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Hiding Weak Pages: SEO Myth
Do You Really Need to Hide Thin Pages with Noindex? Let’s Clear That Up One common belief in SEO circles is that pages with very little content, often called “thin” or “weak” pages, should always be hidden from search engines using the noindex tag. The assumption is that pages like “About Us,” “Contact Us,” paginated content and…
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The Single Great Backlink; Why Consistency Beats Perfection in SEO
We’ve all been there. You’re scrolling through a spreadsheet of 500 backlink prospects when you spot it: the one perfect link. It’s from a site with a sky-high Domain Rating (DR), excellent Ahrefs Rank (AR), and impressive Semrush authority scores. The context is ideal, and you can already imagine your exact-match anchor text perfectly placed…
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Difference between Classic SEO and AI-SEO (LEO / AEO / GEO)
When ChatGPT first emerged, most people didn’t expect it to have a significant impact on SEO. However, with the increasing popularity of AI services, this topic has garnered considerable attention, especially now that these AI tools are becoming more advanced and can even access the internet. Many believed traditional SEO would soon disappear, but things…
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FAQ page for SEO – Best Practices
In the constantly changing world of SEO, a great FAQ page can become your website’s best friend. It’s more than just a helpful list of questions and answers; it boosts user experience, lifts your search rankings, and shows visitors you genuinely understand their needs. Let’s imagine the opposite: how to create an absolutely useless FAQ…
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Creating Linkable Content for Boring Business
Think your business is too “boring” or niche to attract attention online? Think again! Your specialized knowledge is your greatest marketing asset. By transforming that expertise into authoritative resources, you can create powerful linkable content for your “boring” business that attracts natural backlinks, boosts your visibility, and solidifies your status as the go-to expert in your field.…
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How to Perform Basic Keyword Research for SEO
Keyword research is like a treasure hunt, but instead of looking for gold or gems, you’re looking for the best words or phrases people use when searching online for something your website offers. This process helps you understand what search terms have search demand, allowing you to create content and optimize your website using the…
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What are Keywords in SEO?
Keywords in SEO are words or phrases used to optimize a page so that it appears in search engine results for relevant searches. Using keywords is the foundation of search engine optimization, helping Google or Bing find your page and show it to users. A search query, which users type into a search bar, is…
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How does Google rank websites?
Google ranks websites using a complex system that considers many factors to determine which sites are the most relevant to the search keywords entered. The main things Google looks at are: Keywords: Google checks if the words from search query are found on the website. A site with content that closely matches the search terms is more likely to rank higher.…
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What are SERPs?
SERP stands for Search Engine Results Page. Search results are the list of websites, articles, videos, and other types of content that search engines (like Google and Bing) show you when you search for something. When you type a question or keywords into the search bar, the search engine uses complex algorithms to find and…
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What is a Backlink?
A backlink is a hyperlink on one website that points to another website. Imagine you’re reading a blog post about your favorite hobby, and the writer suggests an article on another website that they think you’ll enjoy. The blog post includes a clickable link to that article – this is what we call a backlink.…
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What is SEO?
SEO stands for “search engine optimization.” In 2025, SEO typically involves optimizing websites to rank high on Google, which holds a dominant 90% share of the search engine market. However, this landscape might shift with ChatGPT from OpenAI, the most popular chat AI, utilizing Bing. Nonetheless, the fundamental principles of SEO will remain consistent. When…
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Breadcrumbs Navigation for SEO (with examples)
A breadcrumb trail (or just ‘breadcrumbs,’ named after a maneuver from a fairy tale) is a secondary navigation in user interfaces that helps users track their location within a program or website. Initially, it appeared in software user interfaces, but now it is more commonly used on modern websites, mainly as a path from the…
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Should I use ‘Broken Link’ method to get Backlinks?
One popular backlink building method is using ‘broken links.’ This technique involves identifying broken or dead links on other websites that no longer direct to an active page. Once you find these broken links, contact the website owner or webmaster to inform them about the issue and suggest your website’s content as a suitable replacement…