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August 18, 2007

Suicide in Cyberspace - Your Outward Links Can Kill Your Rankings

Filed under: Link Building, SEO Articles, Off-Page SEO Tips — admin @ 8:45 pm

Link building strategies have, for most people for a long time, revolved around reciprocal link exchanges. Whilst most people understand that links are important, they generally don’t understand why this is so. In a nutshell, a link to your site has traditionally been accepted by Search Engines as a vote for your site. A link from a topic or theme-related site to yours is better than a link from a site having a completely different topic. An important site’s link to yours carries more weight - for example from The Open Directory, or Yahoo Directory. All pretty straightforward…

BUT… the rules have changed… significantly! All the thinking webmasters worked diligently to build links - willy-nilly - in order to subvert the search engine rankings and gain an advantage to themselves at the expense of everyone else. For a long time, there have been mutterings about this, and comments from Google staffers about possible penalties from linking to “bad neighbourhoods’” and - heaven forbids it -  buying links! Google et al simply don’t approve of willy-nilly link-building schemes, and have recently tightened the screws a bit more, in two notable ways…

Bad Links 

Some links are bad… for example, if you are a car sales company and you’ve got dozens of completely irrelevant links to international hotel sites… yeah, YOU know the ones! in Prague, Munich, Shanghai  etc! That’s a BAD neighbourhood over there! That IS going to put a world of hurt on you! And as for the Free For All link sites, web rings, and 3 way link schemes… that’s just suicide in cyberspace! Why? Coz its a blatant and completely indefensible attempt at cheating the system!

Reciprocal Links - Almost a Waste of Effort

Reciprocal links are still of some value, providing the link titles are explicit, and if the page they link to you from has a higher Page Rank than the page from which you link to them. The concept of a link to you being a vote for you, and being added to your site’s Total Vote Count has a flip side. A link from you to someone else essentially deducts a vote from your total vote count… meaning its value is minimal when compared to a 1-way incoming back-link!   

1-way Outward Links Are Toxic

Ok, lets assume you are a service provider, maybe a health clinic, and you deal with hospitals, other doctors, specialists, nurses, laboratories. So, as a benefit to your visitors, you place direct links to their web resources on your links page. Is that clever? Most certainly it is NOT! Transfusion time, because you’ll be haemorrhaging Page Rank with nothing in return! Do it, but be smart about it, because there is NOTHING to be gained (by you) from linking to any site that does not link back. So make sure your links include the “nofollow” attribute that tells SE’s that the link is NOT a vote by your site for that site! 

Link Content Is Mission Critical

This is mission critical because Google and other have decided that they can’t trust you to be honest about your site! Basically, it seems like there are two web tribes - those who know not so much about how things work, and those who know more than they should. There should be a flourishing third tribe, who just build great sites with lots of terrific content that automatically ranks highly - but nobody’s seen nuthin’ from those guys for ages! 

The tribe who know more than they should ruthlessly manipulate every available loophole to dominate search engine rankings, at the expense of those who have yet to read SEO For Dummies. Therefore, Google decided that its essential that there is some external correlation between what YOU say your site is about, and what OTHER people say your site is about…  This is done by analysing the words in the Link Title on all links pointing to your site.  Bottom line here is - if a keyword phrases does NOT appear on links to your site, you ain’t gonna rank for that phrase!

For many established sites, this is the main reason they might have experienced a noticeable decline in rankings in the last few months. Most older sites will have a majority of incoming links based on their business name, and NOT on their activities / products / services / location etc. To use the common “widgets” analogy - if you are selling “widgets” and all your incoming link Titles have your only business name e.g. Smiths Manufacturing Co Ltd, its now very difficult for you to rank for “widgets”! 

Backlink analysis reveals this shortcoming rather quickly and, lucky for you, it is possible to remedy this by building 1-way incoming back-links using multiple Title / Description combinations that contain a good spread of relevant keywords. It does require some keyword research, and it is tedious - but if you don’t do it, you are certainly not going forwards! But your competitors might be…

Yet Another SEO Article by;

Ben Kemp, aka The SEO Guy

Web: www.comauth.co.nz

Email: SEO@TheSeoGuy.co.nz

Contact us for a Free SEO Site Review….

backlinks link building Off Page SEO Tips page rank Reciprocal Links SEO SEO Articles submissions
May 20, 2006

Keyword Meta-tag - much abused, but still of use…

Filed under: Keyword Meta-Tag — admin @ 4:50 am

Accordling to SEO legend, this tag is no longer used by most search engines. In the “olden daysit was possible to shoot straight to the No.1 position for almost any keyword/phrase just by stuffing it into the keyword meta-tag. So that’s what people did… The SE’s responded to this “spamming” approach by either skipping or de-emphasising the contents of the tag.

I still think it is a useful discipline to insert the targeted keyword phrases for the page into the tag – as a reminder of what you are attempting to define about tthe page, if nothing else.

However, I also observed an interesting Google ranking result on a client’s site recently, where the Home page ranked surprising highly for several keywords that existed only in the keyword meta-tag. E.g. one of these keywords was “MPIO MP3 Player” and it was not listed in the Title, Description, Headings, Body Text or in any of the links pointing to the site.

So, on that basis, I think it is worth being specific and including approx 200 characters of relevant variations of the page’s primary keyword phrases.  

Why you NEED a good description Meta-tag

Filed under: Description Meta-tag — admin @ 4:13 am

It is crucial to search engine rankings that a carefully crafted Description, preferably unique to every page, be provided. This helps the search engines to properly categorise the site.

A well crafted description will also be used verbatim in most search engine results displayed to searchers, meaning you can actually control what is shown. There are two common problems with Description tags;

  1. You do not have one at all. Therefore, you effectively force the search engines to “create” one from random snippets of text from anywhere on the page, which can look very unappealing to a searcher who sees this in the SE results!
  2. You have a “generic” one that is used on every page of the site! This (marginally) better than not having one at all, but means you miss the vital opportunity to control what is displayed about the site, and emphasise to the SE’s what each page is about.

What you require is a crisp summary of the page contents in the first 150 characters - which is all that Google displays. However, it does not do any harm to make the Description extend up to 200 characters as some SE’s will display this much. At the same time as you create this “summary” you must;

  • Place the primary keyword phrase as close to the beginning as possible
  • Make a compelling sales pitch that persuades the viewer that THIS page has what he/she wants
  • Repeat the primary keyword/s between 1.5 to 2 times, and/or add 1 or more closely related word/s
  • Not over-capitalise it, and avoid punctuation, grammatical and spelling errors! :-)

 

 :: Author’s Note ::

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Ben Kemp has 20 years of experience in the IT industry, including 12 years as a free-lance IT consultant. He is one of NZ’s longest serving Search Engine Optimisation practitioners, with clients throughout Australasia. He shares his experiences via The SEO Guys Blog.

The SEO Guy (NZ)  ::  Email: bjk@TheSeoGuy.co.nz  ::  Web: http://www.comauth.co.nz

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