SEO Strategies

Sunday, January 31, 2010 0 comment
Understanding the world of search engine optimization, or SEO, can be hard if you are new to the field. There are a lot of strategies out there that can help you to increase your rankings; then again, there are also a lot of people who will give you bad advice. Keep reading to learn which SEO strategies work, and which ones don't.

Which advice should you heed, and which should you avoid? It can get murky. That is why today we are going to look at some of the strategies that will and will not work for your site. First we will look at a thing you should not do, then we will move onto one that you should do.

Don't be shocked if some of the dos and do nots seem very similar. Bad SEO advice thrives by looking like good advice.

Bad Strategy One: Putting Any and All Outbound Links on Your Site.

Good Strategy One: Choosing to Link to External Sites Carefully, but Generously

In general, creating outbound links from your site to another site is a very good thing in the world of SEO. The quality of the sites that you link to, however, can make a big difference in the effect that it brings you. If you choose to link to sites that fall into the headings below, then you can end up reversing all of your work thus far -- or at the very least, not helping your rankings.

In general, there are a few key areas that you need to be worried about when you are choosing which sites you should link to and which you should pass on by. What are these target areas?

1. Sites that have been categorized as a bad neighborhood by a search engine. These are sites that have been penalized for over linking -- for using links inappropriately. How do you spot one of these sites before you link? The simplest way is to search for the domain name (not the URL) in an engine. If it does not show up, it has been blacklisted. You may want to try this with a few engines.

2. Adult sites. Aside from the fact that you may offend your readers and lose them, you run the risk of getting your site moved into that category if you have too many links to this type of site. There is no magic number here, where you can link to the sites and get jumped. Each search engines formula works differently. Just be aware that you need to have less of these to fall into that category if you have more related keywords on your site. This means that unless your site is truly meant for adults only, you need to be very cautious with these links.

3. Black holes. This is a term for sites that get links without giving them in return. Sure, it will not really damage your SEO, but it does not get you anything. Be wary of sites with no outbounds, or only "no follow" outbound links. One of the biggest in that category is Twitter, which does all links as no follow, as well as some major news sites. Yes, Twitter has a lot of great uses, but SEO is not one of them.

What about inbound links? Don't they matter?

Yes, they do. You can't do anything about it if one of the sites in this category chooses to link to you. If, however, you do not link to them, you can steer clear of one of the biggest problems possible, the reciprocal link. These links count heavy in a lot of formulas, and having them to the wrong sites will drag you down. While we are talking about links, let's look at a sub-category of bad linking ideas.

Bad Strategy One and One Half: Using a Paid Link Service or Link Trade Site to Get Links for Your Site

Using a paid link or a link trade service can get you into one of the situations above. Most owners of decent and reputable sites prefer to get their links in other ways. So, be aware that these communities often have at least a few of the sites that fall into the categories above.

Source : seochat.com
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Accurate Rank Checking in Google for Different Geographical Locations

One of the most important and common measurements of ranking success is the search engine results position. Since this factor is quantifiable, it should be very easy to measure the success of an SEO campaign. As you might guess with anything concerning SEO, it's not as easy to determine as you might think. Geographical location plays a major role; this article will explain how to take that into consideration.

If one didn't consider geographical location as a factor, one would think ranking a website accurately is a straightforward task. Say a website ranked at position 15 in Google before it was improved with SEO, but after SEO it ranks at position 5 for the chosen keyword(s). Then we can say it reached the first page, and that the SEO campaign was successful.

However, the ranking we check is just the tip of the iceberg with respect to client expectations. For example, say you have a client who is US-based and targeting Google.com US, and you are an SEO specialist living in the UK. Of course, your client's and your geographical locations are different, and so are the ranking results you see; they are not exactly the same. Initially, we've observed this to be different and discussed some useful geo-targeting techniques.

Say you check rankings for his targeted keyword "widgets," and it ranks at position five in www.google.com -- but you are in the UK. His site might still be ranking at position nine, or even worse, on Google's second page, like position 15, in www.google.com when checked in the US.

This article provides tips and techniques for effectively checking the ranking of websites for the targeted keywords in Google. Using these techniques, any SEO practitioner can accurately check rankings in Google with differences in geographical location or Google country-targeted search engines (Google.co.uk, Google.com.au, and Google.com) taken into account.

Source : seochat.com
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