Archive for the ‘Multi-Sites SEO’ Category

How the Web’s Rich Get Richer

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

From Wikipedia’s own website: “The greater the number and quality of Wikipedia articles, the greater the number of people will link to us, and therefore the higher the rankings (and numbers of listings) we’ll have on Google. Hence, on Wikipedia ‘the rich (will) get richer’; or ‘if we build it, they will come,’ and in greater and greater numbers.”

In March 2000, Nupedia was launch around articles written by experts and reviewed under a formal process. In January 2001, a feeder project with the goal of making a publicly editable encyclopedia, and the supporting technology choice of using a wiki, gave birth to Wikipedia. By the end of 2001, with roughly 20,000 articles, Wikipedia gained serious ground with search engines and quickly overshadowed all but three websites in terms of SERP visibility.

Indeed, we already knew that collaborative writing can create vast amounts of information. However, Wikipedia’s organic search success is due to more than just content and built-in quality control processes.

1. Platform and automation:
Highly search engine-optimized pages, navigation, technical readability, and linking structure are all vital. Two hundred and fifty million internally optimized links help Wikipedia’s SEO efforts tremendously. Search optimized internal links across related and high-quality pages make a world of difference, but manual coding is not an option to execute deep links consistently over time.

You also need additional flexibility because your websites and lead generation mini-sites are not geared towards being know-it-all encyclopedias. However, there is good news here because you will augment your clout with search engines by segmenting your content across a number of domains (links spread across root domains is a sign of quality). You need a platform that scales your efforts across multiple domains.

Wikipedia uses MediaWiki. What do you use?
Yes, we know Wordpress is a great blogging platform, but, no, it is not an option to scale search engine visibility across vast number of website properties.

2. Quality is key. Content should at least equal that of sites you wish to beat in SERPs. But that’s the only point I will include on that list that requires on-going thinking from your part in the absence of hundreds of thousands of Wikipedians. Interns or offshore writers might be good sources to cost-effectively meet the quality threshold.

3. Volume matters. Thirteen million articles filled with original and relevant content are bound to give you a good level of visibility: Wikipedia counts 165 million inbound links.

But what is less known is that pages start with a small nominal value in terms of page rank. As a result, the more pages you’ve got, the more page rank you create for yourself. And that’s page rank you can pass around throughout your own network of pages and websites. In short, you can keep mostly to yourself. That’s where the next point comes in.

4. Manage link equity. Wikipedia works as a vortex that sucks out inbound link equity (a.k.a. Google Juice) from outside the network (see opening statement) and never sends it back thanks to the systemic implementation of the infamous rel=”nofollow” tag. Follow links within your corpus of websites; follow contextual outbound links to authoritative websites, and use ‘no follow’ tag for others. You can automate most of this too.

Pick a technical framework built to scale and manage exceptions to the rules only. Then write any amount of quality content you can muster, and augment volume over time. For this, obviously I would not recommend any else than SEO Samba as the first multi-site SEO execution platform or SEO Software as a Service. Success breeds more success.

Interview with Webmaster Radio

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Howdy folks, another historic radiophonic moment in history of your truly talking about the SEO Samba organic search management platform. It probably isn’t quite on par with Orson Welles’ war of the worlds broadcast, and the Hindenburg disaster live news broadcast, but it is a start anyway ;-)

SEO Samba SEO Automation Platform

Michel Leconte, the CEO of the first Organic Search Management Platform SEO Samba, tells us about developing search engine marketing strategies.



Satellite SEO websites

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Marketing satellite SEO websites is a valuable SEO tactic that can be used in a number of situations. It can allow for intensive positioning of a select group of competitive keyword phrases that would be impossible to effectively position within the main site. It can also overcome many of the problems presented by sites that use extensive Flash or database-driven content, and give more control over indexation and rankings.

The satellite websites or “mini-site” concept, therefore, is gaining ground as effective sales channels. But it faces three major problems in order to drive a critical number of search engine referrals. Specifically, satellite websites lack content, keywords and linkage. Coincidentally, these are three of the most wanted items on search engines’ checklists. But for those who know the ropes, building a universe of satellite websites can result in powerful brand vehicles and marketing tools.

Content is the key
No matter how cutting edge and well rounded your mini-site is, if you don’t offer original, up-to-date content, visitors will vanish. Your traffic will stay low and your rankings will follow suit. But even by simply broadcasting a small part of your staff’s combined knowledge you will provide useful information and gain opportunities to disseminate selected keywords within your content, reinforcing your chances of top ranking. Copywriting services, information swapping, content aggregation and email marketing will complement your content offering and provide you with a great platform for your industry, market, services or products.

Keyword concentration
Mini-sites, much more specific in scope, should be entirely built around a few efficient and related keywords, articulating a consistent theme throughout its few pages. Industry-oriented or informational sites are ideal candidates, as they can branch out to products or services presented on your main website. The main difference with larger sites is that mini-sites address a much more targeted niche. But they require going through the same optimization process as bigger sites, only on a much smaller scale, at least initially.

Link popularity
As you may know by now, a decisive factor in search engine positioning is the number of links pointing to you. For out-of-the-box satellite sites, this can be accomplished by first referencing the site in directories using fee-based submissions. However, the ideal situation is to have search engines find you, not the other way around. A link from a well-established site, even in an unrelated business, will do the trick for initial indexation.

Once your homepage makes it into the index – Google is fastest at this game – other pages will follow suit. In turn, optimized pages will generate top listings and traffic referrals. As a result, you will get many prominent links coming from well-known sites. Of course, as you build multiple properties, all of them will cross-link using appropriate keywords. Each page referenced in a search engine is an additional link. After a few months your site will be ranked as reasonably popular. In turn, it will be used as a launching pad for new networked sites and help search engines understand what niche they’re catering to.

Creating theme-based satellites or mini-sites can add great value to your existing presence by offering specific content to a more targeted audience. It is a cost-effective way to address precise market segments, enhancing both customer relationships and brand awareness while generating qualified sales referrals. It is also an excellent way of building business continuity into your online operations and more control over your search engine traffic.

In short, to take control of your SEO universe on any kind of scale, tools are needed to keep content fresh and cross-links updated while avoiding costly pitfalls such as same server or C-class hosting and many others. The more sites you have, the more critical the system is.

Obviously, here I’d recommend using SEO Samba for this. SEO Samba is an excellent vehicle to develop and manage online properties and satellites by making it very efficient to maintain a large number of optimized sites over time.