- •Google Secrets
- •PART I – Getting Started
- •So What Is a Ranking?
- •When Google Comes Visiting
- •Deep Crawl and the Google Dance
- •Fresh Crawl
- •How Google Ranks Websites
- •Keyword Factors and Page Relevance
- •Link Factors (PageRank) and Page Importance
- •Top 5 Things Google Looks For
- •Chapter 3 - Determining Your Best Keywords
- •So What Exactly Are Keywords?
- •Using WordTracker
- •Using WordTracker step-by-step
- •What is your Primary Keyword Phrase?
- •What are your Secondary Keyword Phrases?
- •Putting it All Together
- •PART II - Optimizing Your Website
- •Chapter 4 - Structuring your Site Correctly
- •Structure by Theme and Topic
- •Create Lots of Short Pages
- •Don’t Nest Your Pages
- •Don’t Bloat Your Pages With Code
- •Keywords in Your Domain Name
- •Chapter 5 - Optimizing Your Web Pages
- •Keyword Factors Used in the Algorithm
- •Keyword Proximity
- •Keyword Placement
- •Keyword Prominence
- •Keyword Density
- •Keyword Format
- •The Importance of the <TITLE>
- •Best Practices for Creating Titles
- •How and Where to Use Keywords
- •Use Keywords in the Following Places
- •Proper Link Structure
- •What Google Ignores
- •Chapter 6 – Linking Your Pages Correctly
- •Structuring Your Internal Links
- •Hierarchical linking
- •Mesh linking
- •Best Practices for Internal Linking
- •Chapter 7 – More Advanced Techniques
- •Multiple Sites – Is it Worth It?
- •Domain Pointing and Subdomains
- •PART III - Exchanging Links Effectively
- •Chapter 8 – The Importance of Links
- •Link Factors Used in the Algorithm
- •Introducing PageRank
- •So What is Link Quality?
- •Chapter 9 - All About PageRank
- •PageRank vs. Search Result Ranking
- •Toolbar PageRank vs. Actual PageRank
- •Increasing PageRank
- •The PageRank Equation
- •Chapter 10 - Submitting Your Site to Directories
- •About the Google Directory
- •Submitting Your Site to the OPD
- •Submitting Your Site to Yahoo
- •Submitting Your Site to Business.com
- •Other Search Submissions
- •Chapter 11 – Getting Ready for Linking
- •Creating “Link to Us” Code
- •Maintaining a “Related Links” Page
- •Dealing with Non-Reciprocal Links
- •Chapter 12 – Which Links to Focus On
- •Best Practices and Tips
- •Link Farms and FFA Sites – Just Say No
- •Chapter 13 - Managing a Reciprocal Link Campaign
- •About OptiLink
- •About Arelis
- •Checklist for Setting Up a Link Campaign
- •A Link Exchange Email Template
- •PART IV - Putting It All Together
- •Chapter 14 - Monitoring and Measuring
- •Monitoring Your Site Traffic
- •Using a Log-file Analyzer
- •Using a Real-time Tracking Service
- •What to Monitor?
- •Monitoring Your Ranking
- •Monitoring Your PageRank
- •Checking Pages Indexed
- •Checking Link Count
- •Measuring Sales Conversion and ROI
- •Appendix A - Web Site Design Do’s and Don’ts
- •Appendix B - Linking Do’s and Don’ts
- •Appendix C - Additional Resources
- •Online Subscription Newsletters
- •Web Forums & Bulletin Boards
- •Web Content Sites
- •Online Tool Sites
- •Software Sites
- •Professional Organizations:
- •Books
- •Professional Services:
- •Appendix F – About Google AdWords™
Google Secrets – How to Get a Top 10 Ranking… |
page 42 of 112 |
Structuring Your Internal Links
There are two main types of internal linking methods – hierarchical and mesh.
Hierarchical linking
Hierarchical linking is used where one or more pages on your site (such as the home page) are considered more important than other pages. Important pages are linked to from all other pages in the site, but not all pages cross-link between each other. This concentrates PageRank on your most important pages.
Most sites should use a hierarchical linking structure, whereby the home page and the most important product, service, or content pages are linked to more often than other pages are. In this way, you can increase the chance that your most important page is ranked the highest on Google for your most important keyword phrase. The following figure illustrates this concept.
PR=6 Home
page
link link
PR=5 Product |
PR=5 Product 1 |
About Us |
main page |
page |
PR=4 page |
link |
link |
link |
link |
link |
|
Hierarchical linking – only important page(s) get links from every other page
The home page typically has the highest PR value as this is the page most often linked to, both externally and internally. This may not be ideal if your home page is nothing but a splash page or contains little content. In this case, you should redesign your home page to include more content and make it more relevant to Google (and to your visitors). If this is not possible, you should re-link internally to your most important keyword-relevant content page(s).
www.google-secrets.com |
Copyright 2003-2004 Dan Sisson. |
|
All rights reserved. |
Google Secrets – How to Get a Top 10 Ranking… |
page 43 of 112 |
Note that in the preceding figure that the About Us page is only linked to from a single page. This is because the About Us page is not nearly as important (as far as relevant content related to theme, topic and keywords) as the other pages. So why funnel precious PR value to it – instead flow PR value out of the page back to the home page.
Mesh linking
Mesh linking is used when all pages are considered equally important (to theme, topic, and keywords). This is the simplest linking method in that each page on the site links to every other page on the site. Most sites use mesh linking by default without thinking about it by virtue of having the same menu or navigation bar on each page that contains the same links. This evenly distributes PageRank among all pages in the site, which is generally not ideal. The following figure illustrates this concept.
PR=5 Home |
PR=5 Products |
page |
main page |
link |
link |
link |
link |
link |
link |
PR=5 Product 1 |
PR=5 About Us |
page |
page |
link |
link |
link |
link |
link |
link |
Mesh linking – each page links to every other page
In this example, note that each page links to the lesser important About Us page. So why funnel precious PR value to it? Use hierarchical linking whenever possible!
www.google-secrets.com |
Copyright 2003-2004 Dan Sisson. |
|
All rights reserved. |