On-Page factors are the aspects of a given web page that influence search engine ranking.
What are On-Page Factors?
There are several on-page factors that affect search engine rankings. These include:
Code Sample
Content
Alt Text
Bold/Strong
<body>, <div>, <p>, <span>, no tag
Alt Text
<img src="http://www.example.com/example.png" alt="Keyword">
Bold/Strong
<b></b>
<strong></strong>
Content of Page
The content of a page is what makes it worthy of a search
result position. It is what the user came to see and is thus extremely
important to the search engines. As such, it is important to create
good content. So what is good content? From an SEO perspective, all
good content has two attributes. Good content must supply a demand and
must be linkable.
Good content supplies a demand:
Just like the world’s markets, information is affected by
supply and demand. The best content is that which does the best job of
supplying the largest demand. It might take the form of an XKCD comic
that is supplying nerd jokes to a large group of technologists or it
might be a Wikipedia article that explains to the world the definition
of Web 2.0. It can be a video, an image, a sound, or text, but it must
supply a demand in order to be considered good content.
Good content is linkable:
From an SEO perspective, there is no difference between the
best and worst content on the Internet if it is not linkable. If people
can’t link to it, search engines will be very unlikely to rank it, and
as a result the content won’t drive traffic to the given website.
Unfortunately, this happens a lot more often than one might think. A
few examples of this include: AJAX-powered image slide shows, content
only accessible after logging in, and content that can't be reproduced
or shared. Content that doesn't supply a demand or is not linkable is
bad in the eyes of the search engines—and most likely some people, too.
From: A Visual Guide to Keyword Targeting & On-Page SEO
Title Tag
Title tags are the second most important on-page factor for SEO, after content. You can read more information about title tags here.
URL
Along with smart internal linking, SEOs should make sure that the category hierarchy of the given website is reflected in URLs.
The following is a good example of URL structure:
- http://www.dmoz.org/Games/Video_Games/History/
This URL clearly shows the hierarchy of the information on the
page (history as it pertains to video games in the context of games in
general). This information is used to determine the relevancy of a
given web page by the search engines. Due to the hierarchy, the engines
can deduce that the page likely doesn’t pertain to history in general
but rather to that of the history of video games. This makes it an
ideal candidate for search results related to video game history. All
of this information can be speculated on without even needing to
process the content on the page.
The following is a bad example of URL structure:
- http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0468569/
Unlike the first example, this URL does not reflect the
information hierarchy of the website. Search engines can see that the
given page relates to titles (/title/) and is on the IMDB domain
but cannot determine what the page is about. The reference to
“tt0468569” does not directly infer anything that a web surfer is likely
to search for. This means that the information provided by the URL is
of very little value to search engines.
URL structure is important because it helps the search engines
to understand relative importance and adds a helpful relevancy metric
to the given page. It is also helpful from an anchor text perspective because people are more likely to link with the relevant word or phrase if the keywords are included in the URL.
SEO Best Practice
Content pages are the meat of websites and are almost always
the reason visitors come to a site. Ideal content pages should be very
specific to a given topic—usually a product or an object—and be
hyper-relevant.
The purpose of the given web page should be directly stated in all of the following areas:
- Title tag
- URL
- Content of page
- Image alt text
Here is an example of a well-laid-out and search engine–friendly web page. All of its on-page factors are optimized.
The content page in this figure is considered good for several
reasons. First, the content itself is unique on the Internet (which
makes it worthwhile for search engines to rank well) and covers a
specific bit of information in a lot of depth. If a searcher had
question about Super Mario World, there is a good chance, that this page
would answer their query.
Aside from content, this page is
laid out well. The topic of the page is stated in the title tag (Super
Mario World – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia), URL
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Mario_World), the page's content
(the page heading, "Super Mario World"), and within the alt text of
every image on the page.
The following example is of a poorly optimized web page. Notice how it differs from the first example.
This figure shows a less search engine–friendly example of a
content page targeting the term "Super Mario World." While the subject
of the page is present in some of the important elements of the web page
(title tag and images), the content is less robust than the Wikipedia
example, and the relevant copy on the page is less helpful to a reader.
Notice that the description of the game is suspiciously similar
to copy written by a marketing department. “Mario’s off on his biggest
adventure ever, and this time he has brought a friend.” That is not the
language that searchers write queries in, and it is not the type of
message that is likely to answer a searcher's query. Compare this to the
first sentence of the Wikipedia example: “Super Mario World is a
platform game developed and published by Nintendo as a pack–in launch
title for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System.”. In the poorly
optimized example, all that is established by the first sentence is that
someone or something called Mario is on an adventure that is bigger
than his or her previous adventure (how do you quantify that?) and he or
she is accompanied by an unnamed friend.
The Wikipedia example tells the reader that Super Mario World
is a game developed and published by Nintendo for the gaming system
Super Nintendo Entertainment System–the other example does not. Search
results in both Bing and Google show the better optimized page ranking
higher.
An Ideally Optimized Web Page
An ideal web page should do all of the following:
- Be hyper-relevant to a specific topic (usually a product or single object)
- Include subject in title tag
- Include subject in URL
- Include subject in image alt text
- Specify subject several times throughout text content
- Provide unique content about a given subject
- Link back to its category page
- Link back to its subcategory page (If applicable)
- Link back to its homepage (normally accomplished with an image link showing the website logo on the top left of a page)
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