30th
March
2007
By: Source: pandia.com
It is common knowledge that inbound links will boost a Web page’s ranking in search engine results, especially if the links are relevant to the topic of the page and the sites linking to it are considered to be “authority sites” by the search engines.
Authority sites, again, are defined by the fact that they appear as hubs in the network of web site inter-linkages.
But what about insite linking, i.e. linking from one page to another within the same site? Do such links have any search engine marketing benefits?
Actually, the do.
Admittedly, such links will not boost the “prestige” of the whole site vis-a-vis the search engines, as they cannot be counted as a vote of confidence from other sites in the Web community. But we believe that they may help the page you are linking to when it comes to particular search phrases.
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30th
March
2007
By: Loren Baker | Source: webpronews.com
Serph, the reputation tracking search engine which scours results from various social media sites has come out of private beta testing and is now open to the public.
Serph tracks sites including various Blogs, Flickr, Delicious, Digg, Technorati, Bloglines, YouTube, Google Blog Search, Sphere, Ma.gnolia, Podzinger, Newsvine, Feedster, and Topix.net all into one easy to manage search engine.
Read more here…
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posted in SEO/Search Engine News |
30th
March
2007
By: Solomon Rothman | Source: webpronews.com
I setup A LOT of blogs and many times it’s difficult for customers to get or understand is that one of the key components in a successful blog search marketing campaign is shaping a blog so that it attracts links automatically from other on-topic blogs and sites.
If you fill your blog with promotional articles or mix too much commercial content with your more objective articles and personal anecdotes, you greatly reduce your ability to gain natural links.
This is why I often recommend companies co-brand their blog and separate it from the regular commercial content of their site; it’ll be easier to attract links. I’ve had a ton of success with this. If they can get some good links / traffic from social media, it’s always a great way to jump start a new website.
It’s a lot harder to get people to link to a “Buy This NOW” company blog than it is to create a catchy, co-branded blog who’s content and name are more targeted for attracting links and less stuffed with commercial content.
For ranking purposes, what keywords people use link to you are extremely important. If you co-brand your blog you can control (or more accurately encourage) what keywords other blogs and websites should use when linking to you. The more links to your blog and to the individual posts that use the exact keywords you are targeting, the more successful you’ll be. If you co-brand your blog you can actually use your target search in the name of your site, meaning instead of getting links to Company X’s Blog, you’ll get links to “Niche Industry Keyword Blog” and this will greatly propel your organic rankings.
When your blog structure encourages links with the right keywords, add some detailed objective posts and you could really gain links quickly. In less competitive industries adding an extra 100 quality links gained from a few good blog posts can make all the difference in being invisible or found on page 1.
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