SEO can lead to some odd permutations... I'm not saying it is necessarily
"good" SEO, but I've seen it happen.

Example: Jamming up an HTML page title with SEO-specific keywords in the
FRONT of the title, and the actual name of the site after a colon or a pipe
at the end.

Usability Problem: Ultimately, every HTML page title is bookmark copy,
whether a browser bookmark or a delicious bookmark. Bookmarking is a helpful
user activity when a site has great utility, and when you are planning to
make many repeat visits, especially if you designate that bookmark for your
toolbar (or in the case of the Firefox delicious plug-in, your toolbars).

So the HTML page titles get truncated in many instances: toolbar bookmarks,
3-pane RSS readers, any sort of list view.

I mean, nonsensical or generic HTML page titles showing up as gibberish in
bookmarks lists should have vanished long ago, they are EVIL. I used to
grade down my students a full letter grade if I caught them doing it... in
the 1990s. A bookmark is a free ad, after all, and a free ad of the best and
highest quality type. But ultimately, a bookmark is a USER UTILITY.

And yet, with this new crop of SEO-happy page titles, I find myself with
bookmarks that are not gibberish, but are truncated so that all I see are
SEO keywords in my bookmark lists, but I can't for the life of me figure out
the name of the site those wonderful keywords are describing! Makes it
pretty hard for me to make those all-important repeat visits.

Chris

On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 6:42 AM, AJKock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> "Where in particular do you find SEO at odds with good UX?"
>
> SEO prefers descriptive links, which leads to some people creating
> long phrases which they link.
> Usability: I find them less readable and distracting when reading.
> They are also loaded with keywords which are vague, but descriptive of
> the content you are going to, but never spesific.
>
> Example:
> Linking to an article on "hamburgers" by using "succulent beef being
> sacrificed on rolls with green and red salad"
>
> The problem is that those keywords could have linked to many other
> things like steakrolls, sandwiches, etc.
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