01
Domain & URL Architecture
The foundation — how analyzed sites structure their EMD/PMD strategy
What the analyzed pages reveal
Every page uses an Exact Match Domain (EMD) or very close partial match: arialief.com, prodentim.co.in, synadentix-synadentix.com, tonic-greens.uk, billionairebraiinwave.com. The product brand name always appears in the domain. Competitor domains use country TLDs (.uk, .co.in) to target geo-specific SERPs.
Domain Selection
Use EMD or Partial Match Domain Critical
Register the product brand name as the domain. If the exact .com is taken, use variations: brand.co.in, brand-official.com, getbrand.com, trybrand.com, brandpills.com, brandreview.com. Avoid hyphens in the middle of the brand name if possible — synadentix-synadentix.com is weak compared to synadentix.com.
✅ arialief.com · prodentim.co.in · tonic-greens.uk
❌ health-supplement-review-2024.com (no brand match)
Target Geo with Country TLD or Subdirectory High
If the product sells in a specific country (UK, India, Canada, Australia), use the ccTLD (.uk, .co.in, .ca, .com.au) or a subdirectory (/uk/, /au/). This signals local relevance to Google. TonicGreens uses tonic-greens.uk for the UK market — separate from the US site. Set Google Search Console country targeting.
tonic-greens.uk → targets “Tonic Greens UK” queries
prodentim.co.in → targets Indian buyers searching ProDentim
Keep URL Structure Flat and Keyword-Rich High
All analyzed pages are single-page sites (homepage = money page). If you build multi-page, use clean URL slugs with keyword: /arialief-reviews/, /arialief-ingredients/, /buy-arialief/, /arialief-vs-[competitor]/. Never use query strings or dynamic parameters on SEO pages.
yourproductname.com/ (homepage — main money page)
yourproductname.com/reviews/
yourproductname.com/ingredients/
yourproductname.com/buy/
Set Canonical URL Correctly High
Every analyzed page should have a self-referencing canonical tag. Arialief’s main site was missing the canonical entirely — a critical error since duplicate content across variants can cause cannibalization. Always set canonical to the preferred URL (www vs non-www, https vs http).
<link rel=”canonical” href=”https://yourproductname.com/” />
02
Title Tag Optimization
The single highest-impact on-page SEO element — and your #1 CTR driver
Pattern found across all 8 pages
The strongest title structure consistently used: [Brand Name]™ | [Descriptor/Benefit] | [Country] Official Website. The ™ symbol signals authenticity. Numbers and benefit words appear in the best-performing titles (e.g., “#1 Immune Booster”). Meta keywords are used heavily on some pages (Synadentix has 18 keyword variations) but ignored by others.
Title Tag Formula
Lead Title with Exact Product Brand Name Critical
Put the product/keyword at the very beginning of the title. Google gives more weight to words at the start of the title. All analyzed pages do this correctly. Also add the ™ symbol — it differentiates your “official site” from review or competitor pages in SERPs, boosting CTR.
✅ “Billionaire Brain Wave™ | Official Site | Dr. Summers”
✅ “Tonic Greens™ | #1 Immune Booster | UK Official Website”
❌ “Official Website | Best Supplement | Billionaire Brain Wave”
Add Benefit + Number + Power Word in Title High
The best titles in the analysis include: a number (#1, 7-minute, 3.5 billion), a benefit word (Immune Booster, Pain Relief, Neuropathy Support), and a trust word (Official, Natural, Guaranteed). Tonic Greens’ title “#1 Immune Booster | UK Official Website” is the strongest CTR formula found.
Formula: [Brand]™ | [#/Power Word] [Benefit] | [Country/Official] [Site]
Examples:
→ “Audifort™ | #1 Natural Hearing Support | Official USA Site”
→ “Arialief™ | Fast Neuropathy Relief | Official Site | Buy Today”
→ “ProDentim™ | 3.5 Billion Probiotics | Oral Health | Official”
Keep Title Under 60 Characters (or 580px) High
Google truncates titles beyond ~60 chars in desktop SERPs and ~55 chars on mobile. The key keyword + brand must be visible without truncation. All analyzed pages keep titles in the 40–70 char range. Use a title preview tool before going live.
“Synadentix | Official Website | Natural Oral Health Supplement”
→ 62 chars — slightly over but core keyword visible ✅
“Billionaire Brain Wave™ – Official Website | USA”
→ 49 chars — perfect ✅
Title and H1 Should NOT Be Identical Medium
Use the title tag for SERP CTR optimization (shorter, punchier) and the H1 for on-page user engagement (longer, benefit-focused). Synadentix does this: title = “Synadentix | Official Website | Natural Oral Health Supplement” while H1 = “Synadentix USA Official Website”. Good differentiation.
