Need ideas to get do follow links from highly competative niche "wedding"
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I am not talking about a new site. All of that goes on your existing site.
Think about becoming the Maui Wedding Man!
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Where do you thing the best place to post them is besides my blog?
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I would unite with the strongest content producers. This is a content play and you don't want a team of weenies.
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I never post great articles on a blog.... post them on a dedicated webpage where you have absolute control over formatting, optimization and appearance. I envision these articles each having a ton of photos with detailed captions.
Post them as pages on your website, announce them on your blog and promote them on your homepage and all across the rest of your site.
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I love the creativity of your answers EGOL. You definitely offer outside-the-box thinking.
I am trying to wrap my mind around the concept of gathering a group of competitors to work together. Search engine ranking is purely about competition. You can have a poor page rank as #1 if it is better then the pages of your competitors. If you boost your ranking or exposure, but you strengthen your competitors at the same time, how is this beneficial?
I can understand this tactic when an outside force jumps ahead of you in SERP. But when it's just your site and other wedding sites, where is the advantage?
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Most competitors don't have 100% overlap of merchandise or services. They also don't have 100% overlap of geographic areas. Competitors working together identify the areas where they really don't compete. Then they cross promote competitor good/services on related pages of their website.
This gives them advertising on a competitor's site but in a way that will not directly steal clients.
A music store near me has a fantastic selection of guitars but does not sell violins... the best place to get a violin is more into orchestra instruments and could easily partner with the guitar specialist.
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If Steven decides to build the huge Maui wedding resource on his site he could ask the florist who is the strongest content generator to produce some great articles for the various types of wedding flowers and have a photographer who specializes in product photography create the photos. The product photographer would get some attribution links and the florist would get some links too, some great visibility for his work and top billing on the florist resource page.
Remember that acquiring great content is much more valuable than giving it away (it also takes a lot less time)... so create a content acquisition plan that has strong benefits for your partner.
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Thanks for the explanation EGOL. It makes perfect sense, and represents a great thought process. Your views clearly take SEO to a higher level and define the difference between "on paper" SEO, and in practice SEO.
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Egol, I just want to make sure I understand this right. My blog is part of my website and is not a subdomain. I have "absolute control over formatting, optimization and appearance". Why would I create separate pages and not use the blog to publish my articles?
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You can use the blog to publish your articles.
If you do that you are stuck with the way that the blog optimizes the pages and links them into your site. You can modify that to within limits. Blogs are great for getting pages onto your site easily and spending minimum time formatting and optimizing.
However, if you think that you can do a better job at formatting or optimizing then publishing by a different method is needed.
Sometimes I prefer to make finely crafted arrows than to use the ones off of a mass production line.
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I understand, we can format the pages on the blog as we want. That is the answer that I was looking for.
Thanks!