Keywords

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.

Which is more important to Google: title or anchor text?

This question has plagued me for a while. Most of you will be thinking that they are both equally as important and that I am stupid for even putting forward the question. But the answer is not as obvious as it seems, as I have experienced in some seemingly unusual cases.

Landing Page Confusion

I am going back to the very basics of SEO, as this is where some people fall down, making them unable to explore deeper into the discipline. To understand SEO, you have to understand that an SEO campaign has to have a strategy behind which page will focus on which search terms.

Google Local Business Results

Some of you may have noticed the recent prominence of local search listings. i.e the list of ten local businesses that appears at the top of search results page for local search terms, for example ‘marketing sheffield’. From my experience, getting on these listings is dependent on the following factors:

Take control of your Google Local Business listing

Google gathers information from all sorts of local sources to put together its local search listings. However, if your listing isn’t where you want it to be then you have to take control. Enter your own details and verify your listing (I usually choose the faintly funny robotic phone call option to do this) – this will also give you the opportunity for the listing to link straight through to your website, whereas those that have been ‘discovered’ by Google will click through to the full details of the listing.