Even if I create an absolutely huge site and get.

Let’s analyze what I’ll need. In the interest of getting paid I have to figure out a better way of generating huge amounts of authority.. However, I’ll keep the subject coverage factors in my back pocket because they’ll help me deliver the final kill once we catch up. Also, a few informational sites with lots of pages and inbound links(a range of 7k-45k). Even if I create an absolutely huge site and get tons of inbound links quickly I could still get stuck treading water with the sharks for the next 3-4 years. I got some serious age and authoritative competition to deal with. Catching up? Hmm. Within these results the average domain age is 6 years. Alright, so I got quite the project ahead of me. The presence of subpages in the results tells me that “subject coverage” factors aren’t highly required because in this case Google luckily believes that a single page written by a punk editor is more relevant than an entire site dedicated to the subject due to domain authority. there’s an interesting dilemma. By shithead subpages I’m of course affectionately referring to major authoritative sites that have a page on the matter, such as Wikipedia, About.com, and Amazon. There also seems to be a couple shithead subpages. For this fictitious example we’re faced with a top 15 consisting of four or five very large old community sites on the subject. The domain age range is 5-10 years.

Original text search at: www.bluehatseo.com/2007/04/

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