Smarter Internal Linking – Whiteboard Friday

Posted by dohertyjf Hey there SEOmoz readers! This week we are talking about what I like to call “Smarter Internal Linking”. Rand mentioned internal linking a few months ago before Penguin even hit, back when we were still calling it the “over-optimization penalty”. A few months later, we can see the potential effects that Penguin has had and the factors causing them. So how can we be smarter in our internal linking? How can we target our important pages so that they are able to rank well for competitive terms, yet not be in danger of being slapped by algorithm updates? This is exactly what we are talking about in this video, including a few pro-tips I’ve picked up doing SEO in the competitive travel industry, especially in regards to microsites and ccTLDs. Enjoy, and I’d love your comments below! Video Transcription Howdy, SEOmoz fans. My name is John Dougherty. I’m from Distilled in New York City, out here in Seattle for about a week, for MozCon. I came out here a couple days early, and SEOmoz was happy enough to let me shoot a Whiteboard Friday for you. This is a topic that I’ve been thinking about a lot recently. It’s the topic of internal linking. Today, in a post-Penguin world, we need to be careful about how we’re linking to the other pages on our websites, both internally and externally. Internal linking is a factor in Penguin, from what we’ve seen. I’ve been digging around on a lot of travel sites recently for a client, and I realized that sites that are in competitive niches, such as travel – there are a bunch of others that you can think of that we all may or may not have worked in at some point – that use a lot of internal links, site-wide footers especially, point to here site-wide footers in order to drive targeted anchor text deep into their site. The problem I’ve been noticing here is that when you have a set-up like this, this is a beautiful little webpage that I drew for you, with a little URL bar, and I guess this is Chrome because we’ve got the extensions there, maybe a map here. You’ve got some text, and you’ve got your different products through here. It’s just going to be an e-commerce site, or it could be a travel site. Here are sidebar links. So this could be your categories, what have you. But then often here, in the footer, there are links that say, “Atlanta Hotels, London Hotels, New York Hotels,” and they’re on every single page of the website. If you have a site that has 200,000 product pages, you have 200,000 links saying this. One term, two- word term, key term, pointing back to that page. Something is going to look a little bit suspicious, right? What I’ve been seeing here, as I’ve been going through, doing some competitive analysis, is I look at their search visibility using a tool. I use a tool called Search Metrics Essentials. I look, and a lot of them, their traffic is going up. It’s ticking up. Get to the Venice update, which happened back end of March or the beginning of April, which basically prioritized local content. This especially affected the travel industry, so category pages weren’t ranking quite as well. They were bumping up the most well-linked-to individual hotel pages, what have you. Traffic dropped for most of them. Almost every single travel site I’ve seen, traffic dropped. It happens. Google made an algorithm change. Then they take tick along, and we get to the next algorithm update, Penguin. Every single site that I’ve seen that has site-wide links like this, boom, dropped. Most of them have recovered a little bit. They’ve started ticking back up, but almost every single one has dropped. The sites that didn’t, that are not linked this way, might have seen a little bit of a dip, but by and large they were good. So what’s going on here? The only thing I can think of, when it comes to internal linking, that I can see on these sites was these site-wide footers. They’re also doing this externally. A lot of these brands, especially, have microsites, individual hotel sites that are linking back using the exact same footer as is on the main website. Same terms on every single page on those sites. Multiply this by four thousand, five thousand, ten thousand, once again, you have thousands upon thousands of links saying these terms. This is a problem. Today I want to talk about smarter internal linking. How can we link to our important pages in a smarter way? I have a few points for you. How can we be smarter? This is the question we should ask ourselves. How can we be smarter about our internal linking? Question number one: Go back to the user. What would the user expect to see? Google wants to reward a good user experience. They want people to be able to find what they want to find as quickly as possible. So I always start with the user. What is a person going to expect to see? Then, from an SEO perspective, I think, “Which pages are the most competitive?” You go and you do your keyword research, maybe use SEOmoz Keyword Difficulty tool. You look at the SERPs. You figure out which sites are ranking. You look at all the links that they have. Which ones are going to be the hardest to rank for? Especially if you’re working in-house, you probably know what this. You probably think off the top of your head, “Oh yeah, I know this keyword.” This one is going to take a lot more, not only external links, but also internal. So which pages are the most competitive? You need to prioritize those, but not the way that I just showed you. The third point is think about your taxonomy. Think about the page types on your site. I’ve drawn out here a little site architecture for you, right? We start with our home page, and then this is another page type of ours, the category. Then we have the product, and then we have the product details. If we’re keeping with the hotels example, it’s going to be