Free Newsletters
Part of the iEntry Network
of over 4 million subscribers
WebProNewsDE
InvestNewz
CareerNewz

Send me relevant info on products and services.










Using Plain Language To Optimize Anchor Text

By Eric Enge
Expert Author
Article Date: 2009-04-09

Jakob Nielsen recently put up a nice article about link text, titled First 2 Words: A Signal for the Scanning Eye. In it, he covers some guidelines for creating anchor text, reviews some specific examples, and reports on usability testing they did of various link implementations. The article is worth a read for any SEO.

Here is how he summarizes the main things you should do:
  • Use plain language
  • Use specific terminology
  • Follow conventions for naming common features
  • Front-load user- and action-oriented terms

Basically, the lesson is don't force users to think hard. They are busy, have other things they need to do. Making them work to find what they want is just a bad idea.

In addition, users have been trained to look at the top left of pages all over the web, so that is what they do. What it means is that you have to left justify the action or benefits keywords in your link text.

This is all great advice and the article is well worth a read. In addition to link text, I would argue that all this advice applies equally well to page titles. After all the page title often becomes the link text for your page when it shows up in the SERPs. Having a title that will entice a click through starts to sound like a really good thing. In addition to these usability benefits, it is a commonly held belief among SEOs that the search engines also weight the words at the start of a page title more than the words at the end.

So to put it into my own words for do's and don'ts for page titles and link text:
  1. Get the benefit of a page in the first 2 (or 3) words of its title and links to that page. Among other things, this means don't lead with your brand or site name.
  2. Keep it simple. Remember, people don't want to think. They want to get something done.
  3. Don't invent new buzzwords. People don't care. They want what they want, and they want it quickly. New buzzwords, or unique new trademark phrases do not help your cause.

Let me illustrate this with a made up example. Consider an Atlanta based car rental company called "In-Car-Nation". Chances are that someone there might pick a home page title such as:

"In-Car-Nation provides superior quality service and car rentals"

Contrast to:

"Atlanta Car Rentals from In-Car-Nation"

I know which one of those two I would pick.

Comments

About the Author:
Eric Enge has established a reputation as a leading search engine marketing expert, and is the author of the Ramblings about SEO blog. Eric is also co-founder of Moving Traffic, Inc., the publisher of City Town Info and Custom Search Guide.



WebProNewsDE is an iEntry, Inc. ® publication - All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy and Legal