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Hristo Hristov
talks about how tried and true methods for search engine optimization
are preferred by the search engines.
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Find
out you can optimize your website so that it doesn't bounce
around much every time a search engine changes their algorithm.
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Search Engine Optimization that Works in the Long-Term
Search engines are constantly tweaking their ranking algorithms
and when that happens some pages lose their top ranking positions.
One such event was the infamous Florida Update. Many pages were
practically kicked-out of the top 1000 pages for competitive keywords.
With recent updates, webmasters have been thinking that Google
does not use PageRank because low PR pages can get very good rankings.
Before that everyone was saying that PageRank was THE factor for
top positions. Now, everyone is saying that keyword rich anchor
text links from many different sites is the key for the top ranks.
All these recent events seem to indicate that search engine algorithms
are totally unpredictable, right? Wrong!
All search engines are going in the very same direction. The scientific
literature related to information retrieval and recent search engine
patents reveal the not-so-distant future of search engine ranking
algorithms.
Introducing Topic Specific Link Popularity
For the last few years search engines relied on General Link Popularity
to assess the importance of every page. Relevancy was based on a
combination of General Link Popularity (importance) and keyword
matches on page and off page (anchor text of links for specificity).
General Link Popularity is measured by summing the weight of ALL
incoming links to a page. With General Link Popularity ANY link
improved the importance of a page. Webmasters started to buy high-PR
links from totally unrelated sites. Pages were getting unrelated
votes.
To combat this problem, Google implemented a Topic Specific Link
Popularity algorithm. When a user specifies a query, Google determines
the importance of a page by the Link Popularity it gets from RELATED
to the keywords pages.
A link from a page will give you considerable Topic Specific Link
Popularity when:
1) the page itself is optimized for your keywords
2) the page has a high General Link Popularity (PageRank)
3) the page is from a site owned by someone else (you can't vote
for yourself)
From a search engine's point of view, implementing a Topic Specific
Link Popularity algorithm is a very tough task when the queries
need to be answered in less than a second.
All you need to know is this: the top ranked pages for competitive
keywords are the ones with the highest Topic Specific Link Popularity.
You need links from pages that have high PageRank, are optimized
for YOUR keywords and are owned by someone else.
How do you get these links?
1. Search for your keywords on Google and look at all pages that
rank for your keywords. Seek links from these pages.
2. Reciprocal Links. Swap links with sites that can give you a
link on a page optimized for your keywords. Look for pages with
high PageRank that have your keywords in their title and in their
incoming links. Reciprocal links work provided that they come from
optimized for your keywords (related) pages.
3. Buy links from some of the top ranked for your keywords pages.
4. DMOZ and Yahoo's directory usually have pages that are very
well ranked for your keywords. You absolutely must get links from
these pages. If you have a commercial site, don't hesitate and buy
a link from Yahoo immediately. It is well worth the $299.
5. Find out who links to the top ranked pages for your keywords.
Many of their links will not be topic specific, but many WILL be.
Try to get links from the related ones. A page is related when it
has your keywords in its title, text etc.
6. Form a link exchange ring with some of your competitors. That's
a brutally effective strategy. Basically, you link to your competitors
from your main optimized page (usually the home page) and they link
to you from their most optimized page! Such rings can dominate the
top positions and will be very difficult to outrank (it is difficult
to get that amount of topic specific links). The caveat here is
that the link exchange is on the main page and is not buried somewhere
deep.
One more very important tip.
Increase the relevancy of the page that links to you by using your
keywords in the anchor text and the description of your site! Yes,
having keywords in the links pointing to your page increase your
rankings not only by associating the keywords with your page but
also by increasing the relevancy of the page that gives you the
link! That's the reason SEOs think anchor text is the most important
factor. It is NOT. You can get a monstrous ranking boost from a
link that does not use your keywords in the anchor text provided
that the page has high PageRank and is optimized for your keywords
(an example would be a DMOZ listing).
What about getting unrelated links?
Let's say you buy a high PR unrelated link. The page that links
to you does not have your keywords in the title and text. The only
factor that makes the link relevant to your keywords is the anchor
text to your site and your description. You'll still get some benefit
but that's nothing compared to a link from an optimized for your
keywords page.
Your site can't get into Google's top 1000 results?
If your site lacks Topic Specific Links, it may get filtered out
from the results even if it has a good amount of PageRank (from
non-related or affiliated sites). You need some threshold amount
of Topic Specific Link Popularity to get into the top 1000 pages
for very competitive keywords.
Two Final Points
1. Only one link per site can give you a Topic Specific ranking
boost. Look for a link from the most optimized for your keywords
page.
2. If you find a page that ranks well for your keywords, go for
the link EVEN if that page has a lot of links on it.
To recap: the more optimized a page is for your keywords (measured
by PageRank and keywords found on-page and off-page) the more Topic
Specific Link Popularity Boost you will get from a link.
Topic Specific Link Popularity is and will be the key for top rankings.
Anchor text plays a major role but it is not THE factor. PageRank
is still very important especially the PageRank of the pages that
link to you.
About the Author
Hristo Hristov, owner of the Search
Engine Optimization Guide
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