03
Meta Tags & Open Graph
Meta description drives CTR; meta keywords still used for secondary signals; OG tags control social sharing
Critical gaps found in analyzed pages
Audifort has NO meta description, NO OG tags, and NO meta keywords — a major oversight. Arialief’s meta description on the official site is 500+ characters (way over the 160-char limit). Several pages have broken OG:title tags (TonicGreens has a malformed OG title). These are easy wins to fix.
Meta Description
Write Benefit-First Meta Description (150–160 chars) Critical
The meta description is the SERP ad copy. It must: (1) include the main keyword, (2) state a compelling benefit, (3) include a call-to-action word, (4) mention trust signals (guarantee, natural, official). Google rewrites descriptions 63% of the time — but having a well-written one reduces this and improves CTR. Stay under 160 chars.
✅ Synadentix: “Synadentix is a natural oral health supplement that supports strong gums, fresh breath, and balanced oral microbiome for complete dental health.” (153 chars)
✅ TonicGreens: “Tonic Greens UK boosts immunity naturally, packed with essential nutrients and antioxidants for enhanced health and protection against illnesses.” (145 chars)
❌ Arialief Official (500+ chars — gets truncated badly)
Use Meta Keywords for Secondary Signal Coverage Medium
Google ignores meta keywords but Bing still uses them as a minor signal. More importantly, they help you organize your keyword strategy. Synadentix has the best approach: brand name + variations + niche terms. Include: brand name, brand name + “supplement/pills/reviews/official/buy/discount”, plus 2-3 category keywords.
name=”keywords” content=”[Brand], [brand] supplement, [brand] reviews, [brand] official website, [brand] buy, [brand] pills, [niche keyword 1], [niche keyword 2]”
Synadentix example: “Synadentix, Synadentix natural, Synadentix oral health support, Synadentix buy, Synadentix dental, Synadentix USA, dental health, oral care”
Open Graph & Social Tags
Add Complete OG Tag Set High
OG tags control how your page looks when shared on Facebook, WhatsApp, and other social platforms — which matters for affiliate promotion. Also, Google sometimes uses OG title/description as the SERP snippet. All 5 core OG tags must be present.
<meta property=”og:title” content=”[Brand]™ | Official Site | [Country]” />
<meta property=”og:description” content=”[Benefit statement + CTA, 200 chars]” />
<meta property=”og:image” content=”https://yourdomain.com/og-image.jpg” />
<meta property=”og:url” content=”https://yourdomain.com/” />
<meta property=”og:type” content=”website” />
Add Twitter Card Tags Low
None of the analyzed pages have Twitter Card tags. Add at minimum: twitter:card, twitter:title, twitter:description, twitter:image. Use “summary_large_image” card type for maximum visual impact when pages are shared on X/Twitter.
<meta name=”twitter:card” content=”summary_large_image” />
<meta name=”twitter:title” content=”[Brand]™ | Official Website” />
<meta name=”twitter:description” content=”[Short benefit claim]” />
<meta name=”twitter:image” content=”https://yourdomain.com/twitter-card.jpg” />
04
Keyword Placement Strategy
Where, how often, and in what form keywords must appear throughout the page
Primary Keyword Placement (Non-Negotiable)
Keyword in Domain Name Critical
The EMD/PMD strategy — the product name must be in the domain. This is the #1 ranking factor for brand-name searches. When someone searches “[Product Name]”, your site gets an immediate relevance signal from the domain match. All 8 analyzed sites do this correctly.
Keyword in the First 100 Words of Body Content Critical
Google reads your page top-to-bottom. The keyword must appear in the first paragraph — ideally in the first sentence. All 8 analyzed pages do this. The product name typically appears 3–5 times within the opening 100 words. Do NOT bury the lede with generic introductions.
✅ Synadentix opens: “Synadentix is a natural oral health supplement made to support healthy teeth, strong gums, and fresh breath.” — keyword in sentence 1 ✅
✅ Billionaire Brain Wave opens: “Billionaire Brain Wave is a groundbreaking 7-minute audio program…” — keyword in sentence 1 ✅
Keyword in H1, H2, and at Least One H3 Critical
Headings carry significant semantic weight. H1 must contain the exact keyword. H2s should contain keyword + modifiers (reviews, ingredients, benefits, how it works). H3s should contain keyword in at least 2-3 instances across ingredient headings, testimonials, and FAQ sections.
H1: “[Product Name] Official Website” or “[Benefit] with [Product Name]”
H2: “What is [Product Name]?” | “How Does [Product Name] Work?” | “[Product Name] Ingredients”
H3: “[Product Name] Customer Reviews” | “Why Choose [Product Name]?”
