However, this MediaPost column, "If you want to show up for a keyword, use it," got me to thinking about the role of writer in the Web equation. This isn't the first time I've heard people tout the optimization of text. At a previous job, it was customary for a "Web" person to rewrite the headlines to stories posted on our magazine's Web site, to search engine optimize them, and it was a source of constant struggle. Why? To me this gets to a fundamental question of what is more important when it comes to writing for the Web--is it that the information is clearly written, as it is in print, in order present a full story to the reader or is it more important that the story is chock full of keyword phrases so that a reader might more easily find that story?
I realize that I seem like a dinosaur here, but I think search engines have forced us to dumb down our copy and fill it with jargon in order that it might neatly fit into the algorithms they've devised so that we can feel better about the amount of traffic coming to our sites. It would be interesting to know whether people found content on the Web to be more useful before the advent of SEO or whether they've noticed at all.
Labels: keywords, MediaPost, search engine optimization, SEO, webinar