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It’s Good to be SEO

Blog about SEO for Webmasters

  • Affiliates (1)
  • Browsers (1)
  • Directories (3)
  • domains (6)
  • Fun (3)
  • Google (12)
  • JavaScript (1)
  • Keywords (2)
  • MSN (3)
  • Programming (7)
  • Search Engines (8)
  • seo (13)
  • submit (5)
  • traffic (7)
  • webmasters (5)
  • 2 What we should take care of when submitting to directories?

    There are so many directories on the net where you can submit for free or for a price. You probably have seen some advertisements of such dirs like “Top 100 (insert topic here) sites” or “Free submit directory” or any other fancy name. There are directories oriented only to one or a couple of topics. They are called Niche Directories. The niche dirs may help you by adding more value to the link that points to your site from them. This happens because the search engines respect links to your site from sites that are on the same or similar topic. For example if you have a site for dogs you should submit to directories that collect sites only for dogs or for animals. On the contrary if you submit your dogs site to a directory for jewelry you will not have the good vote from that site and the search engines may rank you for jewelry instead for dog oriented keywords. Click to read more …


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    1 Are JavaScript links a duplicate content?

    As you may know Google may or may not(yet) crawl javascript code and respectfully get more links from/to the site from such code.

    Many good SEOs like the Hijax’s site or the Google Webmaster Blog suggests to have html links as well as javascript built links so the spider can crawl the “old fashioned” html “hard” links with no problems and still people to have javascript code on the site such as Ajax and other dynamic content.

    But this still alerts me with the question: “What will happen when Google and the other search engines start to crawl javascript code and find the same links as the html ones that point to the same pages but from (if may say it that way) different sources?” .

    At this moment Google has its algorithms to get the most appropriate page from duplicating links with session id in them or links with random placed variables like: ?var=something&var2=something2 <–> ?var2=something2&var=something.

    What about JavaScript?


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