What is the difference between tag and keywords
From this list you can construct a workable skeleton of numerous keywords, each of which hierarchically contains multiple tags. This is because of the way keywords and tags can interact. These are best kept to in number that can cover the breadth of your current and anticipated digital assets. Because it is best to limit the number of keywords in a digital asset taxonomy, only Canto Administrators can create new keywords, while contributors are free to apply those keywords to assets.
Here are some examples of keyword schemas:. Both Canto Administrators and Contributors can create tags and add them to assets. Unlike keywords, you can and should use a large number of tags to describe details about an asset. Thanks for the tip! Skip to content What is the difference between a keyword and a tag? Like this: Like Loading Author: K. Brooks K. Thanks for the clarification. Good info, Kat; thanks a bunch. I need to pay more attention to that. In my spare time. I got lost after George Clooney.
It can't hurt. Even if it is totally ignored by search engines today, the rules tomorrow might change. It takes no more effort to include the Meta Keywords Tag so do it. Torrington Ct Anything longer than that will be chopped off in the search description but it won't hurt to make your description longer if you wish. Should include your main keyword phrase. The closer to the beginning of the description the better.
As an added, attention getting bonus, use special characters to make your description really pop and stand out in the search results. Free Meta Description Creator Tool Use the form below to easily create a great meta description for your web page.
I am tweaking my links in my hubs now, lol, and also I have reviewed the related links on the side and tweaked some tags to do away with some hubs that are not related.
Your question got me motivated to research and slide into action. Thanks for sharing this useful information. I asked the question Dale Hyde posted this to answer. I now understand the difference between the 2! I searched for information, on Google, on how to answer a questions on HubPages forums Most informative, and has given me some totally new insight on keywords as well as tags dealing with search engines. Rather than try to answer the question in the forum I simply linked to this hub as a great source to answer the questions raised.
Well done, voted up, interesting and MOST useful! This article really helped me and now i can cut down lot unnecessary tags. But I wonder why sometimes search engine visitors land on tag results pages.
Extremely helpful. I've been tinkering with tags and keywords since I came back to HP. Thanks for the clear and enlightening explanation. Thank you for such an interesting and clear explanation about the difference between keywords and tags.
I have often wondered about this - great explanation with concrete terms. I am slowly trying to refine my technique and have learned that the tags recommended may not be the best-the computer is simply picking up words in the article which could be insignificant to the subject matter. This information is so helpful. I can use this immediately. Also, I can rethink my titles and phrasing throughout my hubs.
I had not thought about the effect tags may have on what related hubs come up in the sidebar. That is extremely worthwhile. Excellent hub greekgeek, I'll be following the comments on this one for a while. Thanks for taking the time to write about this. Hi greekgeek, I just know that I will be referring to this hub over and over again because it is packed with lots of goodies! The question of tags comes down to, "What does each website do? Punctuation and Capitalization: People tend to skip punctuation and capitalization when searching.
I double-checked Hubpage's search box, and like Google, it's smart enough to match "Alzheimer's" "alzheimers" and "Alzheimer's" interchangeably.
So that doesn't matter. Pick what feels comfortable for you. Combining keywords: Tags are a list of things that an article talks about. Put different things as separate tags. So use one tag for "alzheimers" and another for "parkinsons", if an article discusses both.
Make sure you've got real meaty content about each tag, not just a one-sentence aside mentioning a disease you don't really talk about much in that article.
You have to be careful of keyword stuffing -- using lots and lots of different phrase variations to capture every single possible search with a keyword. But in this case, there really are two different names that many people use for your topic: "Alzhheimer's Disease" and "Alzheimer's". In that case -- possibly using the Google Keywords Tool to double-check and see if one term is vastly more searched than the other -- it's okay to use both, because you don't know which of those two tags other, related hubs are using.
Probably some use one, some use the other. But allow me to add: Although you kept dropping words from one end or the other, you never changed the word order. Google will find any permutation of the words you list, but will list first the specific order requested, then permutations thereof, and finally instances with intervening words.
This is the problem Greegeek was alluding to when she pointed out that "Blue, red and purple widgets" will rank higher for purple widgets than for blue widgets or red widgets. It may also eventually list "red, white and blue flags" because most of those words occur in your title. I have a question. I asked in one of the forums but never got an answer, I hope you can help.
When entering tags, do I enter Alzheimer's or Alzheimers or does it matter. Or does it matter?
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