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Keyword Sprawl: You May Surprise Yourself

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This YouMoz entry was submitted by one of our community members. The author’s views are entirely their own (excluding an unlikely case of hypnosis) and may not reflect the views of Moz.

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Keyword Sprawl: You May Surprise Yourself

This YouMoz entry was submitted by one of our community members. The author’s views are entirely their own (excluding an unlikely case of hypnosis) and may not reflect the views of Moz.

I've read more beginner SEO guides than I can count, never really being able to convince myself that I'm not a beginner anymore. One thing that appears in a lot of these guides and lists of "SEO Facts" online is the fact that one shouldn't optimize a page for more than a certain number of terms. This usually ranges between one and three. I agree with this if you have free reign to optimize the entire site. Unfortunately, the company I work for had a precedent of selling "homepage optimization" before I began working here and that was pretty much all that was offered, and all that the sales ladies were used to selling. That sounds bad, I know, but it's a web services company that deals primarily with building sites and offering hosting and advertising. SEO was an afterthought, but I'm working to correct that.

So, since I've mostly been limited to optimizing homepages, I just wanted to say that there is nothing wrong with taking a stab at optimizing for up to ten or so carefully researched terms. The beauty of programs like Wordtracker is that you see these idiosyncratic combinations of words that for some collective unconscious reason a couple dozen people type every couple of months. Using these exact combinations of words in the content is sometimes all you have to do to rank inexplicably high for terms that aren't the most competitive, but that you know for sure that people have searched for and may search for again. These terms also tend not to be tied to a local term and therefore please your clients if they can find them on Google while hopefully bringing in some meaningful traffic. 

Surely, you focus on the most important 2-3 terms in the title, site description, and anchor text for links in directories, etc, but by sprawling the researched terms from your assuredly giant list into the content and perhaps a few appropriate alt tags, you may surprise yourself with the results. I was worried people (beginners) may be afraid to do this because of what so many of these guides say, but as long as you're not spamming, there's no reason not to.

In fact, maybe there should be a contest for SEOs to see who can rank the highest for the MOST terms on a single page. I suppose it's what they call "bang for the buck."

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