2.14 Top Averages
Area
rows on the Page Analysis table that begin with "Top
Averages" contain statistics for the average scores of
top ranking pages for the selected search engine. These averages
are re-computed periodically by the staff at FirstPlace Software
and incorporated into Page Critic Knowledge Base updates.
The averages are based on the analysis of hundreds of top
ranking pages across dozens of different keyword searches.
Although these scores are not guaranteed to get you to the
top for your keyword, they will definitely give you valuable
help on what the averages are for top ranking pages.
For these
lines to appear, you must select the option on the second
tab of the Page Critic screen.
AVERAGES
WILL VARY: You will also notice that these averages will
VARY depending on whether you are doing an exact match keyword
analysis, a non-exact match analysis, or an analysis of a
single keyword (rather than a multi-word phrase). Since the
search engines often return a different set of statistics
depending on the type of search conducted, we've incorporated
three different sets of "averages" within the knowledge
base to more closely match the type of search you are optimizing
for. In other words, the top averages for the phrase "blue
widgets" will not normally match the averages displayed
for just "widgets."
When doing
a non-exact match on a multi-word phrase, the frequency counts
will often be much higher since it will count the occurrence
of ANY keyword within the phrase, rather than just matches
on the entire phrase. In turn, your own pages should return
frequency counts that are generally higher when optimizing
on multi-word phrases if you wish to score well.
Warning
about averages: Averages can be very helpful in many cases
to determine trends. Generally you'll want to try and make
your own page statistics come close to the averages for top
ranking pages, or identify which averages are "significant."
However, they can also be deceiving in other cases. For example,
if a search engine scored pages highly that either had the
keyword at the beginning of the title, OR at the end of the
title, then WebPosition might report an average keyword
prominence of 50%. However, in reality, most of the top
ranking pages may have had 100% or 0% prominence scores. Putting
your keyword in the middle of the title to match the "average"
in this scenario would not help you.
Another
potential pitfall of blindly following averages rests in the
fact that there are MANY variables that a search engine ranks
a page on, so you should be cautious before drawing any conclusions.
For example, you might assume that since a majority of the
pages on average had one or more keywords in their meta keyword
tag, that the search engine supports keyword tags. However,
since many Web masters use meta keyword tags regardless of
whether the search engine supports them, this conclusion would
be wrong for about half the major search engines that declare
they do not support that tag.
TIP: For
some competitive keywords, averages for many keywords may
not give you statistics that are useful. You may wish to try
the TOP X averages feature
to see how the top ranking pages for YOUR keyword average
for each statistic.
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