I was suggesting that, on the internet in general, the word "dannon" is often followed by the word "yogurt", even in normal unlinked text.
Maybe they're running some kind of semantic analysis of the entire corpus, not just the hyperlinked text.
Interestingly, that suggests that you could alter search rankings without even linking to the target site... just generate keyword-rich babble and throw it out there to be spidered. I guess the SEO forums are the place to ask about this.
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What's your point? Obviously it'll be easier for them to get it right if you add the word "dannon".
Parent comment
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&sa=X&oi=spell&resnum=0&ct=result&cd=1&q=%22dannon+yogurt%22&spell=1
Replies
I was suggesting that, on the internet in general, the word "dannon" is often followed by the word "yogurt", even in normal unlinked text.
Maybe they're running some kind of semantic analysis of the entire corpus, not just the hyperlinked text.
Interestingly, that suggests that you could alter search rankings without even linking to the target site... just generate keyword-rich babble and throw it out there to be spidered. I guess the SEO forums are the place to ask about this.