Posts Tagged Duplicate
Article Writing Tips to Avoid Duplicate Content
Posted by Jon in Content Writing on November 24, 2009
Lately I have been concerned about, and have been hearing more and more about duplicate content on the internet. Particularly if you run your own online business like I do, you definitely want to have good quality content on your site to attract not only visitors and buyers, but to get the attention of the search engines that look for unique content. Article writing is one of the best and most cost-effective ways to put content on your site, and to market your online business these days. The problem is that the same, or very similar content is showing up more and more on different web pages, much to the search engines’ chagrin – and they will penalize your site for it! Here are some ways to write and use articles in such a way that you can skirt the duplicate content penalty:
As far as article writing goes, there are different ways to get content onto your site. You can write your own articles, you can hire a ghostwriting service to write articles for you that you can put your own name to, or you can use other people’s articles on your website and blog to add fresh content to your site. I’m going to discuss each of these in greater detail so that you can compare each, and learn some new tips on how to avoid duplicate content using these methods.
If you choose to write your own articles, you are doing the best thing for your business and for the search engines because you are making your site stand out from the rest by making it your own. You may find it difficult to come up with your own content, but I find that the more you learn about your business, or website topic, the more you will have to write about. It’s easy in internet marketing to come up with a topic, as the learning truly never ends in this field! Your task becomes even easier when you consider writing one original article, submitting it, and then changing or re-writing it. There is nothing wrong with modifying your own articles and re-submitting them!
It’s true that other people may use your original article on their websites and make you wonder about duplicate content. You may also wonder about submitting your same, original article to thousands of publishers through article distribution services. At first, this may seem the ultimate compliment to you that your article is being used, and so it should be! You also want your articles to be displayed in multiple places to grow you back links. But I have heard of instances where your article shows up in thousands of different places, the search engines see it as duplicate content, and then suddenly you no longer have a listing for your site in relation to your own article! The fact is, duplicate content cannot really be avoided on the net, and you should only get banned if you have a spam site with no valuable content. These are things I wouldn’t really worry about.
Ghostwriting services can make your life easier by writing good articles for you for a reasonable price. This is a good option if you want to send out many articles at once with your name and links attached. It saves you time, energy, and work, and the articles put out are usually good quality articles. The problem is that many other people might have very similar content to yours. A way to avoid duplicate content here is if you just change a few things about the articles you get. For example, you may want to change the article title, or add headers to separate paragraphs. You can change some of the wording around, mix up the paragraphs a little, or even bold or italicize some text to make it more unique.
If you use other people’s articles on your site, it may be best to ask for the author’s permission to change the article slightly as well, or to simply quote bits and pieces of the article, surrounded by your own commentary. I personally like to use other people’s articles on my blog to show that I am not the only authority on the subject areas in my niche. On days when I have writer’s block, this method comes in handy as well. Lately, I have been trying to avoid duplicate content on my blog by adding an introductory paragraph before posting the article by another author in its original form. I haven’t yet added concluding remarks following the author resource box, but this is also an excellent way to avoid duplicate content and I plan to do this in the near future.
Hopefully these article-writing tips will help you avoid the nasty duplicate content penalty. No one wants their site to be banned from the search engines, so it’s a good idea to write your own articles, make slight changes to other articles if you have permission to do so, and add an introduction and conclusion to your blog if adding other’s articles to your blog.
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A Threat to Your Wordpress Blog: Duplicate Content
Posted by Jon in WordPress templates on October 15, 2009
Blogging is extremely popular these days. And the most popular stand-alone blog engine is Wordpress. It is flexible, has many useful featires and there is a lot of eye-catching templates for it. But those who have a Wordpress blog must be aware of a serious problem that can cause your blog to be removed from Google’s search results. The problem is: Duplicate Content.
WordPress content management system which, when used with the default configuration, is not duplicate content proof. In fact this CMS is capable to render almost 100% of your content duplicate. As usual the fault of the system has roots in its advantages. WordPress has many features facilitating blogging and linking, such as RSS feeds to posts and comments, trackback URLs, monthly archives and so on. In the same time this variety of URLs returning similar or identical pages represents a clear case of duplicate content.