your home page, domain.com. Your category, domain.com/londonhotels, or language/londonhotels, what have you. Product, so this is going to be a hotel page. Product detail, this could be like amenities for the hotel or something like that. It’s a subpage of your product page. Obviously, these are going to be your most important pages. They’re higher in your site architecture. They’re going to be more useful to the users. These are going to be the ones Google wants to serve up for the competitive search terms. We link to as many of those as we can off the home page. If you have a thousand of them, how are you going to be able to do that? If you have hotels in every single city in the United States, there’s no way you can link to all of them from your home page, nor would you want to. You’re diluting your link equity basically irreparably. Here’s another category page. This guy’s sad. He’s like, “What’s going on? I’m getting no love at all.” Then he’s got product pages underneath there, who are also getting no love. I’m not going to link. First of all, this isn’t going to be my most competitive term. This is probably going to be like second-tier competitiveness. I’m not going to link to this guy. Let’s say this is London, this is Atlanta, this is New York, this is Boston. I live in New York, and there’s a New York-Boston feud going on, so we’ll make Boston second-class. If you’re from Boston, I apologize. I love you guys. But I don’t want to link to the Boston page, necessarily, from the individual London product page. But it will make sense for me to link to Boston from New York, from Philadelphia, etc. It’s the same thing. If this is Atlanta, and this is New York, I don’t necessarily want to link to it. London and New York, I don’t necessarily want to link to an individual New York hotel page, but I may want to link to the New York hotel page from Boston and vice versa. We’re joining these two up. Or if I know I need to prioritize Boston a little bit, I’m just going to link to it from New York, because that has more link equity going to it, because it’s more of a direct line from the home page. Be thinking about some creative ways that you can do this, some creative ways that you can link between your different page types and your important pages. Some that I’ve seen, that are working, especially in the travel industry right now, are sidebars. Once again, these are not site-wides. Most of them are doing it in the form of popular products, popular locations, trending locations, something like that. A lot of them I think that they update them semi-frequently. If I was doing it, I would update them semi-frequently. Keep the main ones. Keep London and Boston, etc. Keep your very competitive ones. But then you can switch them as other keywords become competitive. If you know people are going to New York for Christmas, you can switch that out, and you can prioritize that page for a while to get that ranking right before the Christmas holiday hits. Here’s a little pro tip for you, something that I’ve seen working. This isn’t necessarily internal linking. It’s like quasi-internal linking. Think about your ccTLDs. If your company is in the U.S. or in the U.K., in France, etc., think about how you can use the ccTLDs to link back to these pages from the relevant page on that ccTLD. So you’ve got domain.co.uk/londonhotels with UK English. Domain.com/londonhotels with U.S. English, think about how you can link from this page, from this London hotels page, back to this page. You’re still driving the targeted links. You could do it through an image. I’ve seen some sites doing it with all of the countries down in the footer. On that UK page, if you mouse over the US, it says “London Hotels,” pointing back. Super-smart way to do it. They don’t do that site-wide, and so they’re able to drive those targeted links back from a different domain. Those are going to be very valuable for them. One last thing that I’ve mentioned briefly at the beginning here was beware of your microsites. Beware of your microsite site-wide links. If you have sitewides on your microsites, as well as on your main site, this is exactly the kind of thing that Google can easily figure out. They can see everything. They can see the code. They can see the way that it’s structured. They can look at the Who Is information. Of course, we can do things to try to finagle and try to trick Google, but those are only going to last for the short term. So think about building for the long term. Microsite site-wides are not really working anymore, from what I’ve seen, so beware of these. Think about the taxonomies within these as well. You can still link. Think about these the same as you would think about your ccTLDs, linking to the relevant pages back on your main website. Now I want to get a little bit bluebird for you. I want to think a little bit big. If I were Google, what would I do if I were Google? If you were Google, what would you be wanting to see? How would you want people to structure their sites? How would you want people to link? What kind of content would you want on there? How should people link between all of that? Google wants the best user experience. If I’m trying to serve the best user experience, I’m not necessarily going to have a travel guide on another page. If I have a London hotels page, why I’m not going to have a travel guide that I’m sending people all around? It’s bad from a user experience. It’s bad from a conversion experience, etc. I’m going want all of that right there. If I were Google, I’d be looking to rank sites that are like a London hotels page that also has a travel guide on there. I saw one site doing this recently. I was like, “Light bulb brilliant.” Put your travel guide there on the page. You get links saying London hotels travel guide, London hotels, hotel travel guide. You can also link to the travel guide internally so you’re not just using London hotels to link to it. That’s the kind of thing that I would want to be rewarding, if I were Google. In summary, I hope this Whiteboard Friday has been helpful to you. I hope I’ve given you some things to think about when it comes to internal linking. Feel free to tweet at me, doughertyjf on Twitter. Email me, my email is on the Distilled website. Once again, I’m John Dougherty from Distilled New York City. It’s been a pleasure. Please leave your questions and comments down below. Thanks. 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Smarter Internal Linking – Whiteboard Friday

