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#1 |
Selling porn allows me to stay in a constant state of Bliss - ain't that a trip!
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 3,914
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Too lazy. Presumably your point is hyphenateds are in the results.
Didn't say they wouldn't work at all, but, the consensus is they don't confer the advantage they once did. They are thus less valuable for resale. I can tell you rumors and gossip about google devaluing networks with "too many" hyphenateds, but thats just seo superstition. wait, I'm not that lazy - lets look. oh - 1 result, the top result, is a hypenated, the rest of teh top ten are not. You do remember when nearly every result would have been a hypenated, right? Actually, you may not realize it, but you have proved my point, not disproved it. Good on Mark Lambert, the owner - he's done something right for the moment. I wonder what. what is it with me not typing the 2nd "h" in hyphenated, lol? |
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#2 |
You can now put whatever you want in this space :)
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 988
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The question is, if they confer any advantage. I think that 3 keyword phrases may be worth to try in this case...
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A nice list of perfect pool hotels (hotels with pool) |
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#3 | |
Selling porn allows me to stay in a constant state of Bliss - ain't that a trip!
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 3,914
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Quote:
Used to be, google distinguished keyphrases marginally better when the words in the domain were seperated by dashes. All teh seoers noticed this, and for almost two years you could seize good positions using a combination of networks and hyphenated names, and everybody did. That marginal difference made all the difference, at that time. Then, google updated their algos and that marginal difference disappeared. Combine that with googles drive to wipe out the value of private networks and build up trustrank, and hyphenateds became obsolete. Not useless, just not conferring any advantage. The example you found, well, if I had to bet, I'd bet that guy had bought himself some great inbound links, or in some other way gotten some great inbound links, enough to push that domain to a top spot for a medium value keyphrase. It's not the hyphenated keyphrase that is doing it, it's his inbounds. Will it last? I'd bet not, but it depends on his cleverness. |
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