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Dilemma about SEO cannibalization
I am having a dilemma here. The thing is that on the site I am working on, every page is targeting different keywords and that's precisely defined, so I guess it is not SEO cannibalization by definition.
But, some of the keywords are very similar so I am not sure if is that holding me down in SERPS. When I check rankings, it happens that two of the pages from the same site are in SERPS for one keyword (even if one of the pages was never meant to target that keyword). To clarify, it is something like this (not the exact keywords I am targeting): MILF cams MILF webcams MILF sex cams MILF live cams MILF live webcams At this point, I am unsure if is this a confusing search engine. |
Hey man, how are things? Maybe on the next update?
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I am just investigating the current situation so this is one of the issues while I am analyzing everything |
Dropped in SERPs that you need to work again?
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Just focus on creating quality content pages that will naturally attract links. |
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G can figure out from it's own library of popular search phrases which ones may apply to your pages. Exact match is good, but overrated. |
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Not the same as getting a BL from an authoritative site, but they add up. |
I always find it odd when folks say to just make a good site and don't worry about SEO. I truly wish it worked that way. It is probably better to make a good site than to do really bad SEO, but I think it is painfully accurate that SEO makes a crucial difference.
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I find if you have a high-quality site, the backlinks come naturally, I always get backlinks from people mentioning my website in their articles
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In the old days of keyword stuffing, explicit term reinforcement, and obsessive linking topologies - which actually worked - search engines did not have the high (AI) level of content/structure analysis they do now. A "good site" design today presumes:
In the non-adult world, getting collegial backlinks and authentic meaningful (substantive original text with reasonable linking), is much easier than in adult. That's not to say that a porn site won't promise, or even appear, to provide a decent backlink, but trust levels in this world, on a high volume level, are disappointing. There are some really good players in this biz, but they are a rarity. Site scrapers and brute forcers have choked out a significant portion of daily web traffic. All that to say, rather than "SEO", "SEC" (search engine compatibility) which embodies basic SEO, is required for any page intended to be practically seen by others through various searches. :2 cents: |
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