Yet Another Related Posts Plugin to Help Your Readers

Yet Another Related Posts Plugin is a handy little plug in that I use on one of my other sites. I tested it out there and plan to incorporate it onto all of my other blogs soon. You can visit plug in site here.

What exactly does it do?

Simply put, it detects other posts on your blog that relate to the one being posted. It uses key words, phrases, titles, etc to help it find related posts. It shows up at the bottom of the posts and says; “Related Posts.” Under the title is a list of posts and their links that relate to what you just wrote.

Another interesting thing about this plug in is that next to each “related posts” link, it has a percentage. This percentage tells the reader just how related the topics are. Very helpful for someone researching a specific topic.

It is a great tool to help readers browse your site about specific topics. It also encourages them to read more of what your site has to offer. As a website owner, my goal is not only traffic, it is continual traffic, return traffic and quality traffic. I believe this plug in helps facilitate that goal.

Plus internal link to other pages on your website are very good for SEO.

You can see it in action on my Mom site. Simply scroll down any post. At the bottom you will see the plug in at work. Here is a link to one of our recent posts: http://momsoffaith.com/blog/faith-and-business-101-the-nitty-gritty-part-2

Let me know what you think. Have you used this plug in or one like it? What was your experience?

Copyright © Lara Velez, All Rights Reserved

SEO and Active Links

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is an art. If you own a website or blog and want it to grow and be a great site with lots of traffic, SEO must become a regular part of y our life. Webmasters, successful ones anyway, never stop optimizing their sites. There is always something that can be tweaked or new idea surfacing to help site owners have better SEO.

Active Link Factor and SEO

You must be very careful how many outgoing active links (that are not a part of your actual domain) on your site. If you have too many, search engines will think you are a link farm and punish you for it. If you research and look for successful, high ranking and high traffic sites, you will see that they are not an ocean of outgoing links…especially on their main page.

If you have a lot of resource links, consider just putting them up as a reference and not making them active. That way visitors can still access the resource, but you are not hurting your SEO with a sea of active links.

Link Exchanges should be made only with good ranking sites and or quality niche sites. Be very picky. Also, make a separate page for link exchanges. Better yet, place link exchanges around your internal pages in places they will be most appreciated by visitors and encourage the same for those you exchange with. Remember, a quality link coming IN does not necessarily need to e a high ranking page. A page within your NICHE is the best.

Good SEO requires commitment and regular attention. Take the time to optimize your site regularly and you will reap the benefits for years to come.

Copyright © Lara Velez, All Rights Reserved

5 Key Elements to the Value of a Back Link

By: Anthony Kristovich III

Back links are an often-discussed, but rarely fully understood topic. Your site’s reputation and Page Rank depend very greatly on backlinks, so knowing what makes your back link reputation for your site more important and have more value is the next logical step.

So, you might ask then what things affect how much a given backlink is worth towards your reputation, and what can you do to maximize your backlink value.

While there are many things that affect how much a backlink is worth to your website, many are unknown to the world that search engines, especially Google, take into account.

5 main things that make up most of your backlink score

Page Rank. The page rank, or reputation, of the webpage that links to you giving you a backlink is the biggest factor. Page is ranked per page, not per website, and page rank is spread through outgoing links.

Anchor text. This is the text showing as the link text, the underlined text you click on (not always underlined, but you get the point). This text can have a very large impact on your backlinks. Google expects to see varied link texts in a normal situation, and it has been said that Google will only count a certain number of backlinks with the same exact text. Optimally, you want your keywords are you aiming for on your website to be in your backlink text if you can help it.

Relevant sites. It’s Especially with Google’s Jagger update, back links from relevant-themed websites is worth more than from unrelated websites. This means if you have a website about cars, backlinks from other car-type sites will give you more value than backlinks from a cooking website. This makes sense, as each backlink is a recommendation or a vote, and related recommendations have more authority or hold more importance.

Location.
The location of the back link to your website also makes a difference. The farther towards the top of the page, the more the backlink is weighed.

Age. The age of a backlink makes a difference. It may take up to 6 months to see the full effect of a back link. This makes it a great reason to exchange backlinks with sites whose PR has not yet gotten to where it will, as you will get even greater advantage once they do reach that level.

So, the question of the day is what stuff can you help in reality.

Page Rank may or may not be an issue, as getting in a backlink while a website is newer will gain you a good advantage in the age category once they have grown to their potential. The main to remember here is to make sure they are a website that you would want to trade links with regardless of page rank.

Location you usually do not have much of a say in, and the age is out of your hands. So, the best concept is to concentrate on trading with websites whose content compliments your own, or is at least similar in theme for the best gain. If you can, try to get your target keywords into the anchor text if at all possible. Google definitely looks at the anchor text and takes this into consideration. Varied link text has been proven to give an added edge to a website and put it over the top into the lead.

Article Source: http://www.homebusinessresourcedirectory.com

About the Author: Tony Kristovich is the owner of http://www.EZLinkSystem.com a link exchange website where you can register for free to exchange links with other webmasters like you.

NOTE:
You may use this article for reprint ONLY if you DO NOT change the article in ANY way, AND you keep the source and bio IN TACT with ALL links ACTIVE!