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Is Google slapping you with “duplicate content” penalty? Do you know what that penalty looks like? What if it wasn’t a penalty… but instead…There’s always two sides to every coin, and we’re going to look at both sides in this article on titles.
You’ll also see a way to get your titles clustered onto the first page of Google search results, and you will have proof positive of exactly how important titles are for search ranking.
What a great deal!
You know, I had a wack dream the other night. I was talking to Stanford Professor Donald Knuth. I swear this is true, because I hardly ever remember dreams. (If you don’t who Prof. Knuth is, no worries, just skip ahead to the rest of the article.)
The dream went something like this: I was talking to someone else, and Prof. Knuth was eavesdropping down the hall (weird, I know).
Then he said something like “Nobody follows me!” (a patently absurd remark, he has legions of fans).
I replied with:
“People want to make their own mark on the world.”
Then Prof Knuth and I were off talking earnestly about contributing to the TeX community (which I have) and whatnot. Very peculiar. I don’t think it means anything more than I’m kind of a geek down deep, but it’s as close as I’m liable to get to speak to Prof. Knuth, so I’m cool with it.
What about you: Do you want to make your own mark on the world? I know I do, but that’s a long story for another time. In the meantime, perhaps we can make a mark or two on the world of WordPress.
Duplicate content penalty doesn’t exist!
The first thing you need to know is that there is no such thing as a “duplicate content penalty.” I know this to be true because Google says so; here’s proof:
Now, that being said, Google will “aggregate” results that appear similar to their indexing algorithm. These aggregated results are often displayed as “Show more results from yourwebsite.com,” with a hyperlink that will unfold to display… more results.
(Screenshots coming, below.)
First, let’s a take a detour and examine a technique I am using successfully to rank very high on Google search results. Frankly, I probably shouldn’t post this publicly. It’s going to get ripped off, scraped and reposted all over the web and other web sites are going to get credit for my techniques. You can almost always count on “SEO might equal SEO right,” regardless of how fair or unfair it is.
In any case…
Create your own keywords
Instead of pursuing other people’s keywords, consider creating keywords you practically own outright.
Somebody has to do it.
I’m doing it myself; I own a number of “Practical Tips” domains. For example, I own “Practical SEO Tips.” I have enough of these (about a dozen) that I believe I could easily dominate searches once I established the notion that a “practical tip” was worth searching for. At the moment, Website In A Weekend totally dominates the phrase “Practical WordPress Tip,” and I’ll prove it in a screenshot below. There Is No Box is creating the “Practical Productivity Tips” series, which I believe will rank very highly once a couple of dozen productivity tips are published.
If this isn’t reason enough, consider Brian Clark’s advice on targeting niche phrases as part of his Magnetic Headlines series.
However, if you want to see how powerfully your title element and blog post title (H1 element) affect search results, read on!
Practical WordPress tips
I own the “Practical WordPress Tip” keyword phrase. Here’s some screenshots to prove it:
The above shot shows “Similar Results” folded. I suspect that many people – include SEO experts – would regard this as a “duplicate content penalty” where Google “slaps” a website for having too much content that’s too similar.
Personally, I don’t mind, and here’s why.
As a reader, I like the folded results. It keeps the results clean, providing both depth (many articles from the same site) and breadth (many different sites) all on the same page. In this case, the first page of Google SERPs.
Putting on my marketing hat, I give you this:
I would like to be able to stand on both sides of the counter at once.’ Julius Rosenwald
I’ll take the folding “penalty” to have ALL my articles available on the first page! Let’s unfold it and take a look:
I like it!
Again, this works for me because I’m not hard-selling from any of these pages, and I don’t consider myself to have a lot of real competition in the DIY WordPress market.
Ok that’s a little too egotistical… maybe a little delusional… let’s try again: Given I keep up my current pace of 2-4 very high quality articles on WordPress for the next year or so, I believe Website In A Weekend will be one of the top WordPress sites on the internet.
Also, my goal for the Practical WordPress series is to get readers sucked into the series, such that they read them all in a row! Since these articles are all linked into a chain, all I need is to get a reader into the first one, and let the links to the previous and next tips do the work for me.
Next is a slightly different technique, where I’m tagging an entire series of posts such that the reader has access to the entire series once they get into one of the “Unleash WordPress” articles.
Unleash WordPress
“Unleash WordPress” is a second series of posts, covering material that is intermediate in scope. Here’s what the search results look like:
Let’s take a look at the unfolded version:
As you can see, Website In A Weekend has a pretty good grip on “Unleash WordPress” as well.
Penalty is perspective
As you can see, the so-called duplicate content penalty can work for you, or against you, and it’s mostly a matter of your perspective. This article contains keywords for both the “practical” and “unleash” series, so it will further reinforce search results on both of those terms in this context. If either of the terms gets popular (and they will when I start to earn money), the spammers, scammers and associated black hats will horn in to siphon my traffic away. Having parasites is simply a side effect of success. In some respect it’s a high quality problem, and I’m not going to worry about it too much right now.