Keyword in Image Alt Tags AND File Names High
Every analyzed page uses the product name in alt text for the hero/product image. Best practice: main product image alt = “[Brand Name]”, secondary images = “[Brand Name] [descriptor]” (e.g., “Arialief ingredients”, “Arialief reviews”, “Arialief official”). File names should also match: arialief-supplement.webp, not IMG_001.jpg.
alt=”Arialief” (product shot)
alt=”Arialief ingredients” (ingredient breakdown image)
alt=”Arialief customer reviews” (testimonial section image)
alt=”Arialief official website buy now” (CTA image)
alt=”Arialief fda approved gmp certified” (trust badge image)
Keyword in CTA Buttons High
CTA button text is crawlable anchor text. Include the keyword in at least some CTAs. The analyzed pages use a mix: pure CTA text (“Order Now”, “Get Instant Access”) and keyword-enhanced CTAs (“Order Now Just For $49 Bottle”, “Order Your [Brand] Now”). Keyword-enhanced CTAs also pass relevance signals through internal link anchor text.
Keyword in CTA: “Order [Brand] Now” | “Get Your [Brand] Bottle” | “Buy [Brand] Official”
Generic CTA (also good): “Order Now” | “Get Instant Access” | “Claim Your Discount”
With price in CTA: “Order [Brand] — Only $49/Bottle” → shows price + brand + CTA
Keyword Density & Variation
Target 1.5–3% Keyword Density (Natural Repetition) High
Analyzed pages show product name appearing 44–71 times across 1,300–3,500 words = roughly 1.5–3% density. Arialief: 44 mentions / 2,587 words = 1.7%. Synadentix: 68 / 2,940 = 2.3%. Billionaire Brain Wave: 51-52 / ~3,300 = ~1.6%. Audifort at only 24/1,298 = 1.8% but page is too thin overall.
Use Semantic Keyword Variations Throughout High
Beyond the exact product name, use LSI/semantic variations: “[Brand] supplement”, “[Brand] pills”, “[Brand] formula”, “[Brand] drops”, “[Brand] capsules”, “[Brand] reviews”, “[Brand] ingredients”, “[Brand] official website”, “[Brand] buy”, “[Brand] price”, “[Brand] discount”. These capture long-tail traffic and strengthen topical relevance.
Exact: “Arialief”
Variations: “Arialief supplement” | “Arialief formula” | “Arialief neuropathy support”
| “Arialief ingredients” | “Arialief reviews” | “buy Arialief” | “Arialief price”
| “Arialief official website” | “Arialief 60-day guarantee” | “Arialief discount”
Place Related Niche Keywords in Subheadings Medium
H2 and H3 tags should include category keywords beyond just the brand. This helps rank for niche queries like “natural hearing support supplement”, “oral probiotics for gum health”, etc. Tonic Greens uses H3: “Tonic Greens UK: Your Natural Immune Health Booster” — excellent. ProDentim uses H2: “Brand New Probiotics Specially Designed For The Health Of Your Teeth And Gums” — captures the category.
Keyword in the Last 100–150 Words (Outro) Medium
End the page with a keyword-rich conclusion paragraph before the final CTA. Reinforce the product name, the main benefit, the guarantee, and a sense of urgency. This mirrors the intro and creates a semantic “bookend” that Google’s crawler recognizes.
Pattern found: Most pages end with a guarantee/order section that naturally repeats the brand name 3-5 times: “[Brand] 100% Money-Back Guarantee | Order [Brand] Now | [Brand] — Safe, Natural, Effective”
05
Heading (H1–H4) Architecture
The universal heading structure found across all 8 analyzed health affiliate pages
Universal heading blueprint from 8 pages
Every single analyzed page follows the same 8-section structure. This is the proven template. The order matters: hook → what it is → how it works → testimonials → ingredients → why choose → pricing → guarantee → FAQ.
H1: Brand + Benefit Hook (One H1 Only) Critical
One H1 per page, always. Must include the brand name and the core benefit or promise. Use emotionally resonant language. Best H1 examples found: “Reclaim Your Life: Ultimate Relief and Support for Neuropathy Pain with Arialief” and “Tonic Greens UK Official Website”. The benefit-first H1 outperforms brand-only H1.
Formula: [Emotional Hook]: [Benefit Claim] with [Brand Name]
→ “Reclaim Your Hearing: Natural Support for Ear Health with Audifort”
→ “Transform Your Smile: Advanced Oral Probiotic Formula with ProDentim”
→ “Unlock Your Potential: Theta Wave Activation with Billionaire Brain Wave”
H2 Structure: Follow the Proven 8-Section Template Critical
This is the exact structure used across all 8 analyzed pages — in this order. Each H2 serves a different search intent and content goal.
