Is there such a thing as artificial intelligent SEO application?
If so how would it work in theory?
Thanks
Is there such thing as an Artificial Intelligent SEO ???
Started by
Guest_changoo_*
, Nov 04 2010 01:37 AM
1 reply to this topic
#1
Guest_changoo_*
Posted 04 November 2010 - 01:37 AM
Guest_changoo_*
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#2
Posted 04 November 2010 - 03:06 AM
I'm doing SEO by making specific content of the website, rather than doing any magic around the site. In that strategy, SEO comes by itself.
Problem with SEO is basically in heads of the people asking for it - they create content on the Web, which is basically junk and mostly contains copy/paste content of other web sites piled up without order; once done, they ask for SEO, like it's a kind of magic.
However, I've created couple of websites that were ranked Google top-10 for queries in their field of expertise without any formal SEO at all. That is because Google finds correlation between queries and textual content of the Web page and counts visitors clicks. Once you make a Web page which contains specific explanations and similar stuff about one particular topic, people looking for that topic will find your page among all others and your page will get into top-10. As simple as that.
After that, copy/paste junkies will steal your content and put it onto their pages, but they will never get enough clicks because your page is ranked higher and people who skip your page will skip their as well, and people who click your page will not click their because they've already found what they were looking for.
I'll give you everyday example. If you ask for something specific in programming, e.g. some specific situation with some .NET class, you'll get MSDN example first, and then tons of copies of the same example later. Actually, you'll click MSDN example and, if that didn't answer your question (as it never does for any specific question), then you'll skip dozens of other hits because it's obvious from Google response that it's just a copy of example from MSDN. Couple of pages later, you'll notice a genuine stuff in couple of pages and you'll open them - in that way, you've punished copiers and you've given hit points to people who wrote genuine examples different from MSDN ones, so their pages will progress.
To conclude - SEO is in writing web content useful to reader, rather than fooling search engines to show your pages first.
And now, what is the question about hypothetical AI SEO?
Problem with SEO is basically in heads of the people asking for it - they create content on the Web, which is basically junk and mostly contains copy/paste content of other web sites piled up without order; once done, they ask for SEO, like it's a kind of magic.
However, I've created couple of websites that were ranked Google top-10 for queries in their field of expertise without any formal SEO at all. That is because Google finds correlation between queries and textual content of the Web page and counts visitors clicks. Once you make a Web page which contains specific explanations and similar stuff about one particular topic, people looking for that topic will find your page among all others and your page will get into top-10. As simple as that.
After that, copy/paste junkies will steal your content and put it onto their pages, but they will never get enough clicks because your page is ranked higher and people who skip your page will skip their as well, and people who click your page will not click their because they've already found what they were looking for.
I'll give you everyday example. If you ask for something specific in programming, e.g. some specific situation with some .NET class, you'll get MSDN example first, and then tons of copies of the same example later. Actually, you'll click MSDN example and, if that didn't answer your question (as it never does for any specific question), then you'll skip dozens of other hits because it's obvious from Google response that it's just a copy of example from MSDN. Couple of pages later, you'll notice a genuine stuff in couple of pages and you'll open them - in that way, you've punished copiers and you've given hit points to people who wrote genuine examples different from MSDN ones, so their pages will progress.
To conclude - SEO is in writing web content useful to reader, rather than fooling search engines to show your pages first.
And now, what is the question about hypothetical AI SEO?


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