Common SEO Questions Answered!Since Google’s Penguin update came out, the Web has been flooded with tons of Penguin survival strategies, magic Penguin-killing bullets, etc. What one often hears these days is “diversify your anchor texts,” “remóve crappy links,” “create unique content,” and so on and so forth.

However, none of these strategies seem cable of doing the simple job of bringing one’s site back to where it was before Penguin.

How to Learn What Google Likes

As Google said, Penguin is about punishing those optimizers who use “illegal” SEO techniques such as sneaky redirects, keyword stuffing, link spam, copying somebody’s content (duplicate content), and others.

However, the questions people ask nowadays are:

* If I used 15 keywords per page, would that be keyword stuffing?
* Which of my links are in violation?
* I’m an affiliate. Would using the merchant’s description on a partnér site create duplicate content?
* etc.

Is there a satisfying answer for these questions? There is, and this answer is “competition watch,” the point of which is to scrutinize top 10 websites rankings for your target keywords in the post-Penguin SERPs.

How Many Keywords are Too Many?

Let’s say your main keyword is “snake leather shoes.” Now, how many times can you safely repeat this keyword on your site without being considered a keyword-stuffer? It’s not hard to figure out!

See who ranks in the top 10 for that word and carefully analyze the following aspects of their site:

* The number of keywords in page titles;
* The number of keywords in site copy (in general);
* The number of keywords in anchor texts.

The number of keywords on a page as related to the overall amount of text is often referred to as “keyword density.” Analyzing competition helps you understand what keyword density is worth high rankings in Google’s opinion.

Shaping a Winning Duplicate Content Strategy

Let’s say you have an e-commerce store – the type of website that potentially has duplicate content. There are different views on how to deal with internal dupe content. Some people recommend using 301 redirects, some folks tell you to employ canonical tags, while some suggest closing it off with a robots.txt file.

So, what’s the best practice in your particular case? To find out, see who ranks in the top 10 for your keyword and see how they use robots.txt instructions, canonical tags and 301 redirects on their site. In that respect, on-page optimization software can help.

Then, if you see that some pages of a competing site are restricted from indexing, check whether there are duplicates of those pages on the site. If there are, employ a similar strategy to avoid duplicates on YOUR site.

The same goes for 301 redirects. See what pages are redirected to what pages (if applicable) and check whether the redirects are used to deal with duplicate content.

Sometimes, optimizers use canonical tags to avoid canonicalization confusion. A solid on-page SEO software piece would report canonical tags on a site as well.

How to Steal Your Competitor’s Secret Link Strategy

And now, let’s talk about the creme de la creme of Google’s ranking algorithm – backlinks.

In general, the more backlinks a site has and the higher-PR they have and the higher the site in question will rank on Google. However, not all links are well-trusted by Google.

For example, links from link farms and blog networks (Google-savvier link farms), paid links and other types of “illegal” links have been the focus of Google’s war on link spam for a long time.

But what if Google makes a mistake and treats your legitimately earned links as link spam? How does one know exactly what links are trusted by Google and which ones are frowned upon?

The way out is to see what link building strategies your top-ranking competitors use and replicate those strategies!

To do the job, one would need a backlink checker. Some folks argue that backlinks to a site can be viewed in one’s Google Webmaster account, however, Google Webmaster Tools will only show you the backlinks pointing to your site, but will not disclose those of the competitors.

To analyze competitors’ backlinks, SEO’s have long used Yahoo! Site Explorer, which ceased to exist on November 2011. However, there are alternatives to Y!SE available to webmasters.

So, get armed with a good backlink checker and X-ray competing websites! Pay attention to the sources their backlinks come from.

Ask yourself:

* Are they using blog/forum commenting as their link strategy?
* Are they doing guest blogging?
* Are they doing link bait?
* Are they getting links mainly from high-PR sites or from a whole assortment of sources?

Asking these questions when analyzing competitors’ backlinks will give you a good comprehensive idea of what link building strategy is likely to get your site to the top.

Anchor Texts – The New Big Thing

Anchor texts have always been important for SEO, in a sense that having your prime keyword in an anchor text of a link going from a reputable source to your site could work miracles on your site’s rankings.

However, as Google is now particularly suspicious of too-good-to-be-true anchor texts (not to mention having lots of identical anchor texts), a lot of SEO’s now believe that too many “keyword” anchor text can hurt your site, especially if those anchor texts are identical.

Thus, anchor texts are big again, but in a different way – one has to be careful not to be too zealous with them. Some folks recommend having:

– 15% of “keyword” anchor texts,
– 30% of “secondary keyword” anchors,
– 25% of “click here” anchor texts,
– and 30% of URL anchor texts.

However, this estimate may not be true for every niche and the only way to create a winning anchor text strategy is… again, to look into competing sites.

So, when doing backlink analysis, pay attention to the anchors your competitors use. Most backlink checkers would quickly retrieve and make a list of competitor backlinks, which makes them easy to analyze.

How Does One Stay on Top of Things?

Nowadays, the search engines are as unpredictable as ever. This means that the set of your competitors may change overnight, which would be indicative of certain ranking algorithm tweaks.

So, in order to notice those changes early on, you should have a competition monitoring plan, which can help you adapt to changing search engine conditions at any time.

A lot of rank tracking apps offer live rankings monitoring and let you keep track of as many as 10 competitors at once. When looking for an SEO tool like that, check if it lets you track competitor rankings side-by-side with your site for the same keywords you have.

Conclusion

Nowadays the SERPs have become very unstable. The only way you can get a working SEO strategy is by analyzing the competition. Hence, competition watch is the new SEO. Of course, this does not mean that SEO best practices no longer apply, quite the contrary. What this means is that one should now hone their SEO tactics by learning the exact proportions in which the ingredients in their SEO recipe should come.

By Alesya Krush (c) 2012