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  • Casual Articles - Anatomy Of A Top Ranking Web page

    Financial Freedom Has Its Price
    "There is no success without hardship." SophoclesFor those of you that are starting (or thinking about) a home-based-business, there are some basic truths that you're not going to hear from the people that are trying to recruit you for THEIR program.First, you will have to make some sacrifices. You will have to devote time, energy, and even money to get any business off the ground. So many recruiters will tell you "anyone can do it" - and they're right. The problem is that so many "opportunities" are misrepresented that the fallout rate is enormous.You will have to give up some of your precious time to build any business. That means less time doing the things you enjoy, less time with your friends and family. This will create some level of hardship, and even possibly some resentment. You need to be prepared to deal with the consequences.You will have to find the energy to do the things that are necessary to create financial freedom. All of us have other commitments that leave us worn out at the end of the day, whether it's a job, the family, household duties, or whatever. Y
    it was the middle word on the page.

    If the phrase was the first word (100% prominence) and the last word (1% prominence) on the page, the average prominence on the page would be about 50%. That means the keywords are well spread out on the page. As prominence increases, the keyword is found higher up the page, as it decreases, it is found lower down the page.

    For analysis of top ranking pages, I look at not only the average prominence of ALL occurrences of the phrase on my page

    i.e. how the keywords are spaced out on the page,

    but also the prominence of the first occurrence on the page.

    i.e. how close to the start of the document is the phrase first found?

    The prominence of the first occurrence of the phrase alsatian dog is 99.67%. That means it is almost the first phrase on the page (only the word ghost comes before it).

    The average prominence of the whole page for this term is 62.62%. That means that the keywords are distributed more in the upper portion of the page. Haven't I always told you that it was important to get your main keyword in the top one-third of the page?.

    This page is a good one to study. It shows a top ranking page for a low competitive keyword phrase. Because of the low competition, incoming links and PR are less important (though if you have both, you could dominate this phrase), while on-page factors will make or break the ranking.

    Even though the exact phrase is only found 3 times on the page, the fact that the phrase is in the title of the document and in the body text seems to be enough. This low density is backed up by using the words that make up the phrase several times on the page. Google will be in no doubt what this page is about.

    How To Get Clients To Take Immediate Action
    Are you tired of excuses? Looking for a persuasion technique to get people to take immediate action? Are prospects saying things to you like: "I'll think it over and get back to you?" "I need to talk it over with my wife." "Call me next week and we'll set up an appointment." Then create a sense of urgency and get your clients to want what you have now!The first step in getting people to take immediate action is for them to perceive your product or service as being in demand or in limited supply. People want what is "hot" right now! Psychologists have proven, people find more value in things they have a difficult time obtaining. If you're told you can't have something, you want it even more.Infomercials tell you that if you call now they will give you another one free or knock $20 of the original price. Shopping networks use a time limit or tell you they only have so many left. Marketers know how to create a sense of urgency.Have you noticed when you are starving for new business you have an attitude that you would do anything to get business. You make promises you normally wouldn'
    Optimizing web pages for high rankings in the search engines involved two main processes. Firstly there is the on-page factors which include what keywords you place where on the page itself. The second, and more important process is getting the off-page factors right - incoming links.

    This article explores mainly the on-page factors. As the competition for a keyword phrase increases, off-page factors become more important to good rankings and these often mask the effects of on-page factors making it impossible to see what on-page factors are important. For this reason, I am going to look at a high ranking page with low levels of competition in Google.

    First, let's consider what we mean by competition.

    There are two ways to look at competition in Google. There is the competition a page has when you type the phrase with quotes, and the competition when you type the words without quotes. The number of results returned by Google in each case is YOUR competition.

    The main differences between these two types of search are as follows:

    Search with Quotes - this returns only those pages that have been "optimized" for the exact phrase.

