Home › Forums › Newbie Helpdesk › Meta Description On My Adult Site
- This topic has 13 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 7 years, 10 months ago by AngelXAces.
-
AuthorPosts
-
ChrisGuest
Hey,
do you recommend to fill in the Meta Description for every single post on my adult website?
Can you also tell me something about the focus keyword? Should i use the same one for every post or a related one to the content of video?
Thanks in advance
mikepowerGuestFor MANY years Google has ignored meta descriptions. Bing sometimes uses them, but doesn’t place much of any importance on them, but does use them from time to time, last I heard. The issue is that it’s invisible data. Because the user can’t see it, it’s not really “on page”. And since it’s not visible, and not part of the UX, it’s mostly used by spammers. And because of that, it’s completely unimportant. In fact, if you use it and raise any alarm bells with Google (because they think the contents of meta description don’t match the content on the page), you may get labeled as a spammer and penalized.
If you can’t tell by now, my advice is to not use meta description at all. I’ve never used it on my adult sites and not using it has never hurt me. My site does automatically put a meta description on the page for my forum site, but it’s just the beginning of the original post, so the description does match exactly with the on-page content.
skywalkerGuestI’m going to disagree with mikepower on this one.
There is no evidence to suggest that Google will penalize you for using meta descriptions, visible to the user or not. Google might not use such a description in their results (in fact most of the time it will pick out whatever piece of text it can find to suit the query of the user regardless of what you have in the meta content) but that doesn’t mean that the content cannot be supporting the theme of the post or page.
Important to remember that just because Google chooses not to use something doesn’t mean Google is blind to it. My opinion is that Google will see everything related to that post, page, tag or category and form an estimation of what it is all about, regardless of whether it actually uses all of that content in delivering a result.
As usual, Google is a mysterious beast, we can all only offer our opinions.
namsooGuestMeta worked in the days when you could build a site solely using html, and if memory serves me correctly, and in this case I think it will, meta was deemed unimportant or removed going back about 5-6 years. Plus, doesn’t the theme script handle the meta details.
sheffffGuestMETA Descriptions have nothing to do with where the page appears in the search results. It is, however, one of your controls as to what people on Google see about your page. Don’t be afraid to fill out the 155 characters, and you can economize a bit in that you needn’t use complete sentences. I use a healthy amount of commas, semi-colons and keywords.
Of course you should write a one for each post.
ChrisGuestThanks for your replys.
I am complete new to SEO so i have a few more questions.
1. I use yoastSEO. If I use a focus keyword more than one time for a single post yoastSEO tells me it is an issue. But which keyword else to use when i am for example in the “milf niche”?
Maybe someone can me explain what the focus keyword exactly is and how to use it for each post 🙂
Thanks in advance
Mr Adult AffiliateKeymasterWelcome there Chris.
The focus keyword is the keyword that you want your adult website to rank for. So for example the word “milf” can be your focus keyword. You should not repeat the keywords too often because it looks unnaturally for the search engines. I think it is healthy to use your keyword once in every 50 words or so.
If you add the post with the text like:
“Milf gets fucked milf bangs”
It not only does not make much sense but it also will hurt your website’s ranking. Write like a human being, not a spammy robot. Check out also the most popular sites in your niche and try to learn from them because if they are ranking high on the Google then they are doing a great job on the SEO side. Read my posts as well.
ChrisGuestThank you 🙂
How about at Yoast Seo? I can set a focus keyword for every single post. Is that recommended? imgur.com/QX73P3z
Is Yoast recommended at all?
Thanks in advance
Mr Adult AffiliateKeymasterIdeally, you should always set a different focus keyword, title of the video/post, scene description et cetera. So let’s say you have a video post titled:
“Big Breasted Milf Fucked By Muscular Guy”
then you can add in the focus keyword box something like:
“Milf Fucked Hard”
or
“Hot Milf Fucked”Every time you post a new post, you should set a different focus keyword.
I am personally using All in One SEO Pack on my adult websites but Yoast SEO is a good plugin as well. You can google the plugin name if you want to know more about the plugin settings.
AngelXAcesGuestAbsolutely.
Others may say it’s not worth your time with the reason being that search engines don’t use them anymore and haven’t for sometime now. There’s no disputing it’s effect on search engines (or lack thereof) but it’s very narrow minded to only think of SEO (this coming from a guy who loves SEO… Childhood, paint chips… He’s not well).Mr Adult Affiliate has already mentioned that keywords should change with each post (if you want to talk about obsolete though…). Updating that stuff still shows that the site is actively maintained and updated rather than stagnant save for a blog entry.
What I really wanted to focus on was the Description meta. I agree with Skywalker. I don’t think MikePower has done very thorough research. Not part of UX my snow white ass. When you post a link somewhere, what vague broad audience are you targeting? Well, you’re not really inviting the people who’ve already seen that particular corner of cyberspace to come peak at it again, are you (secondarily maybe)? So when I post a link to your site saying either, “Me likes,” or, “Here’s what not to do.” whenever that link triggers a preview, that description is the caption and your opportunity (from a UX and Marketing perspective) to give an alternative invitation into the website and hat can either be one of the tools that makes a window shopper into a customer but if ignored as “not part of UX” will be just one way of likely an array of little details that is making your site look like a cheap WordPress knock off and you in the lower income brackets.
Think of it like this if nothing else. What looks cleaner and more thorough on an application? One where the fields that don’t apply are skipped or one where where they have been clearly acknowledged with a neat, “N/A”
-
AuthorPosts