This page is intended to illustrate the ideal structure of a web-page from a search engine optimisation perspective.
No JavaScript, no Flash, just simple HTML headings, paragraphs and style tags.
The ideal web-page should really contain 200 words or more or original content. It's tempting to suggest making the content useful and interesting too. However, whereas the value of the content is subjective, it's uniqueness can and will be checked by Google and others and can influence you ideal wep-page's search engine performance.
Most pages can have their 'visibility' checked online at www.mjbd.co.uk
Check this page here : http://www.mjbd.co.uk/visibility_checker.html?webaddress=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mjbdata.com%2Fthe_ideal_web_page.html
Our own research suggests that the ideal number of times to feature a target search phrase, or the words that make up such a phrase, is 6. There are lots of examples where a page will rank no.1 for a search term that either doesn't feature within it at all, or where it's repeated to the point where the page loses all credibility. The first case is usually a result of lots of text links pointing to the target page that feature the search term in the 'anchor text', e.g. the ideal web-page. The second approach is risky - the more you push your luck with search engine by stuffing your pages with repetitive content the more risk you run of ruining your site's performance in the search engines.