All of a sudden my published posts are not available when I click on them. Only the title and date published comes up.
Is that you WA blog or your website blog? When I clicked on your blog on here it works just fine for me.
Francesca
No, my website. I issued a support ticket as well because I am getting a critical error message on my site. Hopefully it is an easy fix.
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Why is my posts is not visible when I click on it?
All of a sudden my published posts are not available when I click on them. Only the title and date published comes up.
Is that you WA blog or your website blog? When I clicked on your blog on here it works just fine for me.
Francesca
No, my website. I issued a support ticket as well because I am getting a critical error message on my site. Hopefully it is an easy fix.
See more comments
Hi, so I have been reading that many of you are warning about too many links on your website that might Google think it is spam, but I am still a bit confused and need some cla
There are many "rules of thumb" about how many affiliate links to put on a page, but really, there is not a specific amount which will "hurt" your rankings. There are many examples of sites with lots of affiliate links which DO rank, and many with NO affiliate links which don't rank. It just depends.
That being said, you shouldn't be recommending the same affiliate products over and over again on each page. If you want to promote a specific product or set of products frequently, the best idea will be to create a single review page, then link from your other pages to that single review page.
This will make updating affiliate links and offers in the future infinitely easier. Rather than updating links across 100 pages, you just update one page!
I know you have quite a few different answers here, and the reason is because it’s situational.
In some cases where you’re linking to a clove essential oil that’s sold from one vendor and a lavender essential oil where it’s by a different vendor, it would only be frustrating to the end user if you only included one link to a homepage or something. In that case, do what’s best for user experience.
In another case where you’re only talking about lavender essential oil, you won’t need to link 25 times to make the message clear.
It’s case by case. You don’t want it to be too littered with links that it’s like avoiding a landline just to read your content, but you also don’t want to minimize it to the point that it’s hard for them to take action if they wanted to.
Use your best judgement because it’s no set in stone number of links allowed. There are ranking posts that recommend lots of products and have lots of of affiliate links.
What I think works best is when you have more internal links than external links or affiliate links if that’s possible for you. Also, where possible And where it makes sense, link to reviews.
For me, if I find myself repeating a vendors’ name often, I make it a priority to write a review about them.
Just a thought. Hopefully this helps. User experience comes first.
Hi Elize.
It is a little confusing.
The general rule is that you don't want affiliate links in every post.
Some of your posts need to be just supplying helpful information because Google loves that and will reward you accordingly.
Add your affiliate links to posts, like product reviews, where they will have the most impact.
Then internally link your informational posts to the review posts containing the affiliate links.
Hope that helps. Let us know if anything we have said is unclear.
Good luck.
Colette and Philip
As long as its not similar in many of your other pages or posts, it should be alright.
I guess 2 different links per post would not really be an issue or considered as spam
If all the oils are from one place then one link should suffice. You could use product funnels then the number of links don’t matter on the page you use to funnel because you are not trying to rank it.
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Affiliate links for individual products?
Hi, so I have been reading that many of you are warning about too many links on your website that might Google think it is spam, but I am still a bit confused and need some cla
There are many "rules of thumb" about how many affiliate links to put on a page, but really, there is not a specific amount which will "hurt" your rankings. There are many examples of sites with lots of affiliate links which DO rank, and many with NO affiliate links which don't rank. It just depends.
That being said, you shouldn't be recommending the same affiliate products over and over again on each page. If you want to promote a specific product or set of products frequently, the best idea will be to create a single review page, then link from your other pages to that single review page.
This will make updating affiliate links and offers in the future infinitely easier. Rather than updating links across 100 pages, you just update one page!
I know you have quite a few different answers here, and the reason is because it’s situational.
In some cases where you’re linking to a clove essential oil that’s sold from one vendor and a lavender essential oil where it’s by a different vendor, it would only be frustrating to the end user if you only included one link to a homepage or something. In that case, do what’s best for user experience.
In another case where you’re only talking about lavender essential oil, you won’t need to link 25 times to make the message clear.
It’s case by case. You don’t want it to be too littered with links that it’s like avoiding a landline just to read your content, but you also don’t want to minimize it to the point that it’s hard for them to take action if they wanted to.
Use your best judgement because it’s no set in stone number of links allowed. There are ranking posts that recommend lots of products and have lots of of affiliate links.
What I think works best is when you have more internal links than external links or affiliate links if that’s possible for you. Also, where possible And where it makes sense, link to reviews.
For me, if I find myself repeating a vendors’ name often, I make it a priority to write a review about them.
Just a thought. Hopefully this helps. User experience comes first.
