Do Commas In Your Keywords Metatag Affect Ranking?
by Jon Ricerca
http://www.SearchEngineGeek.com
One of our members recently reported that Yahoo was
recommending separating the keywords in your meta-tag using commas.
As we know from experience, the official representatives of the search
engines don't always give us the best advice as it pertains to ranking.
We decided to check out this claim using a statistical
analysis to find out if using commas in your keywords meta-tag had any
affect on ranking on Yahoo. We also studied Google to see if there was
any affect on that search engine.
Here is the methodology I used to answer this question.
I gathered the results of the queries naturally performed last month
by myself and four associates using Yahoo and Google. I then fetched
the pages and looks at any keywords meta-tags on the listed pages.
I tallied the results for the first 8 rankings on both
Yahoo and Google (keeping the results separate) and then converted them
into a percentage of the total results for each search engine.
Here is the graph showing Google and Yahoo results:

The X-axis shows the ranking (from #1 through #8) of
the search engine results in the study. The Y-axis shows the percentage
of domains that contained commas in the keywords meta-tag.
The first thing to notice is that roughly 40%-50% of
all pages in the first eight rankings have a keywords meta-tag with
commas separating the keywords. That really doesn't tell us much about
the ranking of such pages though, only the general distribution of pages
with commas in a keywords meta-tag in the top 8 results.
Still, I was surprised that the percentages were so
high. For several years, the general consensus was that no significant
search engine even utilized the keywords meta-tag (this was before Yahoo
switched from service Google results to their own).
With that general consensus, I expected that a vast
majority of sites had dropped using this meta-tag. However, over 40%
of top ranked sites continue to persist in their use. I find that interesting.
The next thing to notice is that Google showed absolutely
no ranking difference between sites that use commas in the keywords
meta-tag vs. sites that do not use commas in the keywords meta-tag or
have no keywords meta-tag at all. The ranking correlation was an exact
zero on a scale of -100 to +100.
Yahoo's ranking correlation was a -28 on a scale of
-100 to +100 for pages having commas in the keywords meta-tags. I generally
treat results between -35 and +35 as insignificant (don't not affect
ranking or the affect on ranking is small to insignificant).
However, since Yahoo recommended using commas, I did
find the -28 result interesting. Once again, it appears that the official
representatives of a search engine are steering us wrong (at least for
purposes of ranking higher on their search engine). This result indicates
that using commas is either insignificant or if there is any significant
affect... it is NEGATIVE!
Advice: Don't use commas in your keywords meta-tag.
Pages that use commas in the keywords meta-tag do NOT rank higher and
there may be a slight negative affect on Yahoo.
Jon Ricerca is one of the leading researchers and
authors of the Search Engine Ranking Factor (SERF) reports at SearchEngineGeek.com.
For access to the other SERF reports, please visit: http://www.SearchEngineGeek.com