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Exact Match Domains Still Work Perfectly In 2011

This year has been one of the craziest ever seen in the world of IM, the whole industry has seen the game turned on it’s head, search engine optimization is no longer a skill – it is increasingly becoming a science. It almost feels as if anybody who owns a website or anybody offering SEO services has had to extend their brain capacity by 20% this year in order to cope with the fast growing list of new things that need to be remembered.

Many people without a website, or indeed anybody who was lucky enough to be  a ‘net’ gainer from Panda, were quick to praise Google for their ‘war against content farms’, or for winning a ‘battle against spammy content’, anybody with their ear constantly on the ground knew that a lot of good content was punished (and still is being punished) and in many cases outranked by scraped or even spun content. One webmaster that I know set to work deleting 5000 pages of content that he considered to be lower quality or no longer relevant, equivalent to half of his site, only to be punished in the process – probably as a result of a loss of some of his oldest and most mature backlinks.  … Continue Reading

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Wordpess Permalink Structures Tackled

If there is one thing that I hate about SEO, other than that SEO needs to exist, it is that pretty much no question related to on-page aspects has a definitive answer. Search engine optimizers are nothing more than a bunch of guys who struck it lucky a few times with their own properties and then proclaimed themselves as experts, nothing other than their own answer can be correct, and any clients previous SEO contractor is automatically dismissed as clueless or out of touch. The truth is that there isn’t ever really a right or wrong answer to many questions, and if something does become too obvious it isn’t long until Google changes the game again by tweaking some numbers in their algorithm. … Continue Reading

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An Interview with Oliver Whitham of ThisIsFreelance.com

In the aftermath of Google Panda there were plenty of online marketers, freelance writers, and probably unscrupulous spammers, looking for somewhere new to publish online. With major multi-user sites losing tonnes of authority and incomes being obliterated, there seemed to be a mad flurry of activity from many who rushed out to buy their own domains, whilst others sat around twiddling their thumbs waiting for things to get better. A popular destination in the wake of Panda seemed to be a new wave of smaller, typically WordPress based, indie sites.

Many of these sites were brand new and set up as a reaction to market change, primarily by people hoping to benefit from the shoals of disillusioned contributors looking for somewhere new to write their sales pages or let of steam. The concept of small one-man WordPress based revenue sharing sites wasn’t in any way new however, in fact one of my very close contacts was busy building and launching one almost a year before Panda struck. That contact is Oliver Whitham, an Internet Marketing consultant, who added the invitation only article directory ThisIsFreelance.com to his stable of web properties at some stage in 2010. … Continue Reading

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Google Panda Recovery: Has Paul Edmondson of Hubpages Kung-Fu’d The Panda?

It has been over six months since Google shattered the hopes and dreams of webmasters everywhere when they pushed out their biggest algorithm change for years. The Panda update saw thousands of victims going public with desperate pleas for help and advice, some sites reporting a complete loss of Google traffic, had opportunist search engine optimizers touting for trade on message boards web wide, and had reputable search engine optimizers admitting that they had no idea how to help their clients recover.

Three months after Panda 2.0, which was released on February 23rd, I searched high and low for examples of websites which had made a full recovery from the set back. Things looked gloomy at the time, my search was fruitless. There were a few medium to large sized businesses reporting a partial recovery, but these provided little by way of conclusive evidence and those partial gains could well have been attributed to on-page factors which were holding those websites back even pre-panda. … Continue Reading