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My main competitor (who bought the name widgetshoppe.com, unbenownst to me) is PR 5 and has the #1 spot in most search rankings for Widget Shoppe, despite having a different website URL (apparently, he wants to be known as Widget Shoppe in addition to his different URL, which is, I'm told, why he procured the name). This site is well represented with ads on widget enthusiast sites.
My question is, since "the" is often overlooked or discarded in search queries (especially Google), would it be better to link to my sites using the text "The Widget Shoppe" or just plain "Widget Shoppe"? The 'the' is a part of the site name (and a differentiator), but if it would be advantageous to drop it, I would certainly do it. Any suggestions?
I suspect the race between you and your competitor is going to be decided by factors having more to do with number of links and quality of SEO in general, not by this one word in the link.
Beyond that, your prime goal, really, should not be just to rank on your company name... that's a no brainer. It's the other phrases, and other anchor text, that you should be focusing on.
As for when to include the "The," it seems to me that "The Widget Shoppe" functions better as a noun, and "Widget Shoppe" functions better as an adjective... ie, "shop at The Widget Shoppe for a full choice of Widget Shoppe merchandise."
Check out the current discussion of Google's treatment of stopwords at...
Google Says It Ignores Common Words, But...
... if so, why do the SERPs differ?
[webmasterworld.com...]