In
college and some high schools, essays are written using a standard guideline
created by the Modern Language Association (MLA). These guidelines included how
to write you cover page, title, paragraphs, how to cite references, etc. On the
Web, we follow the W3C's guidelines as well as commonly accepted "best
practices" for organizing a web page.
Headings
play an important role in organizing information, so be sure to include at
least H1-H3 when assembling your page. Using cascading style Sheets (CSS), I
was able to make my h1 at the top of this page more appealing. Here's a piece
of code you can pop into your heading:
<style
type="text/css">
h1 font-size: 18px; h2 font-size: 16px; h3 font-size: 14px;
</style>
h1 font-size: 18px; h2 font-size: 16px; h3 font-size: 14px;
</style>
Since
a page full of headings would look just plain silly, my SEO tip would be to
fill in the blank space with paragraphs, ordered and unordered lists, images,
and other content. Try to get at least 400+ words on each page.
No comments:
Post a Comment