    Search without Quotes - this returns all pages that have been "optimized" for the words making up the phrase.

    e.g. (in simple terms)

    a) If you search Google for

    alsatian dog

    Google returns 41,000 competing pages.

    b) If you search Google for

    "alsatian dog"

    Google returns 6,390 competing pages.

    In (a) above, there are 41,000 pages that refer to alsatian AND dog, but not necessarily to alsatian dog.

    In (b) above, there are 6,390 pages that refer to the exact phrase alsatian dog.

    Now, if you want to rank well for the term "alsatian dog" on Google, you only have to compete with 6,390 other pages for this exact term.

    However, there are 41,000 - 6,390 = 34,610 other pages that are related to this search, and might still beat you if Google sees them as more relevant than your page.

    We have discussed before the importance of link reputation and PR in ranking. It is possible for a high PR page to rank well for a term like alsatian dog, even if it does not have the exact phrase on the page.

    This fact clouds the issue somewhat, and so although I recommend searching with quotes to find the real competition, I also recommend that you look at the top few results in Google (as searched without quotes) to determine how important those "partial match" pages are.

    A quick search at:

    http://www.prsearch.net/

    for alsatian dog, shows me that the top pages for this search without quotes have a low PR (0-3) and many of those pages have 0 incoming links.

    The same search at PRSearch.net using quotes around the phrase show very similar results. The competing pages for the exact term have low PR and low incoming links.

    This phrase should be easy to target and get top rankings if done properly.

    A word of warning: Because the PR reported on the Google toolbar is out of date (see earlier), you cannot be 100% sure of the PR of the pages, even using a site like PRSearch. They will use the same formula that the toolbar uses, and so will be equally out of date. Only Google knows the exact PR it is using in its ranking for any one page.

    A second check I often do is to check what the PR of the homepage of the site that is ranking well, as this gives me an indication of how important the site as a whole is. For the phrase alsatian dog (with or without quotes), the top page is:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/stories02/alsatian.html

    The homepage

    http://www.castleofspirits.com

    has a PR of 6 - quite an important site.

    However, there is no link to the alsatian page on the homepage, so the PR 6 homepage wont directly help towards the high ranking of the alsatian dog web page.

    Doing a backward links check on Google does not help since there are no backlinks listed for this top ranking page.

    OK, putting on my detective hat, I see a link at the bottom of the Alsatian page called "March 02 Ghost Stories". There is another link to "Ghost Story Page".

    Clicking on the link to Ghost Story Page, I am taken to a PR 5 page:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/storypg.html

    where I find a link to March 2002 Ghost Stories. Clicking that link takes me to a PR 3 page:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/stories02/mch2002.html

    And on this page I find a link to Ghostly Alsatian dog.

    So, the top ranking alsatian dog page has one link I know of from a PR 3 page. I might assume that this site also has a sitemap (although I cannot find one) where it contains a second link to the alsatian dog page. That means a total of 2 links, both internal.

    I can assume from this that the alsatian page with a PR 2 is probably the correct PR, and the page itself has very few incoming links. I am confident that if I targeted the phrase alsatian dog, I would easily get a top ranking.

    The phrase alsatian dog is therefore an EASY phrase to target.

    As a final check I went to the searchguild difficulty tool mentioned in section 6 of this newsletter and typed my phrase into that. The Search Guild rates this term as EASY.

    With relatively few off-page factors contributing to the high ranking of this page, I can only assume that the on-page factors are what makes this page stand out from the rest and rank at number 1 on Google.

    There are a variety of tools available for calculating density, but I use a tool I wrote for myself and is not available for purchase.

    Running this URL through my tool tells me a lot of useful information.

    Density of the phrase "alsatian dog" on the page is 0.49%

    The keyword is found ONCE in the title (11.11%), and TWICE in the main text on the page (a density of just 0.34%).

    The keyword is not found in any header or meta tag!

