Why Duplicate Content Is Good For You
There are only two things that matter in SEO: writing great  content for your users, and building links into that  content. Everything else is a distraction.
This advice comes from Dan Crow, the Product Manager for Google Crawl  Systems, who speaks regularly at SEO conferences. Forget everything  else, he says, just focus on two things: great content  and great links.
We’ve built our SEO content agency around that philosophy, so we  don’t worry about all the details like keyword density, 301 redirects,  or even duplicate content. In our experience, Google will overlook all  those things, if you just focus on great content and great links.
To illustrate, here’s a case study on why duplicate content is not so  bad, and can actually help you achieve top rankings.

Our client has a credit card finder website that he wanted to rank  on the keyword “credit card concierge.” First, we focused on the  content, coming up with an idea about using a credit card concierge  service to perform silly errands for us, then rating them on the speed  and efficiency with which they completed our insane tasks.
We wrote the piece, posted it to the client site, then focused on  building links into it. It wasn’t long before we had achieved a Google  top ten ranking for the keyword “credit card concierge”:
Then we reached out to Tim Ferriss, the New York Times  bestselling author of The Four Hour Workweek. Tim specializes in  “lifestyle design” services, and we thought credit card concierge  services would be up his alley. We asked him for a link back, but Tim  liked the piece enough to republish it on his blog … word-for-word,  with a small text link at the bottom crediting the client’s site.
The traditional SEO response would be to turn down this offer and/or  run screaming in terror, because of the “duplicate content” issue. We’ve  all heard that Google will penalize duplicate content, you’ll lose your  rankings, and the rivers will turn to blood. But we asked the two  fundamental questions. Was it good content? (Yes.) Was it a good  link? (Oh yes.)
The results were incredible. As soon as Tim published the piece on his blog, it went  megaviral (which is bigger than “viral” but smaller than “gigaviral”),  receiving hundreds of retweets, Diggs, and reposts. The blog post  ultimately landed on the homepage of StumbleUpon.com, where it received  over 300,000 Stumbles!
For the client, that one link from Tim’s blog resulted in hundreds of  new customers to his site — all those people who read about the credit  card concierge service wanted to sign up for it. And best of all, our  client kept his ranking on the Google Top 10 — now sharing it with a  newcomer: Tim’s repost of the article.
So here we clearly see that the “duplicate content” helped everyone  involved. Tim got increased search rankings, and a load of viral  traffic. The client got increased search rankings, and a load of new  customers. Users got great content, and a load of chuckles.
Create great content for your users. Then build links back into that  content.
When we relentlessly focus on these two fundamentals, everybody wins —  our clients, our users, and ourselves. That “circle of goodness” is  what Google is looking for, more than site map optimization or META  tags.
But the circle extended even further. A few weeks later, I called  Chase Visa, the credit card we used for the concierge experiment. It  seemed the piece had caused quite a stir at the company, with a flood of  new applications for the service. ”It’s actually been a fantastic  marketing piece for us,” the concierge confided. ”And quite frankly, I  thought it was hilarious.”
Great content and great links. Everybody wins.


 
 
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