Partial long-tailed keywords

by bblom
2 replies
  • SEO
  • |
So let's say that I have a domain: "most-awesome.net" and I write articles based on the keyword: "most awesome spaceships for martians." If I'm trying to rank for this keyword would it be better to organize my title headings so that the URL comes up as: "most-awesome.net/spaceships-for-martians" -or- "most-awesome.net/most-awesome-spaceships-for-martians?" What I'm trying to do is to produce relevant articles for each individual niche keyword related to the domain keyword instead of buying out each individual domain. Is this capable of placing these articles within the first page of Google? Am I astray in my rationale? Any advice would be much appreciated.
#keywords #longtailed #partial
  • Profile picture of the author Robert Bleach
    I'm about to do something similar, so I think it's a good idea. As to the post titles, I'd use the full keyword title. Not only will it make more sense from a reader's perspective (you want the Google listing to show that your article matches the user's search, and they may not notice the domain name in the search listings), but I think it's far better from an SEO standpoint as well.
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  • Profile picture of the author walkerseo
    According to everything I have read online and on SEOMOz.org, etc. Google is paying less attention to Exact Match Domains. But I think a good sound plan may be to get a domain with your main keyword and don't repeat that keyword in your new posts/pages.

    Relevance is really big with G and I would choose a main domain that was big enough to hang all of the other relevant info on; if that makes sense.
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