Do in page links pointing to the parent page make the page more relevant for that term?
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Here's a technical question.
Suppose I have a page relevant to the term "Mobile Phones".
I have a piece of text, on that page talking about "mobile phones", and within that text is the term "cell phones".
Now if I link the text "cell phones", to the page it is already placed on (ie the parent page) - will the page gain more relevancy for the term "cell phones"??
Thanks
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Definitely. Each link is counted as a vote and internal links help in making the page look more relevant but the link should not be out of context.
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Thanks.
But are you sure that this is the case even when the link is point to the current page? -
(The confusion stems from the use of the words 'parent page'.)
But no, it's highly unlikely that a page can pass value/relevancy for a particular keyphrase to itself. The whole point in linking, after all, is to link one page to another.
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Yes - this is what I would expect - however reading http://www.seomoz.org/ugc/3-ways-to-avoid-the-first-link-counts-rule indicates to me there are still a lot of loopholes in the alogrithm, and I was just wondering if this had ever been tested.
Thanks
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Hmmm..probably i misunderstood your "parent" question. No value will be passed if link points to the current page.