    As a second check I always look at what I call the partial density. That is the sum of the densities of all words that make up the phrase.

    e.g. the phrase "alsatian dog" is made up of two words - alsatian AND dog. I look at the density of alsatian, and the density of dog, and combine the two densities.

    This is useful because it tells me the density on the page of the words that make up the phrase (remember it is possible to rank well without the exact phrase on the page) - a kind of simplified page reputation.

    The partial density of this page is 3.09%, made up of 7 occurrences of alsatian, and 12 occurrences of dog. This page is obviously about alsatians and dogs!

    Let's look at the prominence of this phrase on the page. First an explanation of what prominence means.

    Prominence is a measure of where on the page a word exists.

    A prominence of 100 would mean it was the first word on the page.

    A prominence of 1 would indicate it was the last word on the page.

    A prominence of 50% would indicate it was the middle word on the page.

    If the phrase was the first word (100% prominence) and the last word (1% prominence) on the page, the average prominence on the page would be about 50%. That means the keywords are well spread out on the page. As prominence increases, the keyword is found higher up the page, as it decreases, it is found lower down the page.

    For analysis of top ranking pages, I look at not only the average prominence of ALL occurrences of the phrase on my page

    i.e. how the keywords are spaced out on the page,

    but also the prominence of the first occurrence on the page.

    i.e. how close to the start of the document is the phrase first found?

    The prominence of the first occurrence of the phrase alsatian dog is 99.67%. That means it is almost the first phrase on the page (only the word ghost comes before it).

    The average prominence of the whole page for this term is 62.62%. That means that the keywords are distributed more in the upper portion of the page. Haven't I always told you that it was important to get your main keyword in the top one-third of the page?.

    This page is a good one to study. It shows a top ranking page for a low competitive keyword phrase. Because of the low competition, incoming links and PR are less important (though if you have both, you could dominate this phrase), while on-page factors will make or break the ranking.

    Even though the exact phrase is only found 3 times on the page, the fact that the phrase is in the title of the document and in the body text seems to be enough. This low density is backed up by using the words that make up the phrase several times on the page. Google will be in no doubt what this page is about.

    A

    Looking for a Business to Run in the New Revitalized Downtown Area?
    Looking for a place to add a Quick Lube away from your Super Wal-Mart Competitor? Down Town Revitalization, Why You Should Be Part of Such a Committee.A study showed that within the next five years 20% of LOF- Lube, Oil and Filter Independent Owners said they had plans on adding one or more facilities. So the question is where? You should be thinking on Location Strategies for Quick Lubes and Where Everyone Will Be Going. Right? Yes this is true. And we have talked about this trend lately. A good place to be is at either end of a down town revitalization district? Why? Well oil company brand names want to be in front of those customers just as much as you do.Also you can get incentives, tax breaks, quick loans from local banks in with the projects as well as free stuff like revitalization monies for retrofitting an old gas station or garage along with sidewalk benches, planters, signage upgrades, old fashioned lights out side and poles on the sidewalks. People can drop off their car walk into the down town area while you have lots of time to do the services also this brings in higher end
    he term "alsatian dog" on Google, you only have to compete with 6,390 other pages for this exact term.

    However, there are 41,000 - 6,390 = 34,610 other pages that are related to this search, and might still beat you if Google sees them as more relevant than your page.

    We have discussed before the importance of link reputation and PR in ranking. It is possible for a high PR page to rank well for a term like alsatian dog, even if it does not have the exact phrase on the page.

    This fact clouds the issue somewhat, and so although I recommend searching with quotes to find the real competition, I also recommend that you look at the top few results in Google (as searched without quotes) to determine how important those "partial match" pages are.

    A quick search at:

    http://www.prsearch.net/

    for alsatian dog, shows me that the top pages for this search without quotes have a low PR (0-3) and many of those pages have 0 incoming links.

    The same search at PRSearch.net using quotes around the phrase show very similar results. The competing pages for the exact term have low PR and low incoming links.

    This phrase should be easy to target and get top rankings if done properly.