WordPress And Duplicate Content
The first evidences of duplicate content produced by your WordPress CMS can be found in your sidebar. They are category pages and monthly/daily archives. Category pages store your articles posted under the same topic-a category. Such pages have no unique content; they are just a collection of your previous posts. Monthly and daily archives also simply group your previous articles by the date of posting. Sometimes when you have only one post in a given day, the archive page for the date and your post are totally identical.
The next case of duplicate content is even more prominent. It can be your home page itself. If it contains not excerpts but the full text of your posts, then it duplicates your post pages. This also applies to the “next/previous entries” pages-those accessible via /page/2, /3, /4 etc.
Feeds. Search engine spiders crawl all the content they can reach and of course this includes RSS feeds too. The additional problem with them is that Google may choose to display your RSS URL in the search results over the link to the original post. In this case the user who clicks this result will see an XML formatted page which is not “human-friendly”.
Trackback URLs. Many WordPress templates add trackback links after posts. This links enable authors to track who links to their posts. Usually, if your post URL looks like “yoursite.com/2006-11-30/yourpost/” its trackback URL will be “yoursite.com/2006-11-30/yourpost/trackback/”.
Identical meta-description. By default WordPress doesn”t provide a tool to add unique meta description tags to your posts, and they either have none or share a single site-wide description. Having no meta description at all is a disadvantage, as a properly written one can make your snippet stand out in a SERP. Having an identical description for all your pages is a threat, as Google might get them filtered out as too similar.
Because of the duplicate content Google search can return less desired URLs (such as feeds or archives instead of original posts); your pages can be moved out of their index, or placed into the supplemental results, which are rarely displayed to users.







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A Review Of The No Duplicate Comments Wordpress Plugin – Your Blog’s Bodyguard Against Spam
Posted by Jon in WordPress Plugins on October 15, 2009
Spam is defined as an unsolicited advertisement aggressively published in a public media, and often in a manner that is unethical and detrimental to other peopleâs enjoyment of the services rendered by the said media.Â
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When blog commenting became a very popular way of building back links for a particular website, blogs all over the internet were littered with spam in the form of such blog comments. It was quite common that a reader, who usually goes by a username with three or more consonants in succession, will post an âinvitationâ to visit a particular URL even if such an invitation and such a URL donât have anything to do with the blog post nor the resulting discussion.Â
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These spamming activities became so prevalent, so incessant, and so widespread that Wordpress itself started banning accounts which were associated with such approaches.
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Many Wordpress plugins also introduced the ânofollowâ function. Basically, when this function is turned on, the blog pages will tell search engine spiders not to provide any weight to the URLs that will be posted in them. It was hoped that such a feature would make spammers surrender, as the links they will ram down blogsâ throats will not lead to better page ranks for their own websites.
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It was a case of wishful thinking on the part of blog owners.
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The ânofollowâ feature dissuaded some spammers, but most of them still persisted. URLs left in blog comments, after all, werenât only meant to build up a websiteâs link popularity. They were also designed to garner â or perhaps, the proper term is âstealâ â a blogâs visitors. These URLs in blog comments were also designed to generate direct traffic.
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So, what can Wordpress bloggers do?
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Enter the No Duplicate Comments Wordpress plugin.Â
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The No Duplicate Comments plugin determines comments in the same page which have:
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-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â the same content;
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â the same name for the author; and/or
-Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â the same email address used.
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The No Duplicate Comments plugin will not automatically delete duplicate posts. Rather, the plugin will lead the person who just submitted a post that is deemed a duplicate to an error page where he will be required to change a significant portion of his comment before it can be accepted for publication. This is a reasonable compromise, as duplicate comments can sometimes be accidental and readers should always be given the benefit of the doubt as they are the lifeblood of blogs.
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It is hoped that the No Duplicate Comments Wordpress plugin, together with other Wordpress plugins that set a particular page as ânofollow,â will curb the proliferation of spamming activities that have negatively affected the reading convenience and interactive nature of blogs.
We recommend that you download this Plugin and place it straight on your Blog in order to get the best results. Visit http://www.myeasyonlinepay.com/blogging-tools for a comprehensive selection of Plugins on the internet today.
Against, Blog’s, Bodyguard, Comments, Duplicate, Plugin, Review, Spam, Wordpress
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