Using
great anchor text helps get your pages categorized and indexed more strongly for your target keywords.
Not exact matches
The primary conclusion I draw from this is Google has a
great deal of trust for the
anchor text I use to point to my own pages.
Use language appropriate to the visitor based on the target audience Heat maps show an F pattern is used when scanning content, so using bold headings and sub-headings to make it easier to scan and break up a copy Change paragraphs to bulleted lists Put the main point first (inverted pyramid) Use personal pronouns Put yourself in the place of the visitor and consider questions the visitor may have, then get to the point with the answer Add links, if appropriate, to keep the visitor engaged on your site and to keep them from searching elsewhere Name links (and
anchor text) in a way that the visitor will know what to expect when they click Find out what keywords visitors are searching for to reach your site and write with these keywords in mind These tips are a
great starting point for anyone wanting to optimize their website content.
(Obviously, the
greater the precision in placement of
anchors within the
text, the
greater the usefulness of this functionality.)
A
great concern for military families are credit cards, which can serve as either friend or foe in building a good credit score (link to some article on credit with «credit score» as
anchor text).
You know you've been getting
great «results» from buying keyword - rich domains, building
anchor text links and leaving comment spam that all follow this pattern.
You'll quickly notice that
anchor text links containing semantic keywords is a
great way to give your site ranking a boost.