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<meta name="Keywords" content="SupaGreen, exotic plants, exotic landscaping" />
<H> Tags
H tags (<H1> to <H6>) are used to define HTML headings - which are meant to be used to highlight
various titles on web pages, and are often used to describe the content on the pages. Because of
this, search engines weigh these tags heavily when determining site relevance, so you should use
your keywords in the <H> tags whenever possible, without being spammy. If there is no good way to
do this, write a short article with one of your keywords in the title of the article. This will allow
you to place that keyword all over the page, and will serve as a landing page from search engines, so
make sure it's a decent article and a nice looking page, as it may be a lot of peoples first impression
of your website. If you are not good at writing content, go to google.com and search for: "free plr
articles" and add your keyword as well. PLR stands for "Private Label Rights," and this means you
can download the article, edit it, and even re brand it as your own in most cases. This is a great
way to add related content to your website, which gives you a lot of opportunities to add your
keywords into your site.
Example Site Before: (no H tags at all, instead css styling was used to highlight the text)
<p style="font-size:22px;font-weight:bold;">Welcome to SupaGreen!</p>
<p><strong>Exotic Plants</strong></p>
Example Site After:
<h1>SupaGreen Exotic Landscaping & Exotic Plants </h1>
<h2>Exotic Plants & Exotic Landscaping</h2>
Visible text
This refers to the actual text on each page of your site. Depending on the amount of content on
your site, it may be difficult to go back and add keywords to all of your pages initially, but doing it
over time will continue to improve your results. In the meantime, keep your keywords in mind
whenever you add content to your site, and try to use them whenever possible, while still
maintaining a normal flow of text.
Alt tags
Alt is short for alternate, and is actually an attribute, though commonly referred to as a tag. This
text will appear if the image cannot be displayed. While you should use it to describe the image,