Tuesday, 14 April 2015

How to Use Image with perfection in Onsite SEO


Use images in Onsite SEO

The Search Engine Optimization is the game to trick the search engine crawlers. But this does not mean you, a beginner can't optimize your blog posts to be fit to be regarded as important in the eyes of Google.

Actually, Google is not a human being who visit every page on the web manually. Its a robot made by humans to crawl web pages and index them.

Algorithms are made to judge the quality and relevancy of the pages for some specific keywords. Those algorithms are the mind of Spiders and crawlers.

Search engine bots are not intelligent enough to see the images and even they have no eyes to watch those sexy images embedded on your pages.

Search engine crawlers does not have the capability to anticipate the keywords you're trying to expose with that picture. So, in lack of any instruction about the image, Google isn't in the position to regard your post as useful and important. As a result, your post will not rank on top 3 SERPs.


How to SEO Optimize Images and Pictures?

One can optimize all the images on the posts for the perfection of On site SEO practices. One property is called as title and the second is named ALT.

Title tag is the text you'll see when you hover an image on the webpage which defines the nature and objective of the picture on the post. The title tag is of great importance in onsite SEO.

ALT tag is the text which is seen by your audience whenever the image is not loaded fully or due to slow internet connection, the image is unable to visualize on the page. This Alt is not only the text which is alternative to the image but also the backbone of on site SEO efforts.

Always use keyword in your images ALT tag because this is the only thing what crawlers are able to read and nothing else can they see about your images.

Final Words :


by the way of my above words, all i had to deliver was that, "Images are not enough to create an effective blog post until you include ALT tags and Title tags effectively. Crawlers are not qualified enough to scan those images. All they see on your webpage is HTML coding. Include keywords that define the nature of the image in ALT tags."


Hi There, I’m Vashishtha! Just another tech-savvy blogger on the plannet with a super power of troubleshooting.


EmoticonEmoticon