Duplicate Content 101
Last Updated on Tuesday, 24 August 2010 07:52 Written by (author unknown) Saturday, 9 January 2010 02:00
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If you’re involved with SEO in any way, you’ve probably heard about duplicate content. If you’re not exactly sure what it is and how it affects your SEO efforts, then this article is for you. This topic can be rather technical and have some advanced features, but I’ll try to keep it basic and won’t get into technical details here.
What is Duplicate Content?
In the basic sense, duplicate content is when two or more Web sites have the same content on their site. This isn’t just the same subject or headers, but the exact same content word for word or maybe almost word for word.
This may happen for several reasons. You may have written an article and another site or blog picked up the article and posted it word for word.
Another situation is you might have multiple sites with different domains but have similar content. This is sometimes true for sites in different countries. Sometimes there are legitimate reasons for having the same content. Still, it’s good to understand the pitfalls.
Why is Duplicate Content a Problem?
The goal of the search engine is to deliver the best value for a given search term or phrase. The more this happens, the more searchers will continue to use that search engine.
The intent for the search engine is to avoid serving up many of the exact same Web pages in the search results. Thus, creating confusion for the searcher and delivering a poor searcher experience. So they attempt to filter all of the duplicate content and choose one based on certain criteria and then serve it up.
The problem is that you’re in jeopardy of your page not showing up in favor of another page with the same content. There is speculation about a penalty for duplicate content, but I don’t think it’s so much a penalty as missing an opportunity to show up in the SERPs.
How Search Engines Deal with Duplicate Content
Search engines send out a bot or program to surf the Internet and collect all of the content it finds. This content is indexed and placed into a database.
During this process, the content is compared against other duplicate content. Then an attempt is made to determine the original. Some clues that help it determine this are:
- How trusted is the domain?
- Are there links on one that point back to an original?
- Or where do most of the links point to?
- Where is the first place Google found the content?
- Has any of the content appears to have been “scraped” or repurposed?
One is then picked and used and the others are discarded. This list should also give you some ideas on what you can combat duplicate content issues.
What Can You do to Avoid Duplicate Content Issues
Now that you have a good idea what duplicate content is and how it’s dealt with, let’s look at what you can do to avoid the pitfalls. First, duplicate content issues don’t have anything to do with your site HTML code, only your page content.
Another way to deal with this issue is by using a canonical tag. A canonical page is basically an authoritative page among a group of pages that have similar content.
Also, Google recently posted an article on ways to handle legitimate cross-domain content duplication. They announced the support of a link element and other tips for handling the problem. Basically, Google recognizes there are some legitimate uses for duplicate content and they want to help site owners with solutions.
As I mentioned earlier, being a basics article, I won’t get into any technical details. You may, however, need some technical help to dig further into this topic and plan to implement a solution.
I am not the most creative person in the world and one of the things I have always struggled with is creating titles of articles not to mention the body of the article itself. Well, I use this tool … “Answer Analyst” which has helped me immensely, questions are great to use as titles and answer analyst provides these in abundance. All I have to do is enter the keyword I want to base my blog post on and it will literally throw ideas at me.
This tool does not write your blog posts for you,
but it certainly makes coming up with new blog posts
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Tags: how to get backlinks, duplicate content, article marketing,
Tags: Article Marketing
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Duplicate Content 101 | How To Get Backlinks To Your Site…
What duplicate content is, how search engines deal with it, and how to avoid the pitfalls….
Duplicate Content 101 | How To Get Backlinks To Your Site…
What duplicate content is, how search engines deal with it, and how to avoid the pitfalls….