At one time, according to some SEO professionals, quality anchor text was an essential component of a well-ranked site. After all, this is the text the user opted to see by clicking a link on
another site. Most SEOs still contend that quality anchor text is a highly significant, positive ranking factor. If not for spiders, for visitors clicking in as well. Obviously the text should be
relevant to the destination page for best results; that's where your on page optimization comes in to play.
Duplicate Content: using duplicate content on your web page tells search engines that you have really no new value to add for your audience. So you shouldn't be surprised if search-engines try to
penalize you for using other people's content on your site.
Duplicate Content: using duplicate content on your web page tells search engines that you have really no new value to add for your audience. So you shouldn't be surprised if search-engines try to
penalize you for using other people's content on your site.
SEO Experts are working hard and researching for the various factors that Google uses to rank websites. These factors are called Google Algorithm on which Google is continuously working to
improve and change so that it becomes difficult to figure out.
Try to link to legitimate sites, stay away from link farms or Free for all's. Google checks the status of everybody you link too. If a site goes "bad" or crashes it can look bad on you especially
if you thought you were linking to a legitimate site. Make sure all your links are with creditable sites and check them regularly.
Designing or redesigning the web site with content embedded in images. There is nothing wrong with designing your web site and navigation to be super sleek and stylish. However, going overboard
with visual layouts and fancy graphics can reduce the amount of text you can squeeze in the content area and visible links, leaving nothing for the search engines to index. On average, each web
page should contain a minimum of 200 to 300 words of text sprinkled with the target keywords.
Well an article will always be posted to my blog and then submitted to article directories. Then there will be separate blog comments linking back to the article from a blog network. There will
be links purchased to link back to the post. They're all default things. The additional ones would be forum comments, press release and say Google local submission, that sort of stuff.
If you have a new site and you are filling it with quality, unique content then you really need to keep an eye on your content being scrapped and published on another site. This will make it look
like duplicate content and end in your page being thrown out of the index. This is hard to battle against, carrying out random searches on the exact article name can help you find scrapped
content.
To return the most relevant results for a query, search engines identify and analyse the popularity and relevance of a document, site or web page. This takes the form of two types of analysis:
document and link. In document analysis, search engines will compare the key words queried with the key areas of the document such as the title and heading tags as well as the body of the text
and meta data.
Read about keyword rankings. Also read about seo packages and article submission
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