Content

When not to link

I want you to imagine the following example of a website, which I come across far too often:

The site has a homepage focused on a handful of terms. This then links to other pages that each concentrate on one of these key terms. All text with mentions of key phrases on the homepage are therefore linked to these other pages. The homepage is used as the landing page for a link building campaign, yet doesn’t perform that well.  Website owner isn’t happy.

It is a classic mistake – one I like to call a case of ‘confused landing page strategy aggravated by misappropriation of internal links’. (‘Geek!’)

I’ll explain.

Firstly, you should never have more than one page concentrating on a key phrase/term. This causes conflict and dilution of focus. Big no-no.

Secondly, Google does not read links in the same way as it reads normal text. Google assigns anchor text to the page that the anchor text links to. The page that contains the anchor text does not gain the benefit of the mention of the phrase. Therefore the page that is linked to is seen as being relevant to the phrase whereas that page that contains the link is not.

So in the case of the example mentioned, the homepage is the focus of a load of links yet effectively has no mentions of any key phrases on the page – as all mentions are linked to other pages. Result? Google says SPAM.

Choosing your key terms with ROI in mind

SEO has to be give you a good ROI. And by ROI, I mean return on investment in the form of MONEY, not visits. Therefore choosing your search terms has to be tailored towards optimising your bottom line.

How to get into Google’s ‘Inner Ring of Trust’

On Friday I wrote a post about how on-site changes can have larger effects on rankings for some sites than others. I outlined why I believe this is the case – one way links from quality sites lead Google to trust the content on your site.

Therefore there seems to be a form of ‘ring of trust’ in Google’s eyes. Once you get into that ring of trust then you can rely less on outside sources.

So how do you become a member of the ‘ring of trust’?

Google Comments

A few days ago I read that the Google Comments feature is no more. No I had no idea that there even was one either.

Having joined the SEO world, I have realised that is exactly what it is sometimes – its own little world. Some ideas break out of that world and gain public notoriety. Some don’t, but the SEO world doesn’t seem to notice. The Google Comments feature is one of the latter.

Google and the Circle of SEO

Google is laughing at us.

They have developed SEO from the cheap alternative way to promote your business into a fully integrated follower of the long-standing traditional rules of business. And a lot of people don’t seem to have noticed.