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It seems like
a funny question to me, but it gets asked a lot. "Where should
the SEO copy go on my Web page?" That question gets asked so
much because there are several pieces of out-of-date information,
rumors and myths with regard to text placement, when writing SEO
copy.
For instance,
many absolutely swear that the copy has to be as high up on the
page as possible for the search engines to find it. Not true. The
spiders will find the text regardless of where it is on your page.
Others say all your text has to be in one block. Also not true.
The spiders will find the text regardless of where it is on your
page.
Other statements
I've heard regarding text placement include:
- Your headline
must appear at the very top of the page.
- Copy placed
inside tables throws the search engines off.
- Copy must
be positioned above the fold to be found by the spiders.
None of these
are true. The spiders will find the text regardless of where it
is on your page. (Or did I already say that… twice?) This
is true in 99.9% of the cases, with only some very rare exceptions.
So where is
the best place to put SEO copy on your Web page? Wherever it makes
sense to the site visitor!
Spiders will
find your text regardless of where it falls on the page. Want proof?
Here's a test. Go to Google and type in any working URL. When the
result comes up for that site, click on: "Show Google's Cache
of…" In the box that appears at the top of the next page,
click on this option: "This cached page may reference images
which are no longer available. Click here for the cached text only."
What do you see?
You see exactly
what the search engine sees. If the text appears in this text-only
cache, that means Google's spider can read it and index it.
Put
Copy Where It Is Most Beneficial to Your Visitors
Since the engines
will find your text regardless of where it falls on the page, your
focus should be placed on the site visitor. This is where your focus
should always be. The people who have the money come first; the
search engines come second. :)
If it makes
sense for your visitors to see your headline as the first thing
on the page, then put it first. If a graphic design element makes
more sense, then put that first. If you use photos or other images,
include captions so your visitors understand what these photos mean
and how they relate to the sales message.
If you have
an ecommerce site, create pages for each category of products you
offer in order to help guide the visitors' steps. Then add short
copy segments that quickly describe what is offered for each specific
product. Even though the copy is scattered all about the page, the
engines WILL find it.
When it comes
to copy placement on your Web pages, don't agonize over what the
engines want you to do. Give 100% of your consideration to what
would be most useful for your visitors and place your copy in those
areas. The spiders will find it with no trouble at all.
Karon Thackston
is author of "The Step by Step Copywriting Course" at
http://www.copywritingcourse.com
and “How To Increase Keyword Saturation (Without Destroying
the Flow of Your Copy).” Discover the secrets to creating
SEO copy with a perfect balance between keywords and natural language.
http://www.copywritingcourse.com/keyword
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