Amen. My thoughts mirror this. There’s a lot more SEO snake oil for sale on the web and it’s been that way for years.
I will probably be shot for this, but I consider much of the energy and money which goes to “SEO” and “SEF” to be in vain. This is probably due to my having been active on the net since 1994 and a publisher since 1995. I have seen vast amounts of theories, experts and snake oil…..and we can NEVER underestimate the power that the creation of a multi-million dollar industry (SEO) creates.
What I seldom see anywhere is a healthy list of Things To Do For Better SEO, that, once done, actually improve SE numbers, ranking, and, more important than anything, more page views.
I just typed into google ‘reviews of LG televisions” and got these urls as the top two:
http://www.cnet.com.au/tvs/lcd/0,239035307,240091646,00.htm
reviews.cnet.com/flat-panel-tvs/lg-du-42lz30/4505-6482_7-31263307.html
Strangely enough, the properly named URLS were below that.
A perfect example where “density” doesn’t seem to matter much depending on the key words used in the search.
First, let me debunk the whole idea of “general” SEO. In todays world, you are worried about one thing - Google! That is my opinion, of course, but borne out by experience and stats. See enclosed - my site is a general subject and should reflect a lot of others.
Anyone who thinks they are “experts” in googles technology are, IMHO, full of it. If it were so easy, we’d see 100’s of competitors to google.
Exactly, the proof is in the taste of the pudding. Most of the sites I manage get the vast majority of search engine hits from Google. Yahoo! is a pale second at less than 10% of Google’s numbers. Microsoft is further down the list. All others are outrageously anemic compared to Google results.
What seems to make a difference with Google? My basics (not necessarily in order of importance):
1 - Fresh, regularly updated, original content, relevant to the whole site
2 - Other sites with decent Google Page Rank that link to the content on your site
3 - Keyword density (keywords, keywords in the URL string, which match keywords in the body of content)
IMHO, after doing it for a dozen years, that’s about it.
Anyway, my basic advice is this. You have a limited amount of time and money. Google, in general, will rank your pages by the quality of content and incoming and outgoing links. Time spent on improving your content will ace time spent on redirecting URLs.
Ditto. What he said. A site with relevant, updated content, that is linked to by other ranked sites, will fare better with relevant keywords. Most of the rest of the effort is mumbo jumbo.
BTW, the old version of this software, Pmachine, used numerical urls and I did just fine with them. Forum topics on EE are also numerical and they come up just fine in google.
That’s been my experience, too.
I would suggest paying attention to TITLES as well as page content. URLS are nice for YOU to keep track of that is there…in some cases, so that is a plus for URLs with words. Perhaps change and redirect your main section or main page (pages with a lot of links) URLS if you want to spend time doing it.
Also in agreement. In fact, on some sites I create a Title that works (not always possible to embed keywords or other density tricks in the title), but expand the URL string to include more keywords from the content.
But, in the end, I would throw out all the ideas about link juice and concentrate on building the best site you can build.
It does seem that if all those SEO tools and options actually worked that there would be a way to determine which work well, and which don’t, no?