Hi Elize.
It is a little confusing.
The general rule is that you don't want affiliate links in every post.
Some of your posts need to be just supplying helpful information because Google loves that and will reward you accordingly.
Add your affiliate links to posts, like product reviews, where they will have the most impact.
Then internally link your informational posts to the review posts containing the affiliate links.
Hope that helps. Let us know if anything we have said is unclear.
Good luck.
Colette and Philip
As long as its not similar in many of your other pages or posts, it should be alright.
I guess 2 different links per post would not really be an issue or considered as spam
If all the oils are from one place then one link should suffice. You could use product funnels then the number of links don’t matter on the page you use to funnel because you are not trying to rank it.
See more comments
Hi guys, I live in Australia and when I started my website I started with a .com.au then got a .com website. Do I need the .com.au site at all? Would there be any benefits for
Whether you want to target the USA, the world, or a specific country is up to you. With a general .com, you have the option of getting traffic from every country in the world, with a focus on the USA.
Internet traffic and online shopping is massive in the USA compared to any other country. My recommendation is always is to stick to a .com domain name as your first website. If you want to target country-specific products through keywords and topics for your posts, that's fine too.
For example, mywebiste.com/best-products-in-argentina
With country-specific domains, you limit yourself to traffic from that one country. It's a much smaller traffic pool, and you generally won't rank for any search terms outside of that specific country.
For example, if I have a website bestproteinpowder.ca, I'll only rank for "best protein powder" when someone from Canada searches that term.
However, the advantage of using country specific domains is that you can dominate that area because you'll probably be a lot better at marketing and ranking than most other local sites.
So it's a question of whether you want a small piece of a big pie or a big piece of a small pie. My advice though is to learn your skills on a .com, then transfer those skills to a country specific domain in the future if you still want to at that time.
Up to you though! There's lots of unexplored opportunities online, and you may have some great ideas that could work out. I'm just going off of advice for "best practices", and what I've personally seen/learned over the years.
In your situation, unless you are specifically targeting Australians, my recommendation would be a .com.
Well, I have both at the moment but I need to make a decision whether I am keeping the .com.au.
Since I own both am I allowed to publish the same article on both?
No, you would not be able to publish the same article on both websites. Technically, you "can", but only one website would rank. The other website would be counted as duplicate content, and would not rank.
I'd just redirect the .au domain name to the .com website. This can be done on the domain at your registrar, which I assume is not WA since it's a .com.au domain name, which is not available at WA.
If your site is mainly for Australians then use the dot com dot au. But if you want to reach an international audience then you'll need the dot com.
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Dot com or dot com dot au as well?
Hi guys, I live in Australia and when I started my website I started with a .com.au then got a .com website. Do I need the .com.au site at all? Would there be any benefits for
Whether you want to target the USA, the world, or a specific country is up to you. With a general .com, you have the option of getting traffic from every country in the world, with a focus on the USA.
Internet traffic and online shopping is massive in the USA compared to any other country. My recommendation is always is to stick to a .com domain name as your first website. If you want to target country-specific products through keywords and topics for your posts, that's fine too.
For example, mywebiste.com/best-products-in-argentina
With country-specific domains, you limit yourself to traffic from that one country. It's a much smaller traffic pool, and you generally won't rank for any search terms outside of that specific country.
For example, if I have a website bestproteinpowder.ca, I'll only rank for "best protein powder" when someone from Canada searches that term.
However, the advantage of using country specific domains is that you can dominate that area because you'll probably be a lot better at marketing and ranking than most other local sites.
So it's a question of whether you want a small piece of a big pie or a big piece of a small pie. My advice though is to learn your skills on a .com, then transfer those skills to a country specific domain in the future if you still want to at that time.
Up to you though! There's lots of unexplored opportunities online, and you may have some great ideas that could work out. I'm just going off of advice for "best practices", and what I've personally seen/learned over the years.
In your situation, unless you are specifically targeting Australians, my recommendation would be a .com.
Well, I have both at the moment but I need to make a decision whether I am keeping the .com.au.
Since I own both am I allowed to publish the same article on both?
No, you would not be able to publish the same article on both websites. Technically, you "can", but only one website would rank. The other website would be counted as duplicate content, and would not rank.
I'd just redirect the .au domain name to the .com website. This can be done on the domain at your registrar, which I assume is not WA since it's a .com.au domain name, which is not available at WA.
If your site is mainly for Australians then use the dot com dot au. But if you want to reach an international audience then you'll need the dot com.
See more comments
Good answers for you, Elize!
Jeff