Opinions on Alt tags
-
Reading around the web, there are many sources that suggest all images should have an Alt tag attributed to them. This is good for accessibility etc, however there appears to be conflicting interests between this and what works for SEO. Hence many other sources suggest that you include a keyphrase or two in 1 image Alt tag, and then leave the rest blank so as not to dilute the alts on the page.
In my experience, the latter appears to be true. However this seems wrong when the Alt attribute really should be used for accessibility reasons and not for SEO - why would the search engines encourage us to provide poorer quality information by harming our rankings if we try to make a website accessible?
Interested to hear your opinions and experiences on this subject.
Thanks.
-
As you said it was a generalization, not necessarily directed at you. The quote you are referring to (mine, not Rands) is a simple caveat to anyone who might be reading this question and thinks that alt text will save the day. Optimizing alt tags is a great way to get the job done and accurately describe the images attached, my point was that stuffing, etc... is not. Again not a direct attack on you, just overall advice for people who might want to go down that road.
-
Nobody said anything about stuffing keywords. These images are given a keyword that people are searching for on the internet, therefore they are serving a useful purpose in telling both google bots and people with disabilities and anyone else reading the page what that page is about.
Also, nobody said anything about my site coming down to optimizing alt tags as the only thing being done or the end-all be-all strategy we rely on.
That said, it is widely accepted that optimizing alt tags is a useful tactic in an overall SEO strategy.
Quoted from Rand's post August 17th, 2009:
Alt Attribute - Surprisingly, the alt attribute, long thought to carry little SEO weight, was shown to have quite a robust correlation with high rankings in our studies. Thus, we strongly advise the use of a graphic image/photo/illustration on important keyword-targeted pages with the term/phrase employed in the alt attribute of the img tag.
Finally, if you make broad generalizations about what works in SEO and what doesn't without understanding the particular situation of each site's SEO strategy, then chances are you're the one that's not very good at SEO.
-
are you using the H1 tag multiple times on the same page?
-
an Alt tag is wonderful for those with disabilities to actually understand whats going on in your site. Imagine going to a site that stuffs the same three keywords into their image alt tags? It must be super confusing and frustrating for someone with out the gift of sight. At least consider the purpose of the tag. The benefit of stuffing keywords is far outweighed by making your site accessible and easily understood by those with disabilities, or those trying to figure out what that picture might be. I am sure someone else in this thread has touched on the exact same thing I am saying, but if your site is coming down to over optimizing alt tags, chances are your not a very good SEO, you could easily accomplish more with a great description and title tag than all your alts combined.
-
A large ecommerce site I work on doesn't have a single ALT tag on any of the product images on category and subcategory pages. I have come up with a way to add the H1 tag dynamically to the images on these category pages since I have already put in a lot of long hours optimizing the H1.
My concern is this: will the same keyword text on multiple images on the same page hurt me? No category page has more than 10 images to be optimized.
-
I'm sure many people would say yes, that is spammy, however in my experience that works better than not including a keyphrase at all. My advice would be to do it, see what the results are, but be prepared to change it back if Google decides this is dodgy.
-
Question:
At the moment the alt tag on my logo (which appears on all my 4,000+ pages) simply reads "home". Would it be spammy to change it on all 4,000 pages to, eg, "home of cheap red widgets", assuming cheap red widgets was my target keyword?
-
I wonder if I could dynamically insert alt text based on page title into the logo...
BRB, spamming search engines
-
Like you, I always use the main 1 or 2 keyphrases for the logo alt. I am also a bad man then!
I think, so long as the page is relevant to those keyphrases - which it really should be - it can't be that bad practice because in most cases you're saying what the main focus of the page is. Perhaps I am kidding myself though?!
-
I personnally never heard of this technique (to keep only one alt tag) and thus, I never tried it.
My personal feelings lead me to think it is not natural and I would not recommend using this technique.
-
I would certainly put alt tags on all images for accessibility and usability reasons. The SEO impact of alt tags on images is minimal, but I've never heard of alt tags diluting the SEO success - it sounds ominous to me.
I would be wary of being "too spammy" with your alt tags, as it is entierly possible that googlebot might pick up on this.
It is important to note that good descriptive alt tags (with your keywords) and keywords within your iamge fielnames will certainly help your images rank better on Google Image search. This may or may not be an alternative vertical source of traffic to your site that you may or may not want - really depends on the type of site you're running.
-
I am ashamed to say I spam the heck out of my alt tags because it works
I used to write wonderfully descriptive alt text for accessibility and a different title text, now they're both just the same keyword.
I am a bad man
I've never considered leaving alt text blank if I have multiple pictures as I've seen more than one image rank (image search) from alt text/file name/caption. I do tend to have the first image on the page as the main keyword though.
What do you do about logo alt text?
-
Thanks both for your responses. I think in cases such as this, it's generally a good idea to follow your instincts.
Have either of you guys tested what happens to rankings if you remove all alts except the main, keyphrase rich one?
-
Thanks both for your responses. I think in cases such as this, it's generally a good idea to follow your instincts.
