Quote:
Originally Posted by NaughtyObserver
I have a niche driven wordpress multisite blog that I cover a lot of different 'naughtiest of the web' niche content all through out the network. I received a spam post on one of my blogs:
Here is what I draw from this: - you do not use all three H tags in your post - All my post titles are <h1>. I do not feel the need usually to use <h2> or <h3> all the time. Is this bad?
- not using bold or italics properly - What is the proper way? Is this still relevant? Do I need to bold the keywords in my blog posts? Strategic bolding (like just one instance?)
- keyword must appear in the title and url - If I'm writing about two lesbians with dildos and a fucking machine who also screw anally - how do I title my post? using all? [lesbian] [dildo] [fucking machine] [anal] Or do I just try and place one in the interest of not being 'spammy'? I use a permalinks that makes the post title the url, so that shouldn't be a problem. My posts usually take on a more general descriptive stance rather then keyword stuffing.
- keyword density of 3-5% in your article with relevant LSI (Latent Semantic Indexing) - All of this just annoys me so I just try to write blog posts naturally as if I were speaking rather then try to strategically pound keywords. I don't even know what having relevant LSI even means.
Thanks for any information you an provide.
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I think your on the right track avoid listening to this advice, I rarely use all the H tags on my blog posts, the search engines are good at determining what a page/article is about so yes its good if you can have the keyword in the title but if you don't its not a killer. Keyword density is just a joke just write it naturally include some of your keywords but definitely don't follow this 3-5% formula.
What Google and other major search engines are looking for are websites that aren't trying to be manipulative and sites that are adding value to its visitors. If you go around trying to be too exact you could get burned, that's why Google has come out with over optimization penalties and things of that nature because they want webmasters to take a more natural approach, still follow the basic rules.
I personally have a lot of examples of websites where I just built up a lot of quality pages and I'm ranked on the home page even with very little link building, it's just that I picked the right keywords and posted the best content out of all the competition on the first 2 pages.