1. Second-Tier Search Engines
Unlike Google and Bing which have all but declared the meta keyword tag as unimportant in their algorithms after the tag became the target of keyword stuffing and spamdexing in the ‘90s, other more “primitive” search engines may still be placing some of their algorithm’s emphasis on searching for meta keywords.
Though they might not be the “high-brow” Google users you’re looking for, a consumer is a consumer regardless of where they discover your client’s site, be it Google or Yahoo! or even Lycos.
2. If You’re Running a News Site
In 2012 Rudy Galfi, the product manager of Google, noted that this would be a way for good content on the sites of news publishers to stand out amongst the crowd. So look into trying out the news_keywords tag if your news site needs the extra push!
3. Landing Page Quality Score
However, what we do know is that the quality score is dependent on how relevant a site is for the keyword in question. Many SEO specialists hypothesize that unlike organic search rankings, meta keywords may still play a minor role in helping crawlers understand whether a site is relevant or not.
4. Guideline for Content Developers
In this sense, meta keywords don’t actually help with search engine results, but if content developers provide unique, quality content directly related to the keywords you’ve outlined, then indirectly this should lead to an increase in your search engine rankings as a result of a collaborative and agreed upon goal between you and the content development side of your SEO team.
5. Spam Detection
Google and other search engines have become very good at tracking down sites that use meta keywords irrelevant to their actual content. Likewise, this means your less knowledgeable competitors who attempt black hat SEO techniques such as keyword stuffing will find themselves punished by Google’s search algorithms.
6. It Can’t Hurt
A good SEO specialist will use every tool at their disposal to improve the search engine rankings of their clients. The bottom line is meta keywords can’t harm you in the rankings given you don’t do any of the spammy activities listed in #5.
Nobody except the search engineers at Google, Bing and the other search engines know exactly how their algorithms work. Since the meta keyword tag is a tool (albeit probably a pretty useless one) in your SEO toolbox, there’s no reason not give it a shot.
Ricardo CasasAbout the Author:
Ricardo Casas is the CEO and founder of Fahrenheit Marketing LLC, an Austin, Texas based internet marketing company. With over ten years of experience in the industry, Casas has seen metakeywords fall from grace, but still sees many ways in which they are important for SEO purposes.
