Articles
> SEO Duplicate Web Content Penalty Myth Exploded
SEO Duplicate Web Content Penalty Myth Exploded
- by Joel Walsh
The "duplicate content penalty" myth is one of the biggest
obstacles I face in getting web professionals to embrace reprint
content. The myth is that search engines will penalize a site
if much of its content is also on other websites.
Clarification: there is a real duplicate content penalty
for content that is duplicated with minor or no variation
across the pages of a single site. There is also a "mirror"
penalty for a site that is more or less substantially duplicating
another single site. What I'm talking about here is the reprint
of pages of content individually, rather than in a mass, on
multiple sites.
Another clarification: "penalty" is a loaded concept in SEO.
"Penalty" means that search engines will punish a website
for violations of the engine's terms of service. The punishment
can mean making it less likely that the site will appear in
search results. Punishment can also mean removal from the
search engine's index of web pages ("de-indexing" or "delisting").
How have I exploded the "duplicate content penalty" myth?
- PageRank. Many thousands of high-PageRank sites reprint
content and provide content for reprint. The most obvious
case is the news wires such as Reuters (PR 8) and the Associated
Press (PR 9) that reprint to sites such as www.nytimes.com
(PR 10).
- The proliferation of content reprint sites. There are
now hundreds of websites devoted to reprint content because
it's a cheap, easy magnet for web traffic, especially search
engine traffic.
- Experience. I've seen significant search engine traffic
both from distributing content to be reprinted and from
reprinting content on the site.
How I Doubled Search Engine Traffic with Reprint Content
When I first started distributing content for my main site,
I was stunned by the highly targeted traffic I got from visitors
clicking on the link at the end of the article. Search engine
traffic also slowly increased both from the links and from
having content on the site.
But I was even more stunned with the search engine traffic
I got when I started putting reprint articles on the site
in September. I had written quite a number of reprint articles
for clients and accumulated a few webmaster "fans" who looked
out for my articles to reprint them. I wanted to make it easier
for them to find all the reprint articles I had written.
I didn't want to draw too much attention to these articles,
which had nothing to do with the main subject of the site,
web content. So I secluded the articles in one section of
the site.
The articles got a surprising amount of search engine traffic.
The traffic was overwhelmingly from Google, and for long multiple-word
search strings that just happened to be in the article word
for word.
Why was I surprised with all the search engine traffic?
-
The articles had so little link popularity. The link
popularity to the articles came primarily from a single
link to the "reprint content" page from the homepage,
which linked to category pages, which linked to the articles
themselves-three clicks from the homepage. The sitemap
was enormous, well over 100 links, so its PageRank contribution
was minimal. Since these articles were on the site such
a short time I strongly doubt they got any links from
other sites.
-
The articles had so much competition. These articles
had been reprinted far more widely than the average reprint
article, which is lucky if it makes it into a few dedicated
reprint sites. As part of my service I had done most of
the legwork of reprinting my clients' articles for them.
In fact, I guarantee at least 100 reprints on Google-indexed
web pages either for each article or group of articles.
So that's up to 100 web pages, sometimes more, that were
competing with my web page to appear in search engine
results for the search string.
Why Do Reprint Articles Get Search Engine Traffic?
You would think Google would just pick one web page with
the article as the authoritative edition and send all the
traffic to it.
But that's not how Google works. All the search engines look
at factors beyond just the content on the web page. They look
at links. Google, at least, claims to look at 100 factors
total. Many of these must relate to the content on the page,
but not all of them.
The whole experience has given me great insight into what
factors Google uses in addition to what we would consider
the page itself, and the relative importance of each.
-
Web page titles (the one in the html title tag) are extremely
important as tie-breakers between two otherwise equally
matched pages. Most reprinters waste the html title, using
the article title as the web page title. Set yourself
apart by creating unique five-to-ten-word web page titles
that include target keywords.
-
Content tweaks. You can also introduce the article with
a unique, keyword-laden editor's note, and finish the
article off with some keyword-laced comments.
-
Intra-site link popularity and anchor text (that is,
for links to the article page from other web pages on
the site) are also important. If you can't link to the
page from the homepage, keep it as close to the homepage
as possible and weed out extraneous links (try putting
all your site policies on a single page).
Reprint articles, like the search engine traffic they bring,
cost nothing. Don't look a gift horse in the mouth. Forget
the "duplicate content penalty." Get in on content reprints
and share the search engine wealth.
About the author: Joel Walsh (http://www.joelwalsh.com)
owns UpMarket Content which has Joel's articles available
for reprint, and also lets you order the complete website
promotion content package of distribution and creation of
web content: http://www.UpMarketContent.com
Request
a Free Web Design Consultation Today
Copyright © 2001 - 2008 Able Webs, Burnaby,
B.C. All rights reserved. Contact us at
andrea@ablewebs.com.
Burnaby|Vancouver Web Site Design Company |