In order to get the absolute maximum potential out of your articles, they must not only be appealing to potential readers, they must be appealing to search engines as well. This means sprinkling searchable keywords throughout your articles (including your title) that attract search engine spiders. This will give your articles keyword balance.

By the way, when interspersing keywords throughout your articles, be careful not to repeat them so often they looked forced. Overdoing it with keywords (known as keyword stuffing)will make your articles read unnaturally, and will lead to an unpleasant reading experience for your readers.

In addition, if search engine spiders discover too many of the same keywords in your articles they will penalize your articles for spamming. This will adversely affect the search engine ranking of your articles. It might even get your site blacklisted if the spiders detect a pattern of keyword stuffing on your site.

So, what is the correct density of keywords for an article? Personally, I don’t think keyword density even exists as a calcuable numeric constant. In other words, don’t worry about the correct keyword density. And don’t worry about counting keywords. Just write.

Speaking of writing, I need to clarify what I meant at the beginning of this article when I said:

“In order to get the absolute maximum potential out of your articles, your articles must not only be appealing to potential readers, they must be appealing to search engines as well.”

I feel it’s important to explain what I meant by that statement, because it could easily be misconstrued. When I said your articles must be appealing to search engines, I wasn’t implying you should write for the search engines. That’s the last thing you ever want to do. You should always write with the reader in mind…ALWAYS.

That being said, if you want your pages to rank high in the search engines, you have to give the spiders something to latch on to. You have to give them relevancy. The keywords you use must be as relevant as possible to the page they’re on.

And the best way to do that is to establish keyword relevancy right out of the gate with your article title. Whenever possible, you should use your primary keywords in your title. No, not for the benefit of the spiders, but for the benefit of readers. You see, if you write articles focused on attracting a specific audience, you will automatically attract the search engines. Funny how that works, isn’t it?

Establishing keyword relevance right from the start also means using your primary keywords in the first paragraph of your article. And then, throughout the rest of your article, including the closing paragraph.

Again, don’t force anything. Never place a keyword somewhere it doesn’t belong – where it doesn’t fit. Just write naturally, so that your article has a nice flow. After you complete your article, in addition to reading it yourself, let a couple of people you trust look it over to make sure it reads naturally. If it does, congratulations!

You’ve achieved your goal of writing a keyword balanced article.


David Jackson is a marketing consultant, and the owner of Free-Marketing-Tips-Blog.com – Free, common sense marketing tips to help grow your business. http://free-marketing-tips-blog.com