![]() |
Emd
It directly effects to the search result.
|
EMD means Exact Match Domain. Suppose, I’m a an SEO service provider and based in New York. So, my exact-match domain name will be like SEOServiceNewYork.com. If somebody searches for a phrase like SEO-Service-New York, then Google was giving higher rank to my website search engine results page.
|
Exact match domains (EMD) are exactly what they sound like. If you wanted to create a site to target the keyword phrase “cheeze burgers” the EMD would be cheezeburgers.com or .net or .org. In this case if google found your content is different from the domain what you have then it will be penalized.
|
EMD means thats Google EMD Algorithm. exact match domain
|
Exact match domains have always been the source of a lot of contention among SEOs. For quite some time, EMD’s have offered a competitive advantage for SEO’s who understood how to use them.
|
The EMD Update for “Exact Match Domain” is a filter Google launched in September 2012 to prevent poor quality sites from ranking well simply because they had words that match search terms in their domain names. When a fresh EMD Update happens, sites that have improved their content may regain good rankings. New sites with poor content or those previously missed by EMD may get caught. In addition, “false positives” may get released. Our latest news about the EMD Update is below.
|
Exact match domains have always been the source of a lot of contention among SEOs. For quite some time, EMD’s have offered a competitive advantage for SEO’s who understood how to use them. In the early days of search when relevance algorithms were rather weak, many folks used “double dashed” domains because they were cheap to buy, and easy to rank.
|
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 12:13 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin Copyright © 2020 vBulletin Solutions, Inc.