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Posts Tagged ‘Topical Relevance’

SEO Tips for Link Flow Distribution

13 May

What is link flow distribution in a website and why should you care? Link flow is a metric implemented in SEO which assesses the volume of link equity (accumulated PageRank, citation factor and nodes of relevance) a page has and how it passes along that equity via outbound links to other internal or external pages.

seomyass-link-flow-distribution

Depending on the degree of inbound links from other pages within your website or from other web pages online provide characteristics that distinguish that page in search engines.

For example, a page can rank in search engines as a result of:

  • Aggregate On page Factors
  • Consolidated internal links
  • Off page inbound links (with specific anchor text)
  • Domain authority and some degree of on page correlation

For the sake of analogy, link flow is like the circulatory system for a website, if it is crimped, a page suffers from link attrition, if the arteries (links) to a page are plentiful; the page flourishes as a result of being nurtured from subordinate pages and takes on the role of a preferred landing page.

Essentially, there are two types of pages in a website (1) the pages that are intended to rank well and garner conversion from consumers and (2) supporting pages housing informative, relevant content created for the purpose of (a) increasing the semantic footprint of a website to increase topical relevance and (b) link to preferred landing pages.

This alone when coupled with another prominent element known as domain authority can catapult newly dubbed preferred landing pages into the spotlight in search engines. The source of the link becomes less important as the degree of trust and domain authority increase for the source of the page providing the link.

For example, amazon.com is one of the most authoritative domains online, hence an internal link to a page is often more powerful than an entire website competing against it. Internal pages within Amazon can rank from a few inbound links, whereas a competitor may require thousands of links to equate to the degree of link flow passes along from the internal links within Amazon alone.

This is why you cannot always count links and assume that volume is the only metric which applies weight within ranking algorithms. They must be assessed based on internal link flow, page authority, domain strength, trust and how old the page is and whether or not it is grandfathered (algorithmically) into the top 10 results.

Also, additional considerations are the number of outbound links on the page providing the link and the number of outbound links on the preferred landing page dramatically impact buoyancy in search engines.

This is considered a component of link-loss or rather hemorrhaging link-flow (like a bucket with 100 large holes in it). Under this analogy, it doesn’t matter how much water you put in the bucket, it all ends up spilling out (ineffectually)

For example, we apply a tiered system to websites and categorize important (pivotal) keywords that are part of the parent theme (semantic cluster) that define the purpose or (primary focus) of a website.

By elevating these primary themes into the navigation, breadcrumbs, footer links, secondary navigation from specific pages in the sidebar or server side includes – this way, you can sculpt the link flow distribution within the website to correspond to your primary ranking objectives.

In addition to creating prominent regions of relevance through implementing site architecture or design changes, simplifying elements such as minimizing outbound links per page and consolidating link flow on themed (similar) pages can also reinforce a stable search engine position (without having to resort to off page tactics to produce rankings).

 
 

Developing Link Weight using Internal and External Links

20 Apr

seomyass-link-weight

Understanding link weight, topical relevance and the power of optimizing internal and external links is a crucial component of SEO. Assessing how and why a site occupies multiple top 10 positions is not difficult to determine, if you know how and where to look.

In fact, you can essentially assess how and why a site is ranking for a number of phrases from (1) analysis of the site structure (2) the links, both internal and external (3) the age of the domain (4) the amount of topical information on the subject, and (5) the degree of authority the site has developed as a result of momentum and search engine trust.

  • Determine how many pages are indexed. A simple site:yoursitename.com search command will do.
  • Determine how many pages (out the total number of indexed pages) are indexed with a particular keyword using this command in Google, or Yahoo site:yoursitename.com keyword to research. If the site is 1000 pages and there are 800 that have the phrase present, then that is an 80% saturation for the phrase.
  • Determine if the pages are internally linked properly, from results from #2, how many of those pages are augmenting each other and if so, how and what keywords are linking them together. The top 10 results will suffice.
  • It stands to reason that in order to rank for a term, the ratio of the keyword can determine how relevant a result is returned. Which do you think search engines prefer, a site with 10 pages on a topic or a site with 50 pages on a topic?

 

By linking to your own pages from other pages in your site that have tremendous link weight (like a homepage or the homepage of a blog), then you clearly send a signal to search engines that that phrase or group of semantically related material is a predominant theme on your site.

This is enough to warrant further consideration from both human visitors and search engine spiders about the basis of the site theme.

Here are a few key metrics for consideration:

Internal linking – Is there a clearly defined champion, or is each page like a pawn getting sacked in Chess without an overall goal in the optimization strategy. Choose a champion with your internal links. Just like you can augment a pawn with another pawn and literally lock down the board in a game of chess using pawns in tandem. The same exists if you understand the importance of internal linking.

It is possible (aside from standard navigation) to use text links internally to augment unique attributes of each of the topical pages to serve a greater goal. If you wanted to wait for the correlations to evolve over time before the started to pass link weight, that is one thing, but why wait when you can aid evolution of the site organically through giving search engine spiders something they can sink their teeth into.

Remember in the first step, we assessed the number of pages, in step two you determined how many pages were indexed with a specific keyword using a simple search command. Now put that information to good use, after you have your results from number two, select the most appropriate landing page give it the endorsement from internal one way links.

Simply create links from each of the top 10 results to the selected landing page using keyword rich text that searchers would use to find that page. If you are looking for the most searched terms, then you could use Google Adwords keyword suggestion tool or traditional keyword research tools.

Link Weight

Now that your have selected the most relevant page, perform a link analysis and determine the quality and quantity of links required externally to create and upwardly mobile page in the SERPs (search engine result pages).

One quick way to assess this is to perform a search for the main keyword, look at the first search result (that is not a homepage) typically your will see homepage/keyword-rich-naming-convention.html, then look for two things the number of backlinks to that page externally (using yahoo) as well as how many links internally from other supporting pages.

You must note that, a page can rank highly as a result of internal or external links or a combination of both.

If the pages are light (2-3 links) build links to your links with link insurance (build links to the top 10 supporting pages to add velocity and authority to the new landing page) as well as add 5 fresh links to the landing page to encourage spider activity.

Deep Link / Page Link Ratio – Finding the ratios and percentages of saturation, link popularity and site structure can shed light on why that pages ranks the way it does.

Sometimes, all you need are a dozen links from external sites to break out from having a strong page on your own site and appear as a top ranking search result for multiple keywords on the topic.

So, in essence a page can rank highly as a result of the quality of links per page and how many related pages are themed and interlinked with solid anchor text.

So, the next time you are curios why a competitor ranks so well for a phrase, look at the number of pages they have indexed on the topic and the number of links pointing at those respective pages (the top 5 should suffice) to gain a better understanding of their optimization strategy.

There are one of two strategies they are more than likely utilizing. The first is, to have a site based solely around those keywords with a lower threshold for optimization due to a concise number of pages or your could create an authority site with various interrelated topics (that all support each other holistically).

Sites with under 30 pages are ideal for the first strategy, sites with hundreds or thousands of pages are often using the second and most prominent “content ranking strategy”, which by far is the most difficult to overcome.

The more relevant pages with links, the more authority a site garners. As those links age over time, they can create a challenge for a seasoned SEO to overcome, however there are other tactics one can utilize in such circumstances to overcome insurmountable odds.

It is not always this easy (using a quantitative approach), but until you drill deeper into their content, links and structure you never know, so it is a great starting point for initial research.

 
 
 

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