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Post by account_disabled on Feb 28, 2024 4:56:46 GMT -5
Avoid cross-links between different silos . If you want to do it, just go to the main page of another silo . Not to the deeper content. Since arbitrary links between silos can weaken the theme, no subpage within a silo should link to a subpage in another silo. Organizing your content and internal links into these structures leads to more link juice for the top-level page of each silo. That page becomes the most powerful, most relevant on your site for the keywords related to that theme. What should pages become and what should Chinese Thailand Phone Number List blogs become? This is a question that has often arisen for me in the past. To get straight to the point: You would rather not have all informative content (or content that fits into one of the silos on your website) as a blog. It may seem a bit strange: the use of blog articles. I completely understand that line of thinking! However, most company websites have a mix of content types: normal pages, blogs, service pages, product pages, portfolio pages, and so on. This rule also applies to those types of sites. Why this recommendation? The information on website pages generally remains constant, while blog posts are published continuously. Pages are not tied to a publication date and can be placed hierarchically in a website. Blogs actually always have a flat structure and are linked to a publication moment, which makes them time-bound and more ephemeral. Search engines know this, and will therefore treat blog posts and pages differently.
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