So you think you know on-page SEO? Let's go ahead and put that to the test. Click "Start" to take an SEO Quiz that will evaluate your understanding of a number of different aspects of SEO.
Some key points about the quiz are:All questions are multiple choice. There may be some questions in which more than one right answer is provided. Take care to pick the BEST answer -- picking an answer that is technically correct, but not as good an answer as the preferred answer, will still be judged as a wrong answer.
So take the quiz, and let Read moreus know what you think and know how you did. Or let us know if you disagree with the answer we've suggested is the "right" answer.
Disclaimer: Neither the author nor Third Door Media make any representation that this quiz is a complete test of all aspects of SEO. This quiz has been created and offered to you "for entertainment purposes only."
Also bear in mind that there is far more to on-page SEO than what these 20 questions cover, but this is a start to evaluating where you stand!
Note: If you're having problems taking the quiz on your Mac, iPhone or iPad, check out our tips.
A subdomain that the web server will send users to based on their user agent.
A subdomain that can be easily changed from one server to another.
A subdomain that serves different results to users based on their user agent.
A subdomain that dynamically sizes content to the screen size of the user's browser.
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A site design that adapts to the specific needs of the user.
A site design that uses CSS to dynamically adapt the HTML to fit the user's device and screen size.
A site design that determines the user agent of the browser and sends different HTML sized for optimal viewing.
A site that provides different HTML to Google from the HTML it delivers to users.
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A site that adapts to the specific needs of the user.
A site that serves HTML to the browser so it can dynamically adapt the content to its size.
A site that determines the user agent of the browser and sends different HTML sized for optimal viewing.
A site that provides different HTML to Google from the HTML it delivers to users.
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The number of uses of the target keyword.
Use of the keywords in the keywords metatag.
Use of the target keyword in the top heading of the page.
Use of the target keyword in the title tag.
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It doesn't matter; they are all the same.
The <h1> tag.
The highest level heading tag used on the page.
The <h0> tag.
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The relevance and breadth of the content on the page.
The use of keywords in the heading tags.
The number of times the keywords are repeated in the content.
Whether or not the target keyword is used in the first 50 words.
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1,000 words or more.
It doesn't matter.
100 words on e-commerce pages, 500 words or more on article pages.
Whatever is most appropriate to the topic and focus of the web page.
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When you analyze competitors to discover keywords to target.
When multiple pages on a site are optimized for the same keywords.
When you compete for more than one keyword on the same page.
When poor SEO implementation causes your page to be non-competitive for the target keywords.
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When one page has the exact same content as another.
When you copy content from a competitor's site.
When there are substantive blocks of content on a web page that either completely match, or are appreciably similar to, content on another web page.
When one page has nearly the same content as another.
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They are used to tell search engines what language and country a website is intended to serve.
They are used to tell search engines what language and/or country a website is intended to serve.
They are used to tell search engines what language, or what language and country a website is intended to serve.
They are used to indicate the preferred dialect of a language for a web page.
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It tells web servers that users more about what a user needs.
It tells users that tells a site's content varies from time to time.
It tells ISPs to not cache a site's content.
It tells caching servers that a site's content varies by user agent.
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Fix thin and poor-quality content on the pages of your site, and wait.
Fix thin, poor-quality and duplicate content on the pages of your site, and submit a reconsideration request.
Fix thin, poor-quality and duplicate content on the pages of your site, and wait.
Fix thin and poor-quality content on the pages of your site, and submit a reconsideration request.
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Remove all links to your site with a Domain Authority of 50 or less, and wait.
Remove all links that do not appear to be editorially given, and then wait.
Clean up links from web directories, article directories, countries where you don't do business and where you have too much rich anchor text, and then wait.
Remove or disavow all links that do not appear to be editorially given, and file a reconsideration request.
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Remove all links to your site with a Domain Authority of 50 or lower, and wait.
Remove all links that do not appear to be editorially given, and then wait.
Clean up links from web directories, article directories, countries were you don't do business and where you have too much rich anchor text, and then wait.
Remove or disavow all links that do not appear to be editorially given, and file a reconsideration request.
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To implement 301 redirects.
To help resolve potential duplicate content problems.
To point to the desktop version of mobile pages when you have a mobile subdomain.
Both B. and C.
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To prevent pages from appearing in search results.
To block search engines from crawling pages on your site.
To stop PageRank flow into low-quality pages.
All of the above.
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They are used by publishers to identify groups of paginated URLs.
They cause search engines to treat all links into any of the pages in a group of paginated URLs to be considered links to the entire group.
They help eliminate concerns with perceived duplicate content for paginated URLs.
All of the above.
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Yes; they only care about content visible to the user, as they want to emphasize user engagement.
Yes; they only care about content in the main body of the page, as the rest of the content is not page-specific.
Yes; placement on the page says something about the importance of the content.
No, they don't care.
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Noindex
Robots.txt
Nofollow
Rel="canonical"
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Rel=prev/next + noindex
Rel=prev/next + nofollow
Rel=prev/next
Rel=prev/next + robots.txt
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