use with content --
http-equiv NAME #IMPLIED -- HTTP response header name --
name NAME #IMPLIED -- metainformation name --
content CDATA #REQUIRED -- associated information --
scheme CDATA #IMPLIED -- select form of content --
>

Meta elements provide information about a given webpage, most often to help search engines categorize them correctly, and are inserted into the HTML code in the format illustrated above, but are not visible to a user looking at the site.

They have been the focus of a field of marketing research known as search engine optimization (SEO), where different methods are explored to provide a user's site with a higher ranking on search engines. In the mid to late 1990s, search engines were reliant on meta data to correctly classify a web page and webmasters quickly learned the commercial significance of having the right meta element, as it frequently led to a high ranking in the search engines - and thus, high traffic to the web site.

As search engine traffic achieved greater significance in online marketing plans, consultants were brought in who were well versed in how search engines perceive a web site. These consultants used a variety of techniques (legitimate and otherwise) to improve ranking for their clients.

The keyword tag was popularized by search engines such as Infoseek and AltaVista in 1996 and its popularity quickly grew until it became one of the most commonly used META tags. By late 1997, however, search engine providers realised that information stored in META tags, especially the keyword tag, could be unreliable and misleading, and at worst, could be used to draw users into spam sites. (Unscrupulous webmasters could easily place false keywords into a META tag in order to draw people to their site, whether the content matched these keywords or not.)

Search engines began dropping support for META keywords in 1998, and by the early 2000s, most search engines had veered away from reliance on meta elements, and in July 2002 AltaVista, one of the last major search engines to still offer support, finally stopped including them.

Newer search engines like Google and FAST have never had any support for the META keywords tag.

Some academics, e.g. Zhang & Dimitroff, 2004, have concluded that "webpages with metadata elements achieved better visibility performance than those without metadata elements". However, this may be due to confusion between the HTML tag, which Google does use (and is very important), and HTML <meta...> tags, which Google does not use for indexing. The Director of Research at Google, Monika Henziger, was quoted (in 2002) as saying, "Currently we don't trust metadata" [1]. Techniques have also been developed in order to penalize web sites considered to be "cheating the system". For example, a web site repeating the same meta keyword several times may have its ranking decreased by a search engine trying to eliminate this practice, though that is unlikely. It's more likely that a search engine will ignore the meta keyword element completely, and most do regardless of how many words used in the element.<br /> <br /> Some search engines such as Google will display the text specified in the content of the META description tag for a page in their result listings. This allows the webpage author to give a more meaningful description for listings than might be displayed if the search engine was to automatically create its own description based on the page content.<br /> <br /> Kindest Personal Regards,<br /> <br /> Walt Brown<br /> Site Build It Certified Webmaster<br /> capecod1@capecod-beaches.com </p> <p> <small> 2007-03-20 08:24:09 · <a href="#answer20070320082409">answer #4</a> · <span>answered by <u>wabboc</u> <b>4</b></span> · <span>0<span style='color:green;'>⤊</span></span> <span>0<span style='color:red;'>⤋</span></span> </small> </p> </div> <div id="answer20070318024915" class='answer' > <!-- <b>Answer #5</b> --> <p class='answer-content' lang="en"> Conclusion or Causality -therefore; thus; in conclusion; believes; so; consequently; it can be seen that; can conclude that; claims that; <br /> <br /> Continuation -and; also; moreover; furthermore; plus; in addition; at the same time; as well as; equally;besides; what is more; both...and; equally important; not only...but also <br /> <br /> Contrast -but; despite; yet; however; alternatively; still; although; unless; otherwise; not; though; while; nevertheless; by contrast; notwithstanding; rather; conversely; in spite of; on the other hand; contrarily <br /> <br /> Emphasis -above all; essentially; clearly; most of all; especially; primarily; particularly; in large measure; indeed; <br /> <br /> Evidence -because; for; since; the reason is that; <br /> <br /> Illustration/Exemplification -for example; for instance; specifically; to illustrate; such as; In the words of; To "name"; For "name"; According to "name"; as "name" says,; <br /> <br /> Sequence -Firstly,...,Secondly,...Thirdly,...Lastly; Next; Finally; On the one hand; Recently; </p> <p> <small> 2007-03-18 02:49:15 · <a href="#answer20070318024915">answer #5</a> · <span>answered by <u>Marmylade</u> <b>2</b></span> · <span>0<span style='color:green;'>⤊</span></span> <span>0<span style='color:red;'>⤋</span></span> </small> </p> </div> <div id="answer20070318033002" class='answer' > <!-- <b>Answer #6</b> --> <p class='answer-content' lang="en"> http://searchenginewatch.com/showPage.html?page=2167931<br /> <br /> I hope you will use some search engine in future. BEFORE asking the question. </p> <p> <small> 2007-03-18 03:30:02 · <a href="#answer20070318033002">answer #6</a> · <span>answered by <u>Florchakh</u> <b>1</b></span> · <span>0<span style='color:green;'>⤊</span></span> <span>1<span style='color:red;'>⤋</span></span> </small> </p> </div> </div> </article> </section> <div style="background:#888;padding:8px;margin-top:16px;"> fedest.com, questions and answers </div> </body> </html>