We are doing our best to expand LeoGlossary as much as possible. The database is growing on a consistent basis.
According to Hivebuzz, this is where it stands now:
As we you can see, we are now at 4,075 pages. Crossing the 4,000 barrier was a nice milestone and we are going to push to get to 5,000 by the end of the year.
Most of these pages have links throughout them. Of late, the focus is upon the movie and television industry. This is all part of building a decentralized version of IMDB or Rotten Tomatoes. Earlier development saw the formation of pages around finance and cryptocurrency.
This is all part of a longer term objective that is being put together.
For now, I want to touch upon a topic that aligns nicely with LeoGlossary.
Lists: Hidden Gems
List a very valuable tool that we do not seem to appreciate on Hive.
When I go through the search engines, lists are very common are highly ranked pages. The reason, I believe, for this is because of relevance. Lists are a terrific way to put together relevant content.
For example, a list of Prime Ministers of England is pretty straight forward. Having content such as the individual, DOB, date of death, and term served is full of information. Ultimately, this is what search engines love.
We also see this with the Top (fill in the blank). Lists really can get to the core of a topic, provide valuable information and, very important, do not confuse the search engines.
Over time, it can be a great help ranking content.
LeoGlossary Will Be Doing This
As the content fills in, we are going to produce a lot more lists. This is something that we can really enhance by linking it to the specific pages. Personally, this is one of the reasons I think Wikipedia is so successful. They have pages that are linked together which into the millions.
In fact, that site has over 6.7 million articles as of November 2023. Certainly, we are talking about an enormous difference but we have to start somewhere.
To be fair, that entity did have a bit of a head start, starting back in 2001.
That said, the site has a ton of lists. This is where information is brought together. Once the page is made, it is easy to take a piece of it, copy it onto another page, and put together a list.
For example, if there is a glossary of 100 investment banks, having the top 10 based upon market capitalization or assets under management is an easy page to make. It is also one that is specific, relevant, and providing valuable information.
Here is one of the avenues that LeoGlossary will be heading down.
Can Apply To Anything
Let us take a look at what we are referring to.
Here is a List of Grammy Award Winners along with nominees. I did a search and look at what the first result was.
This is a shot of the page.
Very little is on the page other than the data. However, notice the links to the Wikipedia pages of the various artists.
Obviously, the list is not high ranking on its own but, rather, piggybacking off the entire database. That said, this also helps the total placement considering that it is ranking in this keyword search.
We can make lists for anything and apply them anywhere. If we consider the idea of data and training artificial intelligence systems, we can see how even a short list on Threads could have an impact.
This is why I say nothing is linear when it comes to the digital world.
Whatever your favorite topic, start putting together list. Get them posted on chain. It is valuable information to people while also enhancing the data that is there. We can supplement this with anything such as sports standings, business statistics, or even pages of recipes tied together.
It all ends up feeding the same tough.
Heck, let me know if you want to do this under the LeoGlossary umbrella. This could help to expand the project a great deal.