A Manifesto of Content Marketing

Posted by randfish Last month in Philadelphia, I gave a 10-minute presentation on content marketing to an audience at SEER Interactive ‘s SearchChurch . Since the setting was so unique, I tried a different format and style that I haven’t done previously. It was a bit fun and silly, and also a little heavy-handed (but meant tongue-in-cheek). The fundamentals of what I tried to present, though, are things I solidly believe in: That success is driven by learning from experimentation and failure That content’s goal is not simply links nor SEO, but to earn the awareness, affection and trust of potential customers That committing to a vision that requires sacrifice, sweat equity and tolerance of failure is the best way to earn inbound marketing success in the long term Below is the slideshow from that presentation: The Content Marketing Manifesto View more presentations from Rand Fishkin And I’ve also got a video from the event (which SEER kindly recorded and posted ) for those interested. Looking forward to all of your thoughts around this presentation and the concepts therein. This certainly isn’t the only way to approach content marketing, but it’s one that I’ve seen have tremendous effect and value. And for anyone interested, SEER also posted the other talks from the meetup, including: Joanna Lord on Retargeting 2.0 Chris Countey on Google Authorship Purna Virji on Karmic Link Building Rachael Gerson on KPIs for SEO Ian Howells on Location Data for SEO Eppie Vojt on Scraping Everything Annie Cushing on Web Scraping for Code-o-phobes Wil Reynolds on Link Building in a Post-Penguin World p.s. Nearly every photo in the slide deck (with a few exceptions like the Walter Cronkite slide) were taken by my wife for her travel blog . It was really fun to put together a slideshow using them and it’s something I might do more of in the future. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

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A Manifesto of Content Marketing

Content Curation Guide for SEO – What, How, Why

Posted by gfiorelli1 When it comes to the Internet, I imagine it as the warehouse where the Ark is archived at the end of Indiana Jones – Raiders of the Lost Ark . The Ark is that outstanding content someone has produced and that no other will be able to see again, because it is forgotten and hidden between gazillions of other contents. Apart from the gigantic volume of pages present in the Internet, for a long time, search spam has been making the discovery of reliable sources difficult; and – let’s be honest – Social Media has enhanced this issue, because it added even more noise and dispersion. Actually, as Mitchel Kapor said once, getting information off the Internet is like having a drink from a fire hydrant . To tell the truth, this problem is not new. What is Content Curation? Since the beginning of time, human beings have collected the best humanity has produced in art, literature, science; we invented the museums, the libraries, the Encyclopedia and  have written essays and done research. We have always looked at those ones, the curators who were knowing the right sources of that knowledge, to which being able to access to will have solved our needs.   Content Curation is the online expression of something, which is in the same nature of human beings: the need to collect and catalogue only the most interesting things about a subject so to share it for the common benefit.   This is especially needed in the Internet era. And, as Rohit Barghava wrote in the Content Curation Manifesto , Content Curators will bring more utility and order to the social web. In doing so, they will help to add a voice and point of view to organizations and companies that can connect them with customers – creating an entirely new dialogue based on valued content rather than just brand created marketing messages.   Actually five kind of Content Curation types are classified: Aggregation , which consists in curating the most relevant content about a topic into one single location. This is the most common way of curating content, and it is at the base of the majority of the content curation services actually present online; Distillation , which purpose is to distill the overall noise about a topic to its most important and relevant concept. The best cases of social content curation can be catalogued into this definition; Elevation , when curators draft a more general trend or insight from a mass of daily musings; Mashups , or to merge different content about a topic creating a new original point of view of the same; Chronology , which could be defined as historiographical content curation. Usually it consists in presenting a timeline of curated information to show the evolution of a particular topic. How to do Content Curation: The Tools The Discovery Phase and Tools Actually there are a very large number of sites and tools that help the content curation process, but none is useful without one essential skill: your ability in separate the wheat from the chaff. That means that at first a curator needs to collect all the information out there about the topic he is going to curate and, then, start