Heading tags
Structuring the data on your web pages for best SEO effect.
Following on from our last two blogs about page titles and meta descriptions and the effect that these can have on improving your website traffic, this time we’ll take a quick look at “heading” tags and how these should be employed to structure your web page data correctly for maximum search engine friendliness.

What are ‘h’ tags?
Heading (h) tags are used to denote which elements of your text are most important. There is a scale from h1 through to h6 in descending order of importance as far as the hierarchical ranking of web page information is concerned. Each h tag can be styled differently in keeping with the style of your website – they really can be made to look like anything you want and each time you use them in your web pages, the allocated style will be adopted.
How are ‘h’ tags used?
Good designers use h tags to ensure the correct layout and hierarchical structuring of web page data. So your main title would likely have a h1 tag allocated, secondary sub-title h2 and then minor section titles h3. You can also allocate h4, h5 and h6 as you see fit but typically you would not need to go further than h3 in most cases. If you take a look at the source code of this page in your web browser, you will see exactly this kind of structure.

In our last post we looked at how “on-page” SEO factors are often skimped by web designers and how it usually takes a website audit to unearth them when the owner realises the site isn’t working as expected.
I’m regularly asked how the members of the dental practice team can contribute to the overall marketing effort rather than the practice simply relying on an external marketing partner for everything. Whilst there are some overarching fundamentals, for example developing the team to become “brand ambassadors” for the the business, at the other end of the scale, there are some much more specific tasks which also need to be tackled.