    A word of warning: Because the PR reported on the Google toolbar is out of date (see earlier), you cannot be 100% sure of the PR of the pages, even using a site like PRSearch. They will use the same formula that the toolbar uses, and so will be equally out of date. Only Google knows the exact PR it is using in its ranking for any one page.

    A second check I often do is to check what the PR of the homepage of the site that is ranking well, as this gives me an indication of how important the site as a whole is. For the phrase alsatian dog (with or without quotes), the top page is:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/stories02/alsatian.html

    The homepage

    http://www.castleofspirits.com

    has a PR of 6 - quite an important site.

    However, there is no link to the alsatian page on the homepage, so the PR 6 homepage wont directly help towards the high ranking of the alsatian dog web page.

    Doing a backward links check on Google does not help since there are no backlinks listed for this top ranking page.

    OK, putting on my detective hat, I see a link at the bottom of the Alsatian page called "March 02 Ghost Stories". There is another link to "Ghost Story Page".

    Clicking on the link to Ghost Story Page, I am taken to a PR 5 page:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/storypg.html

    where I find a link to March 2002 Ghost Stories. Clicking that link takes me to a PR 3 page:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/stories02/mch2002.html

    And on this page I find a link to Ghostly Alsatian dog.

    So, the top ranking alsatian dog page has one link I know of from a PR 3 page. I might assume that this site also has a sitemap (although I cannot find one) where it contains a second link to the alsatian dog page. That means a total of 2 links, both internal.

    I can assume from this that the alsatian page with a PR 2 is probably the correct PR, and the page itself has very few incoming links. I am confident that if I targeted the phrase alsatian dog, I would easily get a top ranking.

    The phrase alsatian dog is therefore an EASY phrase to target.

    As a final check I went to the searchguild difficulty tool mentioned in section 6 of this newsletter and typed my phrase into that. The Search Guild rates this term as EASY.

    With relatively few off-page factors contributing to the high ranking of this page, I can only assume that the on-page factors are what makes this page stand out from the rest and rank at number 1 on Google.

    There are a variety of tools available for calculating density, but I use a tool I wrote for myself and is not available for purchase.

    Running this URL through my tool tells me a lot of useful information.

    Density of the phrase "alsatian dog" on the page is 0.49%

    The keyword is found ONCE in the title (11.11%), and TWICE in the main text on the page (a density of just 0.34%).

    The keyword is not found in any header or meta tag!

    As a second check I always look at what I call the partial density. That is the sum of the densities of all words that make up the phrase.

    e.g. the phrase "alsatian dog" is made up of two words - alsatian AND dog. I look at the density of alsatian, and the density of dog, and combine the two densities.

    This is useful because it tells me the density on the page of the words that make up the phrase (remember it is possible to rank well without the exact phrase on the page) - a kind of simplified page reputation.

    The partial density of this page is 3.09%, made up of 7 occurrences of alsatian, and 12 occurrences of dog. This page is obviously about alsatians and dogs!

    Let's look at the prominence of this phrase on the page. First an explanation of what prominence means.

    Prominence is a measure of where on the page a word exists.

    A prominence of 100 would mean it was the first word on the page.

    A prominence of 1 would indicate it was the last word on the page.

    A prominence of 50% would indicate it was the middle word on the page.

    If the phrase was the first word (100% prominence) and the last word (1% prominence) on the page, the average prominence on the page would be about 50%. That means the keywords are well spread out on the page. As prominence increases, the keyword is found higher up the page, as it decreases, it is found lower down the page.

    For analysis of top ranking pages, I look at not only the average prominence of ALL occurrences of the phrase on my page

    i.e. how the keywords are spaced out on the page,

    but also the prominence of the first occurrence on the page.

    i.e. how close to the start of the document is the phrase first found?

    The prominence of the first occurrence of the phrase alsatian dog is 99.67%. That means it is almost the first phrase on the page (only the word ghost comes before it).

