INTERESTING
SEO
Lately
webmasters have noticed that some pages are appearing very high
in Google SERP (Search Engine Ranking Pages)
without even a single presence of the search term; albeit
topically succinct. This is a significant
departure from what is widely known that for a page to appear
for the search term "Apple Computer", the term should be used
in the page fairly frequently. In fact this has been the basis
of a SEO (Search Engine Optimization) tactic called Keyword
Density.
This
means that when you do a search for "Apple Computers" you will
tend to see pages that do not contain this particular term. But
they will contain terms like Mac, Macintosh or G4. These are
what are termed as SE (Search Engine) synonyms. Evidently
Google seems to consider the terms "Mac" etc similar in meaning
as "Apple Computers". This is comparable to the way you would
use the words "car" and "vehicle" interchangeably. And
consequently instead of serving back pages strictly with the
terms Apple Computers it also includes pages without the term
but include terms it considers similar like Mac and
Macintosh.
These SE synonyms are an
expression of Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI), peculiar so far
only to Google search. But of more importance to
a web business is that it impacts significantly on what you can
rank for and how you optimize your web pages on this leading
SE. Previously, to rank for all the keywords related to "Apple
Computer" you would need to write separate pages for each term.
But with this development, it seems the same page could appear
for any of the search terms - even without those other terms
present within the content.
If you
particularly use SEs to drive your online business, LSI adds
one more strategy into your bag of SEO tactic. The tactic is
simply this; when writing content for your website, make a
conscious effort to include SE synonyms in the page.
So instead of only using the term "Apple Computers"
interchange it with G4 and Macintosh. This will
greatly improve the relevance of your page. Not only will
Google notice your main keywords but also the use of synonyms.
This makes the page super-relevant to the synonymic search
terms in the eyes of the SE algorithm.
To
determine SE synonyms use the toogle key before your search
query. The toogle key is the key with the "~" sign. You will
need to hold down the shift key. For example, if you type it
before the term "Apple Computers" you will notice that in the
resulting SERP include the words Mac, Macintosh and G4 in bold.
The bolded words are what the SE also considers as synonyms to
the search queries.
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