Co-Citation or Anchor Text?
Ever since Panda, Google values anchor text less than it used to. When Google devalued anchor text, it also passed more weight to what is called “co-citation.”
Ever since Panda, Google values anchor text less than it used to. When Google devalued anchor text, it also passed more weight to what is called “co-citation.”
Co-citation offers SEOs the
opportunity to target better, higher-quality links, but understanding how it
works (and why) is the key.
How
Co-Citation Works
A lot of SEOs make co-citation sound
more complicated than it is, but it is actually quite simple. Here it goes . .
.
An incoming link to your site passes
more authority if the page on which the link appears also links to a completely
different site on a related topic. That’s
it.
The related topic part is the key
factor here. You want your incoming links to appear on pages with other links
that relate to yours. The more closely related the two link subjects are, the
higher the value of your link.
Co-citation improves search, and
better search means getting the right content to the right searchers. This is a
good thing for SEOs who understand how to use co-citation to their advantage.
5
Tips to Get Co-Citations
You can leverage co-citation by
understanding which subjects relate most closely to your target keywords. Once
you’ve done that, all you have to do is get links on pages that also link to
those related subjects.
For now, we offer this shortlist of
five ways you can begin to implement this post-Panda link building strategy.
Tip #1: Use the “Ad Group Ideas” Feature in the AdWords
Keyword Tool
The “Ad Group Ideas” feature of the
Google AdWords Keyword Tool will literally hand-feed you the subject keywords
that relate most closely to your target keywords.
Tip #2: Use Social Media Analytics to Find More
Related Subjects
If you have social media outlets for
your site, you can use their analytics tools to investigate the interests of
your followers and discover more related subjects.
Tip #3: Target New Links on Sites that Already Link
to Related Subjects
Once you’ve built a list of the
subjects that relate most-closely to your target keywords, save your link
building for sites that already link to sites on those related subjects.
Tip #4: Write Guest Blogs on Topics that Connect Related
Subjects
When you guest blog, write the blog on
a topic that connects the subject of your target keywords and the keywords of a
closely related subject. Place outgoing links in the post to both your target
url and a site that relates to the other subject you tied into the post.
Tip #5: Write Your Own Site Content on Related
Topics
Write your blogs on subjects that
Google considers closely related to the subject of your site. If your site
sells organic Columbian coffee and Google thinks that healthy dog food is a
related topic, write a blog on the healthiest dog food.
It may feel a little strange at first,
but this kind of content strategy will organically generate co-citations.
Conclusion
Co-citation helps us develop a better
a kind of link building, link building for groups of links on related subjects.
You might call it “co-link building.”
Check out our blog in the coming
weeks. We’re going to post on each of the co-link building strategies that
we’ve introduced here. Come back for detailed steps and examples.
By Justin Larsen
Google
(Contributor for ShipleySEO.com)
5 comments:
Nice post for better links. I like this information very much.
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Congratulations Admin! Thank you so much for taking the time to share this exciting information.
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Co-Citation...... Way to getting good links for your website. Try to post Top authority site like SEOMoz, Search Engine Journal blog and more.
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Thanks for the nice post.
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Thank you!
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