One of my writer used to check articles against copyscape by creating blogspot blogs. But what i found is google indexed it before he delete the article from blogspot. so if i post that article on my blog, will google consider it as a duplicate content even if he deletes that particular? if i post article to docstoc or scribe or any other pdf sites before posting it to my site, google will consider it as a duplicate content?
If you have ever noticed, the spiders come into a site on a regular basis to check for any changes. Any changes to a page is then "re-indexed." Any key-worded content that is no longer there is removed from their index. How long it takes is debatable. But we are not talking months here. So, put in that same article, get as many backlinks as you can to tell the spiders it is a popular piece so it can move up in rank, and you are set to go. If you want a second opinion, and from Google themselves: http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=164734 From that page: . If a piece can be picked up by the spiders, and then indexed before you can post it, yes, yours will be considered "duplicate content." But, you can always re-word pieces, thus increasing your odds in ranking high under one particular subject. For example: The Best Flea Collar For Your Dog The Highest rated Flea Collar For Dogs And then just reword the first article a bit.
are you calling him a 'beer tosser'? After giving all that advice about backlinks and duplicate content?
Make sure the original content goes on your website FIRST. You can subscribe to a ping site at very low cost. The wait is because article directories are spidered many times in one day, and you need to be indexed first. Then wait two days. Google gives the most credit to the site it indexes first. A rewrite to a site that gives 4 backlinks like ArticleBase is great. They submit a copy to 3 other major directories, so you might then do one more rewrite and have three of the links going to the 4 different directories and your website. During the first 90 days link your website to the article. Using Squidoo as a "hub" can even provide more action. However if your article is not of high quality, do not worry about backlinks. Instead spend the time writing another article. The rewording technique is best used with find and replace. Find as many synonyms as you can for the title words, and chose one to replace all instances of that word. Do as many title words as possible. Then do a quick, but more effective rewrite. Use this with the above advice and you will have no fear of duplicate content penalties. Something that Google is relatively easy going on.
I just love limericks... There was a king named Lear, Who offered Kenny some beer. He jumped high twenty times, And wrote as many rhymes. Because the beer was actually a bear.
That's like telling a business owner who has very little walk-in traffic not to advertise, not to have others spread the word about his store, to not worry about it. Not necessary at all. Most people search using simple terms. Like, say, cheap travel deals. A webmaster who has a site on traveling business site can simply focus on words, like, say, cheap, travel, dealsl, and those words will naturally bring up other words Google has mixed in with it, anyway. Like maps, hotels, holiday....when associated with the word travel. He then has to get as many related sites to mention his site ("backlinks") as he can to tell the spiders how popular his site is, thus moving up in rank, and, then, STAYING there. And telling them to find as many synonyms as they can could very well make it more confusing, more difficult for those who are already confused and uncertain as it is. That can lead to "keyword stuffing." Use the keywords sparingly, and spread it throughout the first half of the top of the page. If you are going to give advice, at least know what you are talking about. One day my mouth felt so dry, and I thought I was about to die. Then I saw the word “Beer," and one salty tear of happiness escaped from my eye.
Perry no wonder why you will always be a hamburger writer. cheap travel deals = 45,300,000 search results inexpensive traveling bargains = 10,700,000 No wonder no search results in your name, no wonder beer for a brain. You do not automatically get free traffic, you earn it. Something you have never done. Webdeveloper1 always post to your site first. Then if using scribd, or docstoc (two good choices), do a change like above.
dyadvisor, no wonder you will always be highly medicated. Means nothing if a site has a shit-load of backlinks, in addition to sooooo many travel sites run by webmasters who know very little about SEO, AND, they don't do any backlinks. AND...if a site is much older than the others. How long a site has been in a search engine's index also has a lot to do with SEO. lol Please, keep the wizard knowledge coming....