1.2.2 Non-Exact Matching
Non-exact matching will look for
any occurrence of a keyword within your keyword phrase on
the page being analyzed. Non-exact matching is the default
and is activated when the exact matching checkbox is left
unchecked on the first tab of the Page Critic screen.
Non-exact matching will return higher frequency counts on
average than exact searches since ANY word in the keyword
phrase is counted as a partial "hit." This is regardless
of whether the words appear together on the page. The formula
for computing frequency for non-exact searches is:
Number of times ANY of the words in your keyword or phrase
appears on the page, DIVIDED by the number of words in the
phrase
For example in the following paragraph:
"Computer programmers write the instructions that a computer
reads."
If our keyword was computer programmers then the frequency
above for an exact match would be one.
A frequency of 1.5 would be returned if we were doing a non-exact
match. That's because we count "Computer" as one
match, "programmers" as another match, and "computer"
again as a third match. We then we divide by the number of
words in the phrase, two in this case, which yields a frequency
of 1.5. You can think of it as using the phrase "computer
programmers" one and a half times on the page.
Most search engines appear to assign some relevance to keywords
within a phrase even if they do not always appear together
on the page. Therefore, you'll normally want to compare your
page to your competitor's in non-exact mode since it will
often give you a clearer picture of why a page ranks the way
it does. In addition, most users will conduct searches on
multiple words, but will not surround them in quotes to specify
an exact search.
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