[Return to Index] [Keyword Frequency] [Non-Exact Matching] [Partial Matching]
When analyzing a page for a multi-word phrase, frequency by default will reflect only those occurrences where the words of the phrase all appear together in the page area. However, if you disable exact match searching on the Keywords tab in the Page Critic mission, then frequency will count occurrences of ANY of the words in the phrase that are found in the page area.
For Example:
"Computer programmers write the instructions that a computer reads."
If our keyword was computer programmers then the frequency above for an exact match would be one. A frequency of 1.5 would be returned if we were doing a non-exact match. That's
because we count "Computer" as one match, "programmers" as another match, and "computer" again as a third match, then we divide by the number of words in the phrase to determine a
non-exact match count.
In theory, when a search is made with surrounding quotes on a search engine, only words found together will be assigned relevance. In practice, search engines are often inconsistent in requiring
keywords to appear together on exact match searches. Sometimes pages will be returned that include only some of the words in the phrase. In other cases, all of the words may be present but in
different places on the page, even when an exact search was performed. Because of this, it's a good idea to analyze and optimize your page for non-exact searches as well.
Note: the Top Averages will be calculated based on whether you are doing an exact or non-exact analysis. Therefore, you will see a different set of Top Average numbers depending on whether you check the Exact Match checkbox on the Keywords tab of the Page Critic mission.