selecting. The best way to collect that information is listening . For instance, if someone would like to start curating the SEO topic, he should have to start visiting on a daily basis sites like SEOmoz, Search Engine Land, Search Engine Watch, and Search Engine Journal, examining the sites/blogs of the people active in those sites, select the objectively most interesting ones, and use two starting tools, RSS and Twitter: RSS to track their own content production about the SEO topic; Twitter to track the content related to the SEO industry they share. This discovery phase can be facilitated by tools, two of which – sign ‘o’ times – are not strictly web based but mobile apps: Zite ​Zite (for iOs, WebOS and, very recently, for Android too and owned by CNN), is a “Personalized magazine”, which not only offers the opportunity to connect your Google Reader, Twitter and Read it Later accounts in order to have all the content present there in just one place and organized into sections, but also it proposes a large selection of content from other sources it crawled in Internet, and all this content is presented in standard sections like Technology, Politics, Arts & Culture, etc. You can also add sections based on your specific needs/interests thanks to a sort of “search suggest box”. For instance, I have personalized it with very specific sections dedicated to Content Marketing, Content Management, Copywriting, and all those disciplines that can be included in the Inbound Marketing umbrella. The “magic” is that with a simple rule of thumbs up/down you can teach Zite which content is the one you really consider relevant and what not. So the next time you access it, the content proposed will be closer to the one you are really interested in. For a curator, this is like having a robotic personal assistant. Flipboard Flipboard, (for iOS only, sorry), is another “social magazine”, which can be personalized not only by selecting which sites to be republished on our Flipboard and we want to read the content of, but also from an interesting curators’ list and – especially – adding a bigger number of social accounts we subscribe to: Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Tumblr, Instagram, Flickr, 500px, and obviously, Google Reader. Strawberry Jam This tool is still in beta (you need to ask for an invitation directly to the site from someone already using it), and it is an almost perfect tool in order to discover what is the most popular content which is published in your stream, for a keyword or for a hashtag and those Twitter lists you may have added. This is especially useful for three reasons: When you log in Strawberry Jam, it syncs with your Twitter account and shows you all the popular links in the previous 24 hours. This is an amazing way to discover what happened when you weren’t online (i.e.: consider my case, living in Europe and sleeping when the Twitter activity is having its peaks in the USA); It facilitates the selection of those links, which are useful and interesting for those searches (keywords and hashtag, especially) which can be really due a loss of time. Other tools that can be used for this discovery phase are: Evri (for iOs and Kindle Fire), which has the advantage of owning an API which allows to access the data of your Evri “entity” or channels from their site. Feedly (for iOS, Android, Chrome, Safari and Firefox), the plus is having browser versions which are always in sync with the mobile apps. Factiva (by Dow Jones), a great resource for discovering very authoritative news content. My6sense (iOS). This app – apart the classic functionalities of a tool like this – has a very good engine, which is able to understand your tastes and, the more you use it, to present them at the first place. It offers an API for third party development. PostPost . It is focused just on Twitter, but it offers the very appreciated function of breaking the content shared in your stream into a faceted navigation (links, photos, videos…) and ordered by priority: First the content from those contacts you interact the most, secondly the content most shared and cited in your stream and, finally, all the rest. Delicious , especially now that is starting the implementation of some of the characteristics that made Trunk.ly, which it bought months ago, so popular. Faveous , which can be considered a Delicious on steroids. In fact, it can also collect those links you share in Gmail. Inbound.org , Hacker News , and any other content curated news site. These sites are a great shortcut to find out valuable content and, even more importantly, other curators specialized in one or two specific topics. In particular, Inbound.org, with its very well thought categorization of the RSS sources, helps considerably the further skimming of the content published. The Content Curation discovery phase is an ongoing activity, and of every source we should save its RSS in our reader if it’s possible in order to commit several useful SEO actions. The Production Phase and Tools In the last couple of years, the tools available to content curators literally invaded the web. Some are right now all the hype and have partly changed its nature (Pinterest anyone?), and others have a great user base in the content marketing field, but are less known to SEO and/or Social Media marketers. Below I will list and describe just those ones that personally I consider the most interesting. It is a very personal selection, so forgive me if I miss some tool (but I invite you to add more in the comments). My criteria of selection is the following: Overall quality of the product; Quality of the curators using it and publishing their curated content with it; Effectiveness of the content curated publication in the product site; Opportunity of publishing the content curated with the tool on our own site (via embed, RSS, widget