1.4 Keyword Weight
Keyword weight is the percentage
or concentration of keywords on your page in relation to all
other words on the page. A "keyword" can be either
a single word, or a short phrase.
Keyword weight refers to the number of keywords appearing
in the page area divided by the total number of words appearing
in that area. More accurately, the formula WebPosition computes
the weight a little differently depending on whether the keyword
is a single word or a multi-word phrase.
Weight formula:
(number of words in the keyword phrase * frequency) / total
words in area
Therefore, you're weight will logically increase when the
number of keywords on the page increases or the number of
words on the page decreases.
Some search engines consider keyword weight when determining
the rank of your page for a particular keyword search. In
general, the higher the weight the better, but only to a point.
If your weight becomes too high, you may be penalized.
WARNING: Simply dividing the frequency by the total
words on the Page Analysis table will not yield the correct
weight when the keyword is a multi-word phrase.
For example, if the area had only three words in it:
My Blue Widgets
And the keyword phrase was "Blue Widgets," then
the following statistics would be displayed:
Frequency: 1
Total Words: 3
Weight: 66%
The reason weight is not 1 divided by 3 in this case, or 33.3%,
is that the keyword occupies two of the three "word slots"
in the title, commanding a 66% weight. If we didn't compute
it this way when doing an exact search, then a title of:
Blue Widgets
would yield a frequency of one, and a word count of two. However,
it's obvious in this example that simply dividing 1 frequency
by 2 words is not correct since it would yield a 50% weight
rather than a 100%. The weight must logically be 100% because
there's no way a title called Blue Widgets with a keyword
phrase of Blue Widgets could have a higher weight. 100% of
the words in the area are already keywords, thus yielding
a 100% weight.
Ultimately, it doesn't matter much how weight is calculated
exactly so long as it is consistently applied for each page
analyzed. If top ranking pages tend to have a 3% weight as
computed by the Page Critic, then 3% is what you want to shoot
for regardless of how the 3% if computed. The goal is to emulate
the statistics of top ranking pages. If you focus on emulating
the frequency and word count of top ranking pages, your weight
will generally fall in line.
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