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Normally needs a bit of to-ing and fro-ing before the webmaster understands what I want, but most are willing to help. It's amazing how few of them understand the need for anchor text (or even what it is), and how many out there want to link me with graphics/banners.
It amazes me that the site continues to rank so highly update after update all thanks to outdated backward links.
I've optimized many sites that don't have keywords in the domain and I have never run into any problems getting them to rank well. I much prefer brandable domain names to hyphenated keyword domains.
Just this update had a new client that was unlikely to get indexed if enhancing the site first... therefore opted to link exchange increasing the chance of at least some direct influence to SERP's.
Ending up exchanging links with 14 (four of which got indexed).
The domain name was the same as the company - say widgetsRUS.com, the reciprocal link and short description went something like this...
WidgetsRUS.com is a provider of quality <a href="WidgetsRUS.com" title="widget rings">widget rings</a>.
Resulting affect -- Went from nowhere to Ranked #1 on the term.
Assuming website owners/webmasters will not provide precisely what you request as the link anchor & possibly a short description doesn't make it so.
When asked "why" this way (and most do) - I tell them precisely why, and offer the exact same thing... also mentioning the value of the tip has many residuals for their company.
They'd be fools not to.
if by some miracle you can get other sites that link to you use whatever anchor text that you want them to. That doesn't describe the real world for most webmasters.
My domain name consists of the initials of our company name and the state that we're located in, for example www.abcdtexas.com
Almost every one of the unsolicited links pointing to this site uses the page title for the anchor text instead of the domain name. When I link to a site that I feel is of interest to my visitors I view the source code and get the title and description if it is available. If not I use the page title and write a description relevant to the content found on the site.
For any of the links that I've requested, I've never had a site not use the anchor text and description that I suggested.
We rank ahead of the sites with the keywords in the domain name for our relevant search terms. I realize that these terms may not be the most competitive, ranging from 100k to 3.6m results, so I removed the blinders and looked at the results for other sites besides my own. And I'm seeing what most others have also stated, keywords in the domain name don't help much.
Google gives more weight to off page factors as you have less control over them and it's supposed to be more difficult to manipulate.
It's amazing how few of them understand the need for anchor text (or even what it is), and how many out there want to link me with graphics/banners.
I have always assumed (quite possibly incorrectly), that alt tags in graphics would have almost the same effect as anchor text. In this scenario, if you are getting links from people as graphics - it would LOOK much better to have a brandable domain and then simply get your keywords off the alt tags.. Particularly if you the code to the webmaster for linking, it would be a far better scenario than one of those ugly keyword-keyword domains..
In my personal preference, I actually am LESS likely to visit a site with a keyword-keyword.com domain, because I struggle giving them credibility as a business - I am certainly MUCH less likely to buy anything from their site! It's not worth it to me, even though I do see the benefits for SEO purposes. I think you are more likely to build a return visitor base with a catchy name any day!
I don't think I would have found my way back here as often if there was a slash in webmasterworld.com - that's why I keep forgetting how to get to graphic-forums.com, and end up going here instead :)
keyword1.mysite.com
and start building that as my home page, or significant landing page. I could do this with all my target keywords and then as long as I have unique content on these pages, and inbound links, should do well.
Any experience with secondary domain names and whether they work well.
I do think that a keyword relevant company name can help with rankings due to natural linking containing the company name, but does a name like Adobe's hurt their ranking because Google thinks they are more about housing than software?
I'd bet that these companies are hurt by the unrelated anchor text. A made up name might be ok since you are not related to something else, but when the name relates to something else it could have a negative effect across the board. What do you think?
Most of sites, which links to me without my "influence" just place the link <a href="domainname.com">domainname.com</a> ... they just don't use the anchor text. So to avoid this "problem" I use domainname = keyword, where possible ;)
Is it measureable, well yes... when used in a link it add weight towards the linking page. Remembering that the anchor itself determines the topic on linking pages (relevancy) but weight of the link is also determined by surrounding information in close proximity to the anchor -- you can't get much closer than the tool tip.
Use is also recommended by W3C, and should be used on all elements not just links: tables, row & cells (with defined dimensions --height, width), objects, image maps, etc. So by using it in "on-page content" you are adding weight evenly throughout the page.
Effectively this allows you develop highly effective text copy without needing to keyword, keyword, keyword it all over the page - so you develop text for the user not for the spider.
Also key to note: attributes parameters inside an element need to be quoted - I've noticed that many pages just use <a href=something.html title=link anchor text>link anchor text</a>
Without quotes is not proper code and also means that only the first word in the title attribute is parsed.
Does anyone know if anchor text needs to have the exact same words in it or is it enough if just the search word is in both the title and the backlink anchor text? Pretty much everyone has linked me as 'America's Widgeting History'. So what I a saying is will I be hurting myself taking out 'America's'.
Anne
I also don't agree with discussion on importants of the keyword as the 1st word.
What fact-finding mission, experimentation, and extentive research developed this hypothesis? Or are you just taking a guess at it hoping your're right?
The most important anything, word in meta title, word in page title, anchor text on page, title attribute and image image alt always drives "on-page" relevancy.
Research and observation proves this! :)
Ted