PROTECTING YOUR CONTENT Sometimes you can do nothing wrong and still get stuck with a duplicate content penalty if online thieves steal content from your site. Thieves take not only your written work, but other types of content from your site, such as page layouts, graphics, and links. Most of the time they care little for the content itself, but instead they simply want your spot in the SERPs. Intentions are quite malicious they hope that youll eventually get banned, and they'll enjoy the ride! Just a few small changes can ensure that your content is protected. Try a service like Copyscape.com, which allows you to determine whether any of the content on your site has been copied elsewhere. Simply type in the URL of the page in question, and Copyscape will return a list of pages from Googles index that have the exact same text, whether it be from your content, merchant content, feeds, or other articles youve reused. There are two options: a free manual search or a subscription to the Copysentry service, which offers greater protection. When you find your content on someone else's site, try emailing them first and let them know that they've been discovered, and ask that they comply with your removal request. If they dont respond to this request, your next move is to report them to Google as violators of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act guidelines, detailed at www.google.com/dmca.html. DUPLICATION CAN BE AVOIDED The following strategies will help you modify your online behavior so that your content is more unique and you are better able to avoid duplicate content penalties. Mix up automated feeds with UNIQUE content: If there is any duplicate content on your site from automated feeds and especially merchant feeds, make a special effort to incorporate unique material. If feeds are a great source of commissions for you, use some of the profits to protect your site and develop unique content. Dont use canned content in your own affiliate program: Its never a smart idea to encourage your affiliates to copy your articles, sales copy, reviews, and ads. While it involves more work, a smarter strategy consists of building a growing database of resources for affiliates that contain multiple versions of your marketing tools, your sales and pre-sales copy, and mini-site templates. This extra work will impress your affiliates AND protect your business from penalties for duplicate content. You should also offer your affiliates free, branded downloads, like viral reports, software tools, audio and videos. None of these downloads will appear on their sites, so they will avoid duplicate content consequences. Permanently redirect multiple domains to the same site: Use a 301 status code on your site, which signals to browsers that a page has moved. This permanent redirection code will demonstrate to Google spiders that youre directing branded domains to your own web site, rather than using duplicate content at another site. Consult your hosting company if you have any questions about implementing this suggestion. Avoid submitting articles in HTML format: Sending articles in plain text format forces anyone who would scrap them for their own sites to do a little bit of work. Without an HTML format, they will have to do some formatting of their own, at least with paragraph tags or line breaks. Reformatting may not always prevent the content from being judged as duplicate, but it may help. Make each article unique by creating multiple versions: Creating multiple versions is definitely more work, but it's definitely worth the time involved when you consider how many places your content could appear. Try creating several versions of the same article before submitting it for distribution. These different versions can be considered creative edits, in the sense that they involve a few simple revisions to make the content more unique. Consider delegating this task to a college student or freelance editor; their labor is less costly and, after all, youre paying for rewrites rather than original research and writing. Remember, always make sure that anyone who uses your content with your permission re-writes it in their own words. And, always make your own content as unique as possible. Google is now able to determine where the content first appeared. This means that it's more likely that the people who are stealing your content will be penalized, and not you.
Please Rate this Article 5 out of 54 out of 53 out of 52 out of 51 out of 5
Not yet Rated