If you have an Active Rain outside blog, you need to understand that displaying both the Local Posts links and the tags you assign to posts (shown as Categories on the outside blog) will negatively impact the SEO for your outside blog.
If you don’t care why, take my advice: Display only the Local Posts links in your outside blog side column. Don’t display the tags you assigned to the post that display as Categories.
If you don’t mind a bit of techy-talk, read on to find out why!
How Active Rain Outside Blogs Treat Tags and Hyper-Local Links
Blog Tags – As of this writing, here’s how Active Rain treats the tags you enter when you write posts on your Outside Blog.
- The tags don’t appear in the code of the blog post pages except as a list of links called Categories. Therefore, you are not really increasing the density of your keyword phrase by using the tags.
- If you reach a post page using the Category links, the post page’s link or page URL uses the tags. So, for example, if you assigned the tags “Atlanta Real Estate, Market Statistics” to a post, when you reached that post using the Category links, the URL you would see at the top of your browser would be:
http:// www. YourDomainName/post/1111111/Atlanta-Real-Estate-Market-Statistics
Hyper-Local Links
- When you write a blog post, you have the option of posting it to Hyper-Local pages.
- If you display those links on your outside blog, they are labeled as “Local Posts”
- If you reach a post page using the Local Posts link, the post page’s link or page URL uses the blog title. So, continuing the example above, let’s say that you used the post title “June Atlanta Real Estate Market Report”, when you reached that post using the Local Posts link, the URL y0u would see at the top of your browser would be:
http:// www. YourDomainName/post/1111111/June-Atlanta-Real-Estate-Market-Report
You can probably see the problem already:
- When the search engines follow both the Local Posts links and the Category links, they’re going to find one page with two different URLs.
- When one page has two “domain names”, the search engines consider that to be duplicate content.
- When you have duplicate content on one website, the search engines will penalize that site.
So, you can’t use both the Local Posts links and the Categories on an outside blog without SEO consequences.
Why Use the Local Posts Links on Your Outside Blog Display?
The way the Active Rain links are set up right now is a bit convoluted, and I’m sure they’ll be working to make things more consistent.
The Local Posts links on your outside blog should be the most potent. The search engines will find the state/province links on the Active Rain home page. From there, they will eventually end up at your post on the Hyper-Local pages, and they’ll find links back to your Active Rain blog.
Surely, your posts will include links to your outside blog, main website, etc. etc. I would also suspect that at some point, Active Rain will change the links on the hyper-local pages to go to your outside blog, where the search engines will find the same local links that they started following in the first place.
The Local Links should carry more authority with the search engines. The tag/Category links are more useful on your regular Active Rain blog because they aren’t competing with Local Posts links for attention.
The bottom line is this: If you don’t want to get in trouble with the search engines, display only the Local Posts links on your outside blog.
Here’s what happens when you write an Active Rain blog post:
Here’s where you’ll find the options for display in the sidebar on your Active Rain Outside Blog – using the Widget menu. You don’t want to select both Local Posts and Categories.









5 Comments
August 25th, 2010 at 6:42 am
Kathleen, Thanks a lot for this info. I like A/R a lot but it is very confusing. I get pretty good results on google for listings but don’t have a clue as to why.
I suspect you have helped many with this.
Regards
Gordon
August 25th, 2010 at 7:51 am
Hi Gordon – I’m glad you found the post useful. I’ve been working with a client to set up a strategy for using the various social media sites he uses.
I agree that the infrastructure of the Active Rain components still needs work. It took a bit of digging around to figure out how all the Active Rain components work.
I’m sure that Active Rain will be smoothing the integration of the new hyper-local pages as time goes on. But, for now, it’s important to be careful when you structure your own set up.
Active Rain is a great tool. Posting your listings lets you springboard off Active Rain’s high-authority domain name, which is a big help with the search engines!
Kathleen
August 29th, 2010 at 11:53 am
You described this so terribly I don’t have a clue what you are trying to help us with here! Local Posts link? You must not be on the system because what your saying doesn’t make any sense to me at all. Category links? Where are those.
I’m sure you meant to help but it would be alot easier if you chose your wording more clearly using AR terminology.
August 29th, 2010 at 5:14 pm
Lyn,
I’m sorry you found the post confusing. I’m referring to people who are using Active Rain’s ouside blogs, not the blog like yours at ActiveRain.com/Blogs/LynSims, which is a regular Active Rain blog. And, now that I think of it, I’m not sure what people are calling those blogs – inside blogs?!?
I did update the post with a couple of screenshots showing part of the process of writing a blog, and the place on an outside blog where you control whether the Local Posts and Category links show in the sidebar.
Hope this helps!
Kathleen
August 30th, 2010 at 6:09 am
[...] last post I wrote was about Active Rain blogs and how the tags and other posting information is used on outside blogs. A related issue, is the [...]