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Lately, I've been confused about internal link building, topic relevance and keyword cannibalization. It's probably best if I share examples.
Main article 1: info intent, e.g. "grooming your dog" (fake keyword as an example). It's a specific query, pretty long tail and there are no "longer tail" versions of it. It's a 3k words article and I wanted to boost it with internal links. So, I write a supporting article targeting the same theme but not the same keyword, e.g. "bathing your dog". This support content is smaller in terms of number of words and internally links to the dog grooming article with exact match anchor. Result: main article 1 now ranks for dog bathing AND dog grooming, but the dog grooming ranking doesn't improve.
So, main article kw = "grooming your dog", support kw = "bathing your dog", and the support mentions the main kw several times and then exact match links to the main article. So, the link text in the support = "grooming your dog".
This has happened several times now, which made me think: if the main article "eats" the keyword of the supporting article simply because the support links to it (with the main article kw), then for internal links anchors matter less and article topics matter more. From there, it's a short jump to the conclusion that if I want the dog grooming article to get a boost through internal links for its own keyword... I have to write supporting articles that cover the same keyword (but with a different angle). So, I set up a bunch of tests.
Main article 2, 3, 4, etc.: these are all info intent or review style articles. After the above kept happening, I decided to create supporting articles targeting the same keyword as the main. There are several differences: supports are like 600-1.000 words, solid on-page SEO, one image only. The mains are much bigger (2-3k words or more), perfectionist on-page with multiple images, H2s, H3s, alt texts, etc. Just to be sure, the supports cover the same kw but from a different angle. The main article might be an "ultimate guide", while the support is like a X do's and X don'ts type article. Basically, the mains covering everything and supports cover one aspect of the topic only. Now, for the internal links I use exact match anchors. Why? To use the "keyword eating" idea I saw in the wild. The whole idea is: nothing is as relevant as a link from an article about the same topic. In terms of external link building, all links go to the main and not the support just to be safe.
Now, whenever I come across keyword cannibalization chats it's always about:
I've tested expanding main articles with text and images. Nothing. I tried the "write about similar topic and link" approach and it eats keywords, but doesn't boost the main kw so kind of nothing. And as for the supporting articles targeting the same keywords, it's a mixed bag as well in terms of results. It would have been fine if we're talking about 1-2 articles, but I'm talking about having tested two dozen articles here over a time period of 6 months.
It almost seems like internal links only help you rank for additional kw's and don't boost the main kw anymore?
Wtf is going on with internal links these days lol. I'm confused. At this point, I'm almost second-guessing how to do internal link building all together. What is the right approach? What am I missing? How would you do internal linking for "grooming your dog"?
Main article 1: info intent, e.g. "grooming your dog" (fake keyword as an example). It's a specific query, pretty long tail and there are no "longer tail" versions of it. It's a 3k words article and I wanted to boost it with internal links. So, I write a supporting article targeting the same theme but not the same keyword, e.g. "bathing your dog". This support content is smaller in terms of number of words and internally links to the dog grooming article with exact match anchor. Result: main article 1 now ranks for dog bathing AND dog grooming, but the dog grooming ranking doesn't improve.
So, main article kw = "grooming your dog", support kw = "bathing your dog", and the support mentions the main kw several times and then exact match links to the main article. So, the link text in the support = "grooming your dog".
This has happened several times now, which made me think: if the main article "eats" the keyword of the supporting article simply because the support links to it (with the main article kw), then for internal links anchors matter less and article topics matter more. From there, it's a short jump to the conclusion that if I want the dog grooming article to get a boost through internal links for its own keyword... I have to write supporting articles that cover the same keyword (but with a different angle). So, I set up a bunch of tests.
Main article 2, 3, 4, etc.: these are all info intent or review style articles. After the above kept happening, I decided to create supporting articles targeting the same keyword as the main. There are several differences: supports are like 600-1.000 words, solid on-page SEO, one image only. The mains are much bigger (2-3k words or more), perfectionist on-page with multiple images, H2s, H3s, alt texts, etc. Just to be sure, the supports cover the same kw but from a different angle. The main article might be an "ultimate guide", while the support is like a X do's and X don'ts type article. Basically, the mains covering everything and supports cover one aspect of the topic only. Now, for the internal links I use exact match anchors. Why? To use the "keyword eating" idea I saw in the wild. The whole idea is: nothing is as relevant as a link from an article about the same topic. In terms of external link building, all links go to the main and not the support just to be safe.
Now, whenever I come across keyword cannibalization chats it's always about:
- Don't get external links for all pages that are competing for the same kw ("pick one, not all")
- Don't have duplicate content ("I don't, content for the mains and supports is 100% unique and differently written, just same kw")
- Don't have thin content ("supporting articles all have added value, i.e. unique insights not shared in a main")
I've tested expanding main articles with text and images. Nothing. I tried the "write about similar topic and link" approach and it eats keywords, but doesn't boost the main kw so kind of nothing. And as for the supporting articles targeting the same keywords, it's a mixed bag as well in terms of results. It would have been fine if we're talking about 1-2 articles, but I'm talking about having tested two dozen articles here over a time period of 6 months.
It almost seems like internal links only help you rank for additional kw's and don't boost the main kw anymore?
Wtf is going on with internal links these days lol. I'm confused. At this point, I'm almost second-guessing how to do internal link building all together. What is the right approach? What am I missing? How would you do internal linking for "grooming your dog"?