Forum Moderators: open
If you consider it spamming, how would you optimize for an industry that is very competitive -- insurance. I've already done the standard -- Keywords in the Title tag, meta tag description, meta tag keywords, relevant content, etc. We've already received good placement with some keywords, however with others we have not. What other tips can you suggest?
We're really not concerned with optimum placement with specific insurance-related keywords in English--that's just too competitive and not necesarilly our target market. We are targeting Latin America (spanish and portuguese languages), and would obviously want high placement in the same SE's that are popular in the US, but just in Spanish.
Sorry for the long-winded post...it's just hard to explain.
(edited by: agerhart at 3:44 pm (gmt) on Aug. 22, 2001
If you make sure that they look like the rest of the site, are linked to the rest of the site, and are not stuffed with keywords or dupes of other portions of the site, then you should be clear of being called spam.
I think the current trend is away from the "tucked away" doorway pages of old, where the doorway served no purpose than to give one a place to stuff their keywords, and the only link was an "Enter Here" link.
My employer's site features "topic index pages" linked through prominent buttons in the top navigation menu... these pages not only give a keyword-rich introduction to each topic, they link to all pages on the site relevant to that topic. They were specifically designed to do double duty as "doorway/entry" pages, and to serve as navigation aids for site visitors...
I still think these discussions have much to offer in the doorway page conversation arena.
Define Doorway Page [webmasterworld.com]
The ideal (non-cloaked) doorway... [webmasterworld.com]
Doorway pages - still in use? [webmasterworld.com]
(edited by: paynt at 5:39 pm (gmt) on Aug. 22, 2001