    The average prominence of the whole page for this term is 62.62%. That means that the keywords are distributed more in the upper portion of the page. Haven't I always told you that it was important to get your main keyword in the top one-third of the page?.

    This page is a good one to study. It shows a top ranking page for a low competitive keyword phrase. Because of the low competition, incoming links and PR are less important (though if you have both, you could dominate this phrase), while on-page factors will make or break the ranking.

    Even though the exact phrase is only found 3 times on the page, the fact that the phrase is in the title of the document and in the body text seems to be enough. This low density is backed up by using the words that make up the phrase several times on the page. Google will be in no doubt what this page is about.

    Dig a Deeper Well - How to Tap the Power of Your Brand Image
    Many business owners sincerely believe they understand their company brand. They can describe it, quantify it and explain its place in the market. They can recount corporate history and accomplishments and detail future plans and goals. These are all necessary items for communicating a company's brand message, but they are also the most superficial ones. These descriptive attributes tell us about what the business does, but not who the company is. The true power of a brand does not come from the what, where, when and how. It comes from the "who" and "why."Think about it for a minute. Almost every organization can cite what they do, where their offices are located, when they started and how they do what they do. It's the same in science and many other fields. Experts explain how things work, but not why they work. The real effort, the real sweat and tears, comes from digging deeper beneath the surface and asking the tough questions . . . "Who are we as a company and why do we do what we do?"This exercise requires some honesty, reflection and soul searching on the part of those in leadersh
    the phrase alsatian dog (with or without quotes), the top page is:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/stories02/alsatian.html

    The homepage

    http://www.castleofspirits.com

    has a PR of 6 - quite an important site.

    However, there is no link to the alsatian page on the homepage, so the PR 6 homepage wont directly help towards the high ranking of the alsatian dog web page.

    Doing a backward links check on Google does not help since there are no backlinks listed for this top ranking page.

    OK, putting on my detective hat, I see a link at the bottom of the Alsatian page called "March 02 Ghost Stories". There is another link to "Ghost Story Page".

    Clicking on the link to Ghost Story Page, I am taken to a PR 5 page:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/storypg.html

    where I find a link to March 2002 Ghost Stories. Clicking that link takes me to a PR 3 page:

    http://www.castleofspirits.com/stories02/mch2002.html

    And on this page I find a link to Ghostly Alsatian dog.

    So, the top ranking alsatian dog page has one link I know of from a PR 3 page. I might assume that this site also has a sitemap (although I cannot find one) where it contains a second link to the alsatian dog page. That means a total of 2 links, both internal.

    I can assume from this that the alsatian page with a PR 2 is probably the correct PR, and the page itself has very few incoming links. I am confident that if I targeted the phrase alsatian dog, I would easily get a top ranking.

    The phrase alsatian dog is therefore an EASY phrase to target.

    As a final check I went to the searchguild difficulty tool mentioned in section 6 of this newsletter and typed my phrase into that. The Search Guild rates this term as EASY.

    With relatively few off-page factors contributing to the high ranking of this page, I can only assume that the on-page factors are what makes this page stand out from the rest and rank at number 1 on Google.

    There are a variety of tools available for calculating density, but I use a tool I wrote for myself and is not available for purchase.

    Running this URL through my tool tells me a lot of useful information.

    Density of the phrase "alsatian dog" on the page is 0.49%

    The keyword is found ONCE in the title (11.11%), and TWICE in the main text on the page (a density of just 0.34%).

    The keyword is not found in any header or meta tag!

    As a second check I always look at what I call the partial density. That is the sum of the densities of all words that make up the phrase.

    e.g. the phrase "alsatian dog" is made up of two words - alsatian AND dog. I look at the density of alsatian, and the density of dog, and combine the two densities.

    This is useful because it tells me the density on the page of the words that make up the phrase (remember it is possible to rank well without the exact phrase on the page) - a kind of simplified page reputation.

