The Affect Words Like "In" and "To" Have on SEO
- SEO |
Take for example, if you were doing SEO for "plumber new york". Is it better to do on-page optimization with the grammatically correct "plumber in new york"?
A lot of SEO tools I know of do not factor in determiners when analyzing the SEO of a page thinking your keyword "plumber new york" is not in your title tag if you write "plumber in new york". From a user stand-point (and hence likely Google's point of view), it makes sense to optimize for the more human-form "plumber in new york" which should therefore perform better for the search term "plumber new york".
Thoughts on this issue? Any good articles or case studies?
-
Kevin Maguire -
Thanks - 1 reply
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076477].message }}-
Joshua Uebergang -
Thanks
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076548].message }} -
-
-
trade4861 -
Thanks - 2 replies
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076633].message }}-
Joshua Uebergang -
Thanks - 2 replies
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076862].message }}-
G minus -
Thanks - 2 replies
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076931].message }}-
G minus -
Thanks
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076950].message }} -
-
Kevin Maguire -
Thanks - 1 reply
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076958].message }}-
G minus -
Thanks - 1 reply
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8077023].message }}-
Kevin Maguire -
Thanks - 1 reply
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8078849].message }}-
Joshua Uebergang -
Thanks - 1 reply
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8082631].message }}-
Kevin Maguire -
Thanks
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8082864].message }} -
-
-
-
-
-
-
trade4861 -
Thanks
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8078814].message }} -
-
-
Kevin Maguire -
Thanks
{{ DiscussionBoard.errors[8076894].message }} -
-