Is the order placement of a city name in title tag very important?
-
Is "Austin Plumbers" much different than "Plumbers Austin" in the eyes of the search engine and best practices?
I would think that Plumbers Austin would have more search volume. But Austin Plumbers is easier to work in to sentences in the body.
Does Google sees them as the same?
Is it ok to use Plumbers Austin in the title tag and use Austin Plumbers in the body or should I choose one target phrase and stick with just that? If so should the city name come first or last?
-
According to Google's Adwords Keyword Tool, "austin plumbers" gets more search volume (go for Match Type 'Exact' in the left-hand column). Neither offer much volume though, so the results might not be that accurate.
In your title tag (and everywhere), I think you should use whatever makes most sense for the user, with SEO secondary. Your text should look and read naturally otherwise it'll come across as spammy.
It's good to use variations of your keywords, and not always right next to each other, e.g. "plumbers from Austin". Take a look at this for example: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/perfecting-keyword-targeting-on-page-optimization - it's an old-ish post, you might not want to include as many repetitions of the keywords - natural text is the key.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
When is it wrong to use a competitors brand name?
I recently started with a company who've benefited from using a competitors brand name to explain why theirs is superior. They're not wrong and neither have they been derogatory, however they have had significant traffic to their website using the competitors branded search terms. I'm concerned Google will penalise us for this (if so can you point me to case studies/similar examples), or am I worrying unnecessarily?
Keyword Research | | LJHopkins0 -
Brand Name Keyword Stuffing
I'm targeting Roho Cushions and the category page has many products starting with Roho underneath it. I know the keyword "Roho" shows up at least 70 times. I'm not targeting the keyword Roho, but could this negatively effect the rest of my keywords that start with Roho, such as "Roho Wheelchair Cushions"?
Keyword Research | | Mike.Bean0 -
Title Tags
Hi, Say I am going after the keyword "example location". Is it better to have the Title say "Example Location" or can I say, "Example is the best in location" and still get the same keyword results? What about "Example location, location, location", would each "location" carry with it the "example". Hopefully that was not too confusing. Thanks,
Keyword Research | | Mike.NW0 -
Meta tag question
Through research our competitors have created independent product codes like FT-5750 and are using it as an independent SKU#, when I search this product code they are the only search result. can we use their abbreviated SKU# in our meta tag or keywords to show up in the SERP? Thanks, Michelle & Blake
Keyword Research | | LeapOfBelief0 -
Amazon Item Title VS Item keywords
I am a new seller on amazon. People told me that i shouldn't put the same anchor texts on the item title and the item keywords. I am trying to sell an very competitive item: HDMI cable, which it doesn't have much different than what everyone is selling. Any suggestions of what i should put?
Keyword Research | | ringochan0 -
Advanced Domain Name Search Service
Hi guys, I'm looking for a clever domain name search service. I want to provide a list of keywords and the site will return with available .com domains relating to my search. An example - I work in the tourism niche and I want to find available travel related .com domains for about 50 locations. I provide a list of words such as "travel", "visit", "goto", "holidays", and I provide a second list with all the locations, example "London", "Paris,", "Berlin", etc... The domain search tool would then mix up my two lists of keywords and check to see if variants such as travellondon.com, londonholidays.com, gotoberlin.com, etc... are free to register. I then go off and buy those domains and have some epic wins. Does this tool exist?
Keyword Research | | cmoylan0 -
Is it important to have exact keyword in your URL
I have researched exact keywords and noted a four word phrase which has fairly good numbers for exact keyword local searches a month with low competition. If I was to make it as my web address it would mean having www. (18 letters).co.uk Is it important to have the exact keyword in the URL for ranking purposes? Is an 18 letter web address either side of the www and .co.uk too long?
Keyword Research | | TCWorkouts0 -
Does google exact match domain name bonus work if the keywords are reversed?
For example, we all know that there is a ranking boost to having a domain name: http://bluewidgets.com when someone searches for "blue widgets". But would the domain name http://widgetsblue.com also get a bonus in the serp for "blue widgets" ?
Keyword Research | | adriandg0