chardenlada
New Member
Hi folks
Just a quick question which is bugging me, I'am using a keyphrase of "house clearance yorkshire" on one of my pages as this is one of my main keywords which I've researched the problem is I'am finding it difficult to make "house clearance yorkshire" blend in with the natural text of the page, EXAMPLE
A house clearance Yorkshire need not be stressfull. We come fully equipped to deal with these eventualities ect
that just doesn't look right but the following does look ok
A house clearance in Yorkshire need not be stressfull. We come fully equipped to deal with these eventualities
all I've done here is add the "in" word now my question is if I did this am I diluting the ful strength of my keyword phrase or will google simply ignore the "in" word
Thanks group
Mark Putting that into an article to make it sound correct is difficult and I can't think of anything.
If I was personally chasing that keyphrase I would be using that as forum signatures and as a blog commenting name.
Of course, if thats your EMD for your site then you can use it in a sentence such as 'House Clearance Yorkshire has all the answers you need' Quote: Originally Posted by markhealytheking
all I've done here is add the "in" word now my question is if I did this am I diluting the ful strength of my keyword phrase or will google simply ignore the "in" word
Like the previous poster said, it's tough to write that out and have it make sense.
I personally don't think adding the "in" word is diluting the strength of the keyword phrase.
If anything, it'll help. IMO people are just as likely to search for it using the "in" than without it. Is your domain or business title "House Clearing Yorkshire"? If it is then just use it in your content like this:
Quote: House Cleaning Yorkshire is your one stop for whatever it is that you do. Other wise try to fit that exact statement in 2-3 times in your content, then sprinkle the keywords separately throughout the rest of you article. Keep the density of the keywords from 5% - 7%. You can use one of those keyword density checkers readily available online. Hey thats good I'll use that whats EMD stand for ?
cheers
Just a quick question which is bugging me, I'am using a keyphrase of "house clearance yorkshire" on one of my pages as this is one of my main keywords which I've researched the problem is I'am finding it difficult to make "house clearance yorkshire" blend in with the natural text of the page, EXAMPLE
A house clearance Yorkshire need not be stressfull. We come fully equipped to deal with these eventualities ect
that just doesn't look right but the following does look ok
A house clearance in Yorkshire need not be stressfull. We come fully equipped to deal with these eventualities
all I've done here is add the "in" word now my question is if I did this am I diluting the ful strength of my keyword phrase or will google simply ignore the "in" word
Thanks group
Mark Putting that into an article to make it sound correct is difficult and I can't think of anything.
If I was personally chasing that keyphrase I would be using that as forum signatures and as a blog commenting name.
Of course, if thats your EMD for your site then you can use it in a sentence such as 'House Clearance Yorkshire has all the answers you need' Quote: Originally Posted by markhealytheking
all I've done here is add the "in" word now my question is if I did this am I diluting the ful strength of my keyword phrase or will google simply ignore the "in" word
Like the previous poster said, it's tough to write that out and have it make sense.
I personally don't think adding the "in" word is diluting the strength of the keyword phrase.
If anything, it'll help. IMO people are just as likely to search for it using the "in" than without it. Is your domain or business title "House Clearing Yorkshire"? If it is then just use it in your content like this:
Quote: House Cleaning Yorkshire is your one stop for whatever it is that you do. Other wise try to fit that exact statement in 2-3 times in your content, then sprinkle the keywords separately throughout the rest of you article. Keep the density of the keywords from 5% - 7%. You can use one of those keyword density checkers readily available online. Hey thats good I'll use that whats EMD stand for ?
cheers