Site icon Haznos

How SEO Is Like Solving Suduko

<p>Having been a Suduko fanatic for the past few years&comma; there is rarely a puzzle that stumps me&period; Mastering Suduko is all about logic and looking for patterns to see what the missing number is&period; Whether it’s a 9 box&comma; 12 box or intricate combination of multiple interlinking boxes&comma; the key to figuring out the answer is filling in all the possibilities for each box on the puzzle&period;  To be effective at search engine optimization&comma; you have to think the same way&period; The answers to ranking in Google are not spelled out in front of you&semi; rather you have to consider the possibilities&comma; look for patterns and apply reasoning based on experience&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The Correlation<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Steps to Solving a Suduko Puzzle&colon; You could just sit there and painstakingly try to solve the puzzle without filling in all the numbers&period; It will take you considerably longer to solve it&period; But&comma; I begin by looking vertically and horizontally at the numbers existing on the puzzle&comma; filling in the missing numbers for each box&period; Once you’ve done this&comma; your first solved numbers will be those standing alone – there is no other possibility&period; That number is then erased from the boxes it impacts vertically and horizontally&period; Then I look for patterns&period; If 2 boxes in a row could only be 2 numbers&comma; those 2 numbers can then be erased from the other boxes in the row&period; This same pattern hunting technique works for 3 and 4 numbers&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Applying the Logic to a Website&colon; When you assess a website for a plan to make it rank better&comma; you first look for the obvious&period; The obvious usually resides on the website itself in the form of navigation&comma; meta tags&comma; page keyword density and length and quality of content&period; Once these things are improved&comma; some &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;numbers” in the puzzle are filled in&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Patterns<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Looking for the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;patterns” requires more work&period; What keywords is the site naturally ranking for and which keywords is it struggling with&quest; Is the site pursuing highly competitive keywords and creating too many of the same anchor text back links&quest; Is the site getting its links from low quality sources&quest; Is the ranking issue simply due to the site’s age or not having any incoming links at all&quest; The &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;patterns” tell you how to proceed&comma; whether it be removing poor quality links and increasing the diversity of link types and variations of anchor text&period; Pieces of the puzzle come together as a high quality link is implemented and the results realized&period; When you see what works&comma; rankings improve and the answers make themselves evident&period; Websites respond differently&semi; trusted websites will respond better&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;While a Suduko puzzle can be completed&comma; the process of improving a website is ongoing&period; But&comma; when you approach the process by analyzing causes and results instead of just doing without measuring&comma; you never know if what you are doing is helping or hurting your website&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Theresa Happe works with Afternic&period;com where you can find domain names for sale&comma; domain parking&comma; escrow service and professional domain appraisal service&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Exit mobile version