At the top of my page I place my anchor using this code <a name="
seo"></a>
At the bottom of my page I place this href
SEO
This produces this link:
SEO and now I have created a same page link containing my keyword and thus increased my density as well as received added weight by virtue of it being an anchor.
Using your links for "on page" optimization
There are two ways you can utilize your links for search engine optimization. 1. You can use your links for your "on page" optimization; 2. you can use your links for "off page" optimization.
When using your links for onpage optimization consider the following:
Your ">anchor</a> text effects your density
Href="these words all count towards what is called reference_tags density" << ???
Your title="attribute adds a very small amount of extra weight" Use it like an "alt"
Knowing these 3 facts allows you to incorporate your keywords into your links from inception and when you have a page that you think is written to perfection and you don't want keyword loading clogging up the flow, using your links is a great way to make up added density and keyword weight. .
href="http://www.mydomain.com/page.html" vs href="page.html" Which do I use?
The only time you use the full mydomain.com is if the domain itself has keywords that the page the link is pointing to or the page the link is on, is targeting those keywords, otherwise you should go with page.html as this drastically reduces filesize especially for pages with a lot of internal links. * note one other exception is for the index always link to your index using
http://www.domain.com so that your internal
PR boost matches your externap
PR boost, your link partners linked to you with
http://www.domain.com and so should you.