or API). Scoop.it Scoop.it is probably the best site for Content Curation right now. Even though it offers several ways to share on your social sites and to embed on your site the content you curate in your Scoop.it magazine, it is mainly meant to be used as an external property. The final product is a magazine, where it is possible to publish content suggested by the Scoop.it suggestion engine, from the sources you have set up, from its bookmarklet, and from the other curators you are following on site itself. The overall quality of the curators present in Scoop.it is quite high, even though you must dig to find the very remarkable ones. The system suggests users related to your topic. But if you desire to explore topics you’re not curating, the Scoop.it search system is not the best one. As every content curation platform, Scoop.it offers the opportunity to republish your curated content on your site: via widget, which you can configure as you want, and via RSS feed. If you have a WordPress blog (or a Tumblr) you can connect it with your topic page and republish your curated content there. Scoop.it is a freemium product, and the free subscription is powerful enough for the average content curation needs. But if you want to use your brand, your own domain/subdomain and have analytics (and connect your magazine to Google Analytics), then you need to subscribe the Business plan. For more insights about Scoop.it, read this post , which Gabriella Sannino published on Search Engine Journal, or this great guide by Chris Dyson on his blog. Bundlr Bundlr is a “clipper site”. Somehow, it is a Pinterest, but not limited to just images and videos. In fact with it you can clip and save in your bundles practically everything you find relevant about an argument: text clips, images, video, code snippets…. Bundlr, as any curation content tool, lets you share on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Google+ what you have clipped and to add your note commenting the clip. This is especially interesting for social content curation. Moreover, the page can be curated by more than one curator or can be kept private if you are curating a topic for internal use only (both available in the pro version only). Bundlr lets you embed your topic page in your own site too. The embed will get updated as constantly as you continue to clip new relevant quotes, images about your selected topic. Another way to embed a page in your site is via RSS. Alternatives to Bundlr.com are: Snip.it , in beta and very Facebook oriented; Bagtheweb.com , which is a mix between Scoop.it and a clipper site. Its most interesting functionality is that you can create of network of “bags” in order to really create a deeper curated content experience about a topic and its subtopics; Clipboard , which offers the opportunity to embed (or share on socials or with a link) just one clip. For instance click this link (oh yes) Pinterest . Storify Storify fulfills perfectly the “Chronology” concept of Content Curation. In fact, with it, it is possible to narrate a story aggregating the best content about the same topic from different sources, while commenting it and offering your own vision about the event presented, as this Storify by Charles Arthur about Sexism in the web marketing industry displays well. For this reason, it is now widely used especially by journalists, but also by tweeps and bloggers, whose main topic are current news. Surely it is a tool that many of you already know and, maybe, experimented, but if you have not tried it yet, I really suggest you to do it. The list of sources Storify let you build your story from is very big: Storify itself Twitter Facebook YouTube Flickr Instagram Disqus Tumblr SoundCloud are probably the most common sources, but you can also grab content from these other sources: StockTwits, GetGlue, Chute, and BreakingNews . Finally, the opportunity to search on Google, embed URLs you may have saved in your favorites or from your RSS reader, makes the potentialities of Storify almost infinite. Obviously, the stories you create can be exported easily to your WordPress site (both .com and .org), Tumblr, Posterous. You can also mail your stories directly to the subscribers of your newsletter if you are using MailChimp. In other case, you can embed your story via a line of script. Finally, it is possible to share your story on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ via social buttons. Be aware that Storify is quite easy to use, to really be able to create a story that engages your readers is not easy at all. This post by Dave Copeland, Do’s and Don’t For Using Storify , describes perfectly how to create a story that won’t let your readers indifferent. Pearltrees Pearltrees is probably one of the Curation Content sites on the rise among content marketers. At first it is not that different from any other social bookmarking site: You have a browser app which let you “pearl” the page you are visiting; You can connect your Twitter and Facebook accounts to your Pearltrees account; You can import the links you may have saved in Delicious. What makes Pearltrees unique is the visual nature and truly social cooperative nature. It lets you organize your interests into Pearls (let’s say “Topic”) and Pearltrees, which are practically folders where you can add the pages you pearled in a branch. Another interesting function of Pearltrees, as said, is its social cooperative nature, as any other curator expert in your topic may ask to team up with you (and vice versa). The social nature of the site is not limited to the cooperation between curators though. In fact, as soon as you create your pearls, the system will start presenting you related pearls, which can be added to yours completely or just the branch you are most interested in. For instance, in a pearl I created about