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I found out that if there is a keyword in my meta tags which does not appear anywhere else on the visible web, the page will be pulled up as a result in Google. E.g. if I have the word 'widgets' in the meta keyword tag, my page will never be in the SERPs. But if I have the word 'uijets' in the meta keyword and 'uijets' does not appear anywhere else the Google database, the page will be listed in the results pages.
Q. Jean-Delatour: Is it still necessary to fill up the meta-keywords?
A. Not clear who answered:I think that we're open to either kind of deal. Let's see. Google uses meta-keywords, but not as much as most other search engines. I would still include them, but don't worry about putting a ton of effort into it.
So they use them, like the meta description, when all else fails.
Neat factoid :)
Two words of the phrase were in the meta description; none were in the meta keywords, and the meta description was returned as the snippet. The page was totally graphic with an irrelevant title and four backlinks with nothing relevant to the search in (or near) the anchor text.
My guess is that Google counts the description higher than the keywords, because in some cases it's visible.
It would be interesting to see how competitive a search needs to be before the meta tags don't seem to matter any more. That would give us an idea what words are worth going after in the metas. The number of competing pages (for atw/exact searches) would be a very sloppy measure, but it's some sort of rough indication.
Do it during the TV adverts or something, or while you're dropping the kids off at the pool ;)