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ARTICLE REWRITING SERVICE
We offer a complete article rewriting service. This includes rewriting of existing articles on your website. It sounds easy in theory to rewrite an article, but in practice, it is not. Many people cannot spell: I see spelling mistakes all over the web, even in so called guru's sales pages. OK, you have a spell checker, but how many confuse 'there' with 'their',’to’ and 'too' and similar schoolboy bloomers. I can tell you there are loads, and it can be turn-off to some people.
As for grammar. The number of people who make even simple grammatical mistakes in writing articles indicates to me that our schools have a lot to answer for.
I have seen people advertising for work as writers who can neither spell nor construct a proper sentence. Would you put your work in the hands of someone who could not make sure that even his advert was spelled correctly, and grammatically correct?
If you think that spelling and grammar do not matter you are very wrong. Spelling and simple grammatical errors in an article are unforgivable, and most directories will not accept articles with such mistakes.
The error made by the vast majority of article re-writers is that they use synonyms for selected important words within the articles, and assume that this is sufficient alteration to be indistinguishable from the original. They may also make a few changes to the syntax and sentence structure and order.
What most do not realize is, that in the eyes of Google's Bigdaddy search engine, there is no such thing as duplicate content per se. It is certainly true that a complete duplicate of an existing website will probably never see the light of day, but not just because it is duplicate content. Read and take in these facts:
- If two websites are identical the first one visited by the search engines will be that which is listed by the search engine. The second website visited will not be listed since it is not to the benefit of Google users to have two identical sites listed. If two sites have similar content, the decision as to whether or not both, or only the one, will be listed will be determined by the relevance of each site to the topic in hand. It may be that both sites have sufficient unique contact to be listed, or that only one site will be listed. Where scores are equal, the chronologically first site will be listed highest.
- Search engine spiders will determine the relevance of each site to the search being made by the visitor. It could be that a later site will be listed in preference to an earlier site due to it having a wider range of information, or being more relevant to the search term being used by the visitor. In the event that a spider finds it difficult to make a call, a human being will be called upon to review a page. Yes, Google do employ humans. It is not only run by arachnids and robots.
A practical example is that if you have a readable and a printable version of the same web page, and you have not blocked one of them to the search engines by means of robots.txt, the search engine will show the version most appropriate for the search term. It will not 'ban' or 'delist' either version, but will list that which is the more appropriate.
If you don't agree with me on that, then Google says exactly that HERE.
There is therefore no such thing as duplicate content in the eyes of, for example, a Google website spider. It will assess the relevance of each site to the search terms (keywords) being used, and rank them accordingly.
Google, and most other search engines, will list sites according to relevance which is determined not only by the use of the keywords or phrases used during the search, but also related terms and phrases. Hence, an article on 'locks' will not be ranked just on the number of incidences of the word 'locks', but also on related semantics, which makes it clear as to whether the topic of the webpage is 'locks of hair', 'security locks' or 'canal locks'.
The use of such semantics in the assessment of a website has been termed 'Latent Semantic Indexing' or LSI. This has become more relevant lately, and the old standard of 1 - 3% keyword density no longer applies. Good content will include the keyword in the title, early on in the content and near the end. The rest of the content should be semantically related to the theme of the page.
Keep in mind that the term 'keyword' relates to the exact phrase which a surfer is using to find the required content.
Article-Services.com use LSI principles in the writing of original articles for customers, and the re-writing of existing articles to avoid duplication.
Click Here for details and prices.
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