    The partial density of this page is 3.09%, made up of 7 occurrences of alsatian, and 12 occurrences of dog. This page is obviously about alsatians and dogs!

    Let's look at the prominence of this phrase on the page. First an explanation of what prominence means.

    Prominence is a measure of where on the page a word exists.

    A prominence of 100 would mean it was the first word on the page.

    A prominence of 1 would indicate it was the last word on the page.

    A prominence of 50% would indicate it was the middle word on the page.

    If the phrase was the first word (100% prominence) and the last word (1% prominence) on the page, the average prominence on the page would be about 50%. That means the keywords are well spread out on the page. As prominence increases, the keyword is found higher up the page, as it decreases, it is found lower down the page.

    For analysis of top ranking pages, I look at not only the average prominence of ALL occurrences of the phrase on my page

    i.e. how the keywords are spaced out on the page,

    but also the prominence of the first occurrence on the page.

    i.e. how close to the start of the document is the phrase first found?

    The prominence of the first occurrence of the phrase alsatian dog is 99.67%. That means it is almost the first phrase on the page (only the word ghost comes before it).

    The average prominence of the whole page for this term is 62.62%. That means that the keywords are distributed more in the upper portion of the page. Haven't I always told you that it was important to get your main keyword in the top one-third of the page?.

    This page is a good one to study. It shows a top ranking page for a low competitive keyword phrase. Because of the low competition, incoming links and PR are less important (though if you have both, you could dominate this phrase), while on-page factors will make or break the ranking.

    Even though the exact phrase is only found 3 times on the page, the fact that the phrase is in the title of the document and in the body text seems to be enough. This low density is backed up by using the words that make up the phrase several times on the page. Google will be in no doubt what this page is about.

    Organized Time - Money In The Bank
    I can't think of anyone that doesn't want more money. It's pretty clear that either a second job or a business on the side is required to meet that need. The problem is how to find the time to do that in our hectic day to day routines.It seems we are all very busy without enough hours in the day. However, if we really look for it, there is time available if we become more efficient in our use of time. It will mean doing things a little different each day. I think we can all agree that TV is the greatest time stealer aver invented. The programs, even the news, are cleverly constructed to continually lead us on until we have wasted a lot of precious time nearly every day. We need to keep in mind the objective of the additional income is to allow us a better life where we can have the time to live it fully. That makes it worthwhile to give up some temporary habits that are stealing time and making the sacrifice for the great reward.In order to find more time we need to manage our use of it on a daily basis. A good way to start is to make a list of what we do now every day an
    tes this term as EASY.

    With relatively few off-page factors contributing to the high ranking of this page, I can only assume that the on-page factors are what makes this page stand out from the rest and rank at number 1 on Google.

    There are a variety of tools available for calculating density, but I use a tool I wrote for myself and is not available for purchase.

    Running this URL through my tool tells me a lot of useful information.

    Density of the phrase "alsatian dog" on the page is 0.49%

    The keyword is found ONCE in the title (11.11%), and TWICE in the main text on the page (a density of just 0.34%).

    The keyword is not found in any header or meta tag!

    As a second check I always look at what I call the partial density. That is the sum of the densities of all words that make up the phrase.

    e.g. the phrase "alsatian dog" is made up of two words - alsatian AND dog. I look at the density of alsatian, and the density of dog, and combine the two densities.

    This is useful because it tells me the density on the page of the words that make up the phrase (remember it is possible to rank well without the exact phrase on the page) - a kind of simplified page reputation.

    The partial density of this page is 3.09%, made up of 7 occurrences of alsatian, and 12 occurrences of dog. This page is obviously about alsatians and dogs!

    Let's look at the prominence of this phrase on the page. First an explanation of what prominence means.

    Prominence is a measure of where on the page a word exists.

    A prominence of 100 would mean it was the first word on the page.

    A prominence of 1 would indicate it was the last word on the page.