Have either of you guys tested what happens to rankings if you remove all alts except the main, keyphrase rich one?
-
Alt, although a valid signal is not as heavy as title for example, so I suggest that you do not compromise the integrity and quality of site for SEO purposes only and manipulation of this tag. Use ALT as it should be used and describe your illustrations, photos, products images and diagrams well enough so that a visually impaired may get an idea of what the image is. That's what Google expects you to do and is generally a win-win.
-
I personnally always put a quality alt attribute on all my images, with human readable content (for accessibilty reason, or if your image is 404), but also a little bit optimized for SEO. I actually never heard of the alts diluting problem.
I also take the time to put some wisely chosen keywords for the filename of my images. This is the kind of laborious on-page optimization task which individually have no SEO impact, but when combined with many others, can start having an impact on your SEO.
Hope this helps,
J.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Tag Clouds in Google Despite Canonical Links for Single Tags/Articles
I am frustrated to see a lot tag clouds in Google even though I programmed my tagged pages to display a canonical link to the linking article if the is only one result for the tag cloud. The goal to to make sure that the article, which is of better quality than the tag page, ends up in Google without a bunch of thin tag pages getting in there. For instance this article should be in Google and this tag should not be because that tag has a canonical URL for that article. I do not have a lot of experience with tag cloud SEO because I prefer to limit such pages to categories, but I have found tag clouds to be important for aggregating information for specific issues, people, or places that are not already a site category. Some tags I have used to power social media pages that update automatically from RSS feeds for their related tag archives. That is quite useful for pages like that. Should I start using Meta noindex for those instead of rel canonical? I have already done that for author profiles because author profiles get a lot of on site links compared to individual articles because my gridviews use javascript for paging. The same is true for the tags, so if a tag is tagged in 30 articles it will have links from 30 articles but if those articles are not in the latest 20 for that tag only the latest 20 will have links back from the tag archive. I also suspect having a lot of tag pages with little content to negatively impact my indexing rate. I will see a number of recent tag pages added before new articles.
On-Page Optimization | | CopBlaster.com0 -
Showing more Duplicate Title Tags Than WMT
This is yet another question between moz vs google WebMaster Tools. In WMT it only shows 5 pages with a total of 18 duplicate titles. But moz is showing 298. It appears the duplicates are canonical links for the most part. What is the discrepancy?
On-Page Optimization | | jamavan0 -
How bad is it going over 70 character for title tag length?
I know less than 70 is recommended. I am about to run a script to create some title tags and a few will be between 71-74. Is going just the few characters over ok until I can get in there and manually do them?
On-Page Optimization | | EcommerceSite0 -
Description tag/ duplicate content.
Quick question - will Gg deem it duplicate content if I use the description tag text anywhere else in the on-page copy? Thanks, David
On-Page Optimization | | newstd1000 -
Title Tag Not Relaying In Google Search
Our title tag is "<title>HCG</span> Diet - HCG Drops - Example Weight Loss - HCG Diet Weight Loss</title>" But in google it is only displaying "HCG diet" Reasons? What can I do to fix this? I'm trying to get this fixed asap, as it is our homepage that is being effected by it.
On-Page Optimization | | HCGDiet0 -
Does the keyword meta tag not matter anymore?
In the SeoMoz report generated, it recommended removing the meta keywords tag as it was no long relevant? why is google no longer considering this?
On-Page Optimization | | mancmusicman0 -
Tag clouds: good for internal linking and increase of keyword relevant pages?
As Matt Cutts explained, tag clouds are OK if you're not engaged in keyword stuffing (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYPX_ZmhLqg) - i.e. if you're not putting in 500 tags. I'm currently creating tags for an online-bookseller; just like Amazon this e-commerce-site has potentially a couple of million books. Tag clouds will be added to each book detail page in order to enrich each of these pages with relevant keywords both for search engines and users (get a quick overview over the main topics of the book; navigate the site and find other books associated with each tag). Each of these book-specific tag clouds will hold up to 50 tags max, typically rather in the range of up to 10-20. From an SEO perspective, my question is twofold: 1. Does the site benefit from these tag clouds by improving the internal linking structure? 2. Does the site benefit from creating lots of additional tag-specific-pages (up to 200k different tags) or can these pages become a problem, as they don't contain a lot of rich content as such but rather lists of books associated with each tag? Thanks in advance!
On-Page Optimization | | semantopic0 -
Give your opinion about our keyword strategy
This is our idea on how to create pages. Please give us your opinion on this way of targeting keywords. Meta Title Tickets [destination] | Tickets.nl | Flights [destination] Meta description Book your ticket to [destination] online and find the cheapest tickets in just a few clicks… H1: Tickets [destination] H2: Cheap ticket to [destination] – city of … Image Tekst with focus on tickets + destination and ticket + destination City guides general information, More information city guide
On-Page Optimization | | vliegticketsnl
introduction Short snippets of content. More information city guide
Short snippets of content. Additional tekst on flights + destination.0