SEO, I added the one about Python, a topic which interests me, but I am not absolutely an expert of; hence it is better for me to rely to the deeper knowledge of another curator. SEO and SEO Blogs to follow in gfiorelli1 (gfiorelli1) Finally, as any content curation site, it is possible to share your pearls externally (Twitter, Facebook, email) or embed them in your site. But you can share pearl also internally, for instance to your curation team and those one who picked a pearl from you in the past. An interesting function is the ability to export all the links present in your categorized pearls in a RDF file, which can be easily opened with Excel. Why do I Need to Curate Content? There are at least six reasons for considering Content Curation as a tactic to follow in your Web Marketing plan. Conquering the Long Tail From a strict SEO point of view, to have a section of your own site dedicated to the curation of the best content related to your market, or to dedicate a section of your blog to it, is a powerful way to enhance the long tail reach of your site. Obviously, you need to follow the principle of Content Curation as described above (discovers and curates, adds value commenting and providing perspective, crediting the sources) in order to not simply push duplicated content onto your own site. Tools like Scoop.it, with the opportunity they offer to export your curated content feed into your site make this operation easier. Finding Sources for Original Content Creation Another great reason why you should do content curation is that doing it you can collect, find, and re-use (always crediting the original source) great ideas and information, with which you can create great original content. For instance, using discovery tools like the ones above cited, saving the RSS feed of the best sources about a topic and using tools in order to further select the needed content from those sources (i.e.: Yahoo Pipes and some hacking, as described in this classic post by Dawn Foster ). Sure, for some specific topics it may be very hard to find content online, but don’t forget that a world outside the web exists with tons of sources, which can be easily collected and curated, as I explain in this video I had the pleasure to shoot for Distilled: Finding Great Contacts for Link Building Outreach This is almost a natural effect of the Content Curation. To discover and share only the best content online (and offline) about your niche, puts yourself on the radar of the content creators, fact which can lead you to: Having them linking to your curated content. Establishing a contact with them, and possibly creating a collaboration with them. Creating the opportunity for the creation of original content with them. To create original content based on the content you have curated can be an excellent method for obtaining links back too from the sources you cite and use. Then, social curation content is maybe the best way to fulfill the objective of any RSS ( Really Simple Stalking ) plan, as it was described by Wil Reynolds at the last LinkLove conference. Obtaining a Great Amount of Social Signals for Your Site (or Social Media Profiles) Every well executed action of content curation tend to attract readers and to generate a great amount of social signals (tweets, +1s, likes…). Just take as an example the “anti-Google” posts Aaron Wall writes from time to time on SEObook. They are a classic case of “Elevation Content Curation”, as Aaron in those posts usually draft a more general trend or insight from a mass of daily musings, which he widely credits with links and citations. Another example is what Expo Comic Mx did so to obtain better results from its Facebook page: to post a tender photoset featuring a happy Stormtrooper family using the photos of Kristina Alexanderson . That photo – a great example of targeted content curation you can see here below – has obtained more than 13K likes, 756 comments, and was shared more than 7,000 times nowadays. Branding, ORM and Reference Traffic The explosion of Pinterest, even though now it has evolved into a more complex social marketing tool, is a wonderful example of the benefits of being active and using Content Curation platforms. Creating a qualified presence for your brand in those kind of sites, practicing a wise Content Curation activity, and being participative with other curators has been demonstrated as a relatively easy way to enhance the thought-out knowledge of a brand. It helps in dominating the SERPs for your brand name (which is great if you have Online Reputation Management issues), and it provides a constant flux of organic traffic to your site; traffic that – as happened with Pinterest – can become really big if those Curation Content sites you are using become widely known to the masses. Finally, from a strict SEO point of view, the active use of the Curation Content sites helps in making of your site an Entity to Google’s eyes, which is now essential in order to gain authority and relevance and not being considered just a minor presence in the web. Becoming a Reference in Your Industry Curating the best sources about your industry on your site and, especially, using your social media profiles as a medium to share your discoveries, can really help you in obtaining the objective of becoming – if not the – at least one of reference in your industry. Again, the reason is quite easy to understand: if you share, comment, and credit only the best sources, then people will tend to look at you as an authoritative source of information, and the creators you cite will start desiring to be cited by you. And we all know what does it mean to become an authoritative source, also for Google. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

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Content Curation Guide for SEO – What, How, Why