Should You Put Your Keywords In Your URL?

Writing by Nick Stamoulis on Friday, 14 of September , 2007 at 8:14 am

Kalena Jordan over at SiteProNews has this on her list of myths. In fact, it’s myth No. 1.

I’d have to say that this is a myth, but she doesn’t exactly do a good job of explaining why. She gives an awkward example and borrows another from Matt Cutts to illustrate her point - something ridiculous like www.buy-cheap-viagra-online-while-consolidating-your-debt-so-you-can-play-texas-holdem
-while-watching-porn.com
. OK, that’s funny … and just plain off the richter scale of moronic. But that’s the point.

Well, let’s come back down to earth a minute. No one in their right mind is going to buy a domain name that long. If you’d even think about it, you shouldn’t have a website. No one is going to visit a website with that many words in it, keywords or not. Your URL needs to be short. I’d say no more than three words, maybe four if you include a preposition or your key phrase is two words. But I would say that having an URL with your keyword in it is preferable than having an URL without your keyword in it.

URLs Without Keywords Can Rank Higher Than URLs With Them

Let’s be honest. URLs without keywords in them can rank higher than URLs with keywords in them. If the webmaster does a better job at on-page SEO and link building than the webmaster of the URL with the keyword-rich URL then he could, and likely will, rank higher than the non-keyworded URL. Why? Because keywords in the URL is just one criteria that search engines look at in their ranking factors. But, and here’s the rub, it is a factor.

All other things being equal, if two websites competing for the same keyword are competing for a ranking at Google, the domain name with the keyword in it will have a slight edge. Focusing on just one ranking factor, especially an obscure one like this, and hoping you take the top spot at Google, however, isn’t all that smart. Would you take the same approach to title attributes in your link? Or how about alt tags? What I mean is, if you put undue importance on just one ranking factor and forget about everything else then you likely will not get the rankings you expect. SEO is all about making all of the ranking factors work in your favor. While keywords in your domain name is not the most important ranking factor, it is a ranking factor and shouldn’t be ignored altogether.

Summary: Do it if you can, but if you can’t find a suitable domain name available that contains your keyword, don’t fret about it. It’s not a life or death decision.

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3 Comments

Comment by Michael Phipps

Made Sunday, 16 of September , 2007 at 4:47 am

There has been one occasion I can think of where using the keyword in the domain name got me an instant #1 hit. The domain was permarexia dot com. Yes - obscure keyword, but the fact when I registered and put up an obscure 1 page website with the word in the domain, the page title, and h1 tag, it was put ahead of many pre-existing websites about permarexia.

The bloke I set the site up for has since slaughtered the page, and has no idea about SEO (or basic web design), yet the number 1 position still remains.

No, you could not do this for any keyword. But for me to get an unestablished site with no links to it in a #1 position, based on using the keyword in the domain name, says to me that there is *some* advantage to using keywords in a domain name - but as Nick has stated, it is just a factor, and other permarexia sites that focus on on-page factors could probably overtake the #1 position with a little bit of effort.

Comment by namecritic

Made Sunday, 16 of September , 2007 at 12:44 pm

I’ve had similar results that prove the domain name and keywords in the urls do help you get top listings. And I agree that no, this alone does not mean you will get ranked well, but why would you ignore one more thing that can help you?

Comment by Chris Brown

Made Thursday, 7 of February , 2008 at 12:20 pm

I think it is a great idea to put keywords in your urls. I use http://www.swiftstocks.com to get free streaming stock quotes.

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