    A prominence of 50% would indicate it was the middle word on the page.

    If the phrase was the first word (100% prominence) and the last word (1% prominence) on the page, the average prominence on the page would be about 50%. That means the keywords are well spread out on the page. As prominence increases, the keyword is found higher up the page, as it decreases, it is found lower down the page.

    For analysis of top ranking pages, I look at not only the average prominence of ALL occurrences of the phrase on my page

    i.e. how the keywords are spaced out on the page,

    but also the prominence of the first occurrence on the page.

    i.e. how close to the start of the document is the phrase first found?

    The prominence of the first occurrence of the phrase alsatian dog is 99.67%. That means it is almost the first phrase on the page (only the word ghost comes before it).

    The average prominence of the whole page for this term is 62.62%. That means that the keywords are distributed more in the upper portion of the page. Haven't I always told you that it was important to get your main keyword in the top one-third of the page?.

    This page is a good one to study. It shows a top ranking page for a low competitive keyword phrase. Because of the low competition, incoming links and PR are less important (though if you have both, you could dominate this phrase), while on-page factors will make or break the ranking.

    Even though the exact phrase is only found 3 times on the page, the fact that the phrase is in the title of the document and in the body text seems to be enough. This low density is backed up by using the words that make up the phrase several times on the page. Google will be in no doubt what this page is about.

    An Ultimate Lifestyle Secret - Blogging is Not as Easy as You Think
    Do you have any idea how many blogs there are on the Internet? Statistics indicate that while you were reading that question and trying to figure out the answer, more than two dozen new blogs were started up.There are literally millions of blogs online today. People are tripping over each other in their rush to start their own. Why? Money! The word is out that you can make money with a blog. Most people using the Internet began doing so because they heard that a lot of money could be made there. However, when they realized the amount of work and the expense involved in creating a website, they backed off. Then blogs came along. For quite a while, most people didn’t really understand them and had no idea just how profitable they could be.Then new technology and development made it so that even a young child could create a blog and the race was on. Everyone wants one so that they can get in on the cash windfall.However, after a few days of blogging the new blogger realizes that money isn’t pouring into their pocket. They also learn that blogging is work. They have to create entries
    it was the middle word on the page.

    If the phrase was the first word (100% prominence) and the last word (1% prominence) on the page, the average prominence on the page would be about 50%. That means the keywords are well spread out on the page. As prominence increases, the keyword is found higher up the page, as it decreases, it is found lower down the page.

    For analysis of top ranking pages, I look at not only the average prominence of ALL occurrences of the phrase on my page

    i.e. how the keywords are spaced out on the page,

    but also the prominence of the first occurrence on the page.

    i.e. how close to the start of the document is the phrase first found?

    The prominence of the first occurrence of the phrase alsatian dog is 99.67%. That means it is almost the first phrase on the page (only the word ghost comes before it).

    The average prominence of the whole page for this term is 62.62%. That means that the keywords are distributed more in the upper portion of the page. Haven't I always told you that it was important to get your main keyword in the top one-third of the page?.

    This page is a good one to study. It shows a top ranking page for a low competitive keyword phrase. Because of the low competition, incoming links and PR are less important (though if you have both, you could dominate this phrase), while on-page factors will make or break the ranking.

    Even though the exact phrase is only found 3 times on the page, the fact that the phrase is in the title of the document and in the body text seems to be enough. This low density is backed up by using the words that make up the phrase several times on the page. Google will be in no doubt what this page is about.

    A final help to the ranking of this page is the filename. Notice that part of the keyword phrase is found in the filename - alsatian.html

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.casualarticles.com/article/79122/casualarticles-Anatomy-Of-A-Top-Ranking-Web-page.html">Anatomy Of A Top Ranking Web page</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.casualarticles.com/article/79122/casualarticles-Anatomy-Of-A-Top-Ranking-Web-page.html]Anatomy Of A Top Ranking Web page[/url]

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