One other very important result is demonstrated in the screenshots above:
Your HTML title elements and article title h1 elements are heavily weighted by Google.
We’ll pick this conversation up again on titles in the near future.


Ah, the intricate web you weave, Dave. Slowly, slowly, reeling us in with your valuable lessons. I like it that there’s a tad of the nutty professor in you. Makes learning fun.
Your explanation about duplicate content is the most helpful I’ve ever read so far. I’m taking your word for it, but of course I’d still check out the two links you provided.
Bummer. You left a cliffhanger here. Ah well, I hope the installments come every day. Can’t get enough of them, if you ask me.
.-= jan geronimo´s last blog ..10 Blog Lessons I Did Not Learn From Darren Rowse =-.
@jan – I haven’t really started with the nuttiness yet… it will slowly emerge. Don’t want to frighten the children, &c.
Also, I’m bending the definitions here a little bit in part because you will see similar statements in various articles. Definitely read the links carefully. What Google says they are doing and what you will actually see happening isn’t always the same, as noted in the comments to those articles.
.-= Dr WordPress!´s last blog ..Programming Is “Actionary” Blogging Is “Reactionary” =-.
Dave,
As always great stuff. I think you’re keywords are going to take off. I had no idea about how the duplicate content penalty works, so thank you for the explaination! I’d take being folded up on the front page over being on the second page anyday!.
Does h1 really get that much preference on Google over h2? I just think h2 looks cleaner on my blog. If h1 has extra SEO benefits, I’ll definitely take advantage of it.
I’m excited with where this blog is going! Keep up the great content.
.-= Blake @ props blog´s last blog ..5 Flash Maze Challenges to Strain Your Brain =-.
@Blake –
Definitely check into Google’s explanations to get a more complete story on duplicate content.
Like I said, I’ve probably spilled the beans way too early here… watch for some very high profile bloggers to pick this up and run with it! Hopefully, I’ll get a link or some credit. In any case, I’ve never seen this written up before.
Good ideas do erupt spontaneously though, so it’s almost certain more than one person is using any technique I’ve discovered for myself, or I could possibly write about.
Using h1 tags correctly are part of POSH, plain old semantic html, which you should read up about. If you don’t like your h1 tags, do what Holly did and restyle them.
.-= Dr WordPress!´s last blog ..Programming Is “Actionary” Blogging Is “Reactionary” =-.
Great job on this, Dave. Love how you break it down into so much detail. Duplicate content and keywords, along with a myriad of other things, are all part of the blog balance. So hard to not let too many eggs drop in the process.
.-= Gabe | freebloghelp.com´s last blog ..FTC is going to force bloggers to disclose payments =-.
Solid. This is good stuff. I haven’t heard this explained in this way before.
I’ve gotta go create some keywords now.
I’ve always had my site title be the h1 element, adn the post title be an h2 element. Do you think this should be reversed for posts in single view?
.-= Sean´s last blog ..My Art is About Gears, Plants, and Flowers =-.
@Gabe – the simple things are hard enough!
@Sean – Mitts off my keywords, pal! j/k.
If you take a look at source for posts on the main page and posts in single view, for a POSH-compliant theme, you will answer your own question. I’ve (of course) got a post brewing on that… as I mentioned above.
.-= Dr WordPress!´s last blog ..Programming Is “Actionary” Blogging Is “Reactionary” =-.
Doc W., I know better than to steal your tactics.
Your strategies on the other hand, well, those may well be borrowed.
.-= Sean´s last blog ..Speed Bumps on the Road to Productivity =-.
@Sean – Wait till you get a load of my new “ping pong linking” strategy. In a post coming to a blog near you!
.-= Dr WordPress!´s last blog ..Programming Is “Actionary” Blogging Is “Reactionary” =-.
Currently, I am “unleashing” yet another WP website which will be competing in a very high competitive market, ie., recipes. While this website will primarily be for “generating income” (not splog), some hard work needs to be done. The “serial” tactic (almost the “serial killer”) will definitely come into play here (hope you don’t mind if I borrow this tactic too).
With regards to the duplicate content “taboo”, the explanation you provide here is much more “practical” than the theory of what I’ve already seen. This certainly makes me look at this myth in a totally different perspective now.
.-= DiTesco´s last blog ..How To Become A Better Blogspot User? =-.
@DiTesco – Check your email. We need to talk about hRecipe, my WordPress plugin for formatting recipes.
.-= Dr WordPress!´s last blog ..New Obsessions — Opportunities and whimsy abound in stagnant economies =-.
@DiTesco,
http://tinobox.com/wordpress/hrecipe
I need to get back to work on this.
Not this year, but soon, semantic markup
is going to *slay*.
Over 1000 downloads on the plugin.
.-= Dr WordPress!´s last blog ..New Obsessions — Opportunities and whimsy abound in stagnant economies =-.