This article is now defunked as Google has changed its algorithm.
There have been a few articles lately that talk about the fact that UK Google users get different results when having capitalisation in the search term. Personally I do think that this is the case and has been for a while, infact ill prove it.
Google themselves state:
Google searches are NOT case sensitive. All letters, regardless of how you type them, will be understood as lower case. For example, searches for george washington, George Washington, and gEoRgE wAsHiNgToN will all return the same results.
With all of our Customer Street Industry specific directories we keep LSI in mind. LSI is one of the key aspects which search engines use to judge the topical relevance of your site and site pages. Put simply LSI refers to the inter-relation of text, sentences, paragraphs and documents.
When you write a new document (which is a genuine document and not spam!) you will undoubtedly write it with semantically similar text. To use a simple example; if you write an article about pizza you will most probably use words such as mozzarella, tomato sauce, oregano, Italy etc within the text. These words are all semantically related to the topic of the article – pizza!
There are various Meta tags we use at Customer Street but the keyword Meta tag causes by far the most arguments and disagreements between Webmasters and SEOs. When first conceived, the main function of the keyword Meta tag was to tell the search engines what subject / product / industry your site was orientated around and in the early days of SEO it was one of the key elements to high search engine rankings.
The keyword Meta tag:
<META name="keywords" content="keyword 1, keyword 2, keyword 3, keyword 4, keyword 5">
One of the newer additions to the Webmasters artillery, and a staple of Customer Street domains, is the XML sitemap.
The standard visitor sitemap has been around since websites began but only as a tool for site visitors to find the product or page that they are looking for. This is great for the user and it turned out to be great for the search engine spiders too as it gave them a central page from which they could access every URL of a site.