Have doubt with stop keywords and shuflle words

Started by holidaytourism, 03-13-2017, 08:01:39

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holidaytourismTopic starter

Hi frieds,
I am starting one new blog and I am doing seo my self(I am new).I am having one small doubt for my keywords.I am using yoast seo plugin and I couldn't use stop words because when I add focus keyword it is not allowed.My doubt is,
1.)Can I use stop words.
2.)keyword research tools give keyword with stop words.
3.)keywords are
   

  • tourist places in karnataka
        tourist places karnataka(accepting yoast)
        karnataka tourist places
4.)If I use one keyword(first keyword) will i get rank on all three keywords.
And please tell me which keyword i want to use google gives tourist places in karnataka using stopwords "in" is the best option.And can you guys tell me these three keywords almost same words only,but shuffling.
Can I use first keyword.

Note : keywords for india.
website : newbielink:http://www.holiday-tourism.com [nonactive]
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ORLOVA

1.) Can I use stop words?
In general, it is recommended to avoid using stop words in your focus keywords. Stop words are common words like "in," "the," "and," etc. Search engines typically ignore stop words when processing search queries, so using them in your focus keyword may not have a significant impact on search engine rankings.

2.) Do keyword research tools give keywords with stop words?
Keyword research tools can provide you with a wide range of keywords, including those with stop words. These tools aim to give you keyword suggestions based on trends and search volume, but it's up to you to decide whether to include stop words in your final keyword selection.

3.) Keywords:
The three keywords you provided - "tourist places in Karnataka," "tourist places Karnataka," and "Karnataka tourist places" - are indeed very similar in meaning. However, search engines may interpret them differently, and the ranking for each keyword could vary. It is always a good practice to optimize your content around multiple variations of your target keyword to increase your chances of ranking for different search queries.

4.) Will using one keyword result in ranking for all three?
Using one keyword does not guarantee ranking for all three variations. Each keyword has its own search volume, competition, and user intent. While optimizing your content around one particular keyword can help you rank for that specific search query, it may not automatically lead to high rankings for the other variations. To improve your chances, you can create separate pages or sections within your blog that target each specific keyword variation.

Regarding your note about keywords for India, if you are specifically targeting "tourist places in Karnataka" and considering Google's recommendations, using the first keyword ("tourist places in Karnataka") would be a suitable choice.



jamiehennings

Hello,

Using stop keywords are not allowed because they negatively affect site SEO, so once you have defined your keyword, you want to make sure you use it:

1. In the URL for the page (whenever possible, easier for blog posts)
2. In your page title (HTML title tag) and toward the beginning if possible
3. In your page description (HTML meta description)
4. In your main page headline (h1) and if possible in at least one subheadline (h2, h3, h4)
5. In your page or post content, with it bolded at least once
6. In an optimized link, so the keyword appears in the link anchor text and the link title (if appropriate) — great for helping search engines and people
    access more relevant content on your site
7. In an on-topic, optimized image, so the keyword appears in the name of the image and the image alternate (alt) text (as long as it is appropriate
    for the image)
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SEO.Ninja

#3
As Google has become much more apt in dealing with stop words in the last few years, it simply doesn't matter that much whether or not there are stop words between the words you want to be found for. Google is very capable of handling longer search phrases, in fact, Hummingbird was aimed specifically at that. And a keyphrase (including stop words) is usually much easier to optimize your text for. Often it's more like a short sentence and it will make the text much more readable than an optimized text for a keyword without stop words. From a readability point-of-view, you'd definitely want to optimize texts with focus keywords containing stop words.

Post Merge: 05-16-2017, 22:23:45


As Google has become much more apt in dealing with stop words in the last few years, it simply doesn't matter that much whether or not there are stop words between the words you want to be found for. Google is very capable of handling longer search phrases, in fact, Hummingbird was aimed specifically at that. And a keyphrase (including stop words) is usually much easier to optimize your text for. Often it's more like a short sentence and it will make the text much more readable than an optimized text for a keyword without stop words. From a readability point-of-view, you'd definitely want to optimize texts with focus keywords containing stop words.

ORLOVA

I have heard about stop keywords, but what about shuffle words, come to know today by reading above post ??