H2 #1: “What is [Brand Name]?” → Definition section, targets informational searches
H2 #2: “How Does [Brand Name] Work?” → Mechanism section, builds credibility
H2 #3: “[Brand Name] Customer Reviews” → Social proof, targets “[brand] reviews” searches
H2 #4: “Benefits of [Brand Name]” / “Why Choose [Brand Name]?” → Feature/benefit list
H2 #5: “[Brand Name] Ingredients” → Targets “[brand] ingredients” searches
H2 #6: “Order [Brand Name]” / “Limited Time Special Pricing” → Pricing/CTA section
H2 #7: “[Brand Name]: 100% Money-Back Guarantee” → Trust/risk reversal
H2 #8: “[Brand Name] FAQ” → Targets PAA / question searches
H3 Structure: Ingredient Names, Testimonial Names, FAQ Questions High
H3 tags are used for: (a) individual ingredient names within the ingredients section, (b) reviewer names within testimonial sections, (c) individual FAQ questions. Never use H3 for decorative or non-content purposes. Ingredient H3s are especially valuable — they can rank for “[ingredient] benefits” searches.
Under H2 “Ingredients”:
H3: Magnesium Glycinate → H3: Alpha Lipoic Acid → H3: L-Carnitine
Under H2 “Customer Reviews”:
H3: [Name], [Location] → Each review testimonial
Under H2 “FAQ”:
H3: “What is [Brand]?” → H3: “How does [Brand] work?” → etc.
Use Benefit-Packed Language in ALL Headings High
Headings are scanned before body text. Audifort uses excellent question-format H2s that speak directly to pain points: “Are you worried about damaging your hearing?”, “Have you experienced any mental fog?”, “Is the thought of having to rely on a hearing aid frightening to you?” — these resonate emotionally and improve engagement.
06
Content Quality & Structure
The depth, format, and uniqueness of content that separates ranking pages from non-ranking ones
Thin content is the #1 weakness found
Audifort has only 1,298 words — dangerously thin for a health YMYL page. ProDentim has 1,555 words. Google’s Quality Rater Guidelines demand “substantial” content for health pages. The competitive standard is 2,500–4,000 words for a single-product health affiliate page. Word count alone doesn’t guarantee rankings, but it enables comprehensive topic coverage.
Content Depth & Length
Target 2,500–4,000 Words for Main Money Page Critical
Strongest analyzed pages: Arialief Official (3,462 words), Billionaire Brain Wave USA (3,418 words), Billionaire Brain Wave Dr. Summers (3,288 words). These pages rank for dozens of keyword variations. Weak pages: Audifort (1,298), ProDentim (1,555). Expand thin pages with: deeper ingredient explanations, longer testimonials, more detailed FAQ, a “science behind” section, and comparison tables.
Match Search Intent (Buy + Review + Information) Critical
People searching “[Brand Name]” have mixed intent: some want to BUY, some want REVIEWS before buying, some want INFORMATION (what is it, does it work). The universal template satisfies all three intents on one page: informational sections (What is it, How it works, Ingredients) → social proof (Reviews) → transactional (Pricing, CTA, Guarantee).
Informational intent: “What is Arialief?” “How does Arialief work?” “Arialief ingredients”
Review intent: “Arialief reviews” “Arialief customer testimonials” “Does Arialief work?”
Transactional intent: “Buy Arialief” “Arialief price” “Arialief discount” “Arialief official website”
Content Sections — Detailed Breakdown
Write a “Science Behind” / Research Section High
Every strong health affiliate page includes a “science behind” or “research-backed” section. Billionaire Brain Wave has both “Science Behind Billionaire Brain Wave” and “How Soundwaves Activate Your Inner Genius”. These sections: (a) boost credibility with Google’s E-E-A-T signals, (b) add word count, (c) rank for “[brand] scientific evidence” searches. Reference real studies with links to PubMed/NIH.
Deep Ingredient Section (One H3 Per Ingredient) High
The ingredient section is the highest-value SEO content block. Every ingredient gets its own H3, an image, and 100–200 words of explanation. Arialief covers: Magnesium Glycinate, Alpha Lipoic Acid, Butcher’s Broom, L-Carnitine, CoQ10. Each ingredient explanation should: name the ingredient, explain what it does, cite a study, connect it to the product’s core benefit.
H3: Magnesium Glycinate
[Image of ingredient]
Magnesium Glycinate is a highly bioavailable form of magnesium that has been shown in clinical research to support nerve function and reduce neuropathic pain signals. A 2021 study published in the Journal of Neuroscience found that magnesium supplementation significantly reduced nerve pain intensity in patients with peripheral neuropathy…
[External link to study → PubMed/NIH → nofollow]
Personalize with a “Creator Story” Narrative High
Several analyzed pages open with a first-person creator narrative: “When I first started working on the formula that was to become Audifort, I never would have imagined I would help thousands of people…” This creates an emotional hook, increases time-on-page, and differentiates from thin affiliate pages. Include the creator’s credentials (doctor, researcher, neuroscientist). Billionaire Brain Wave attributes Dr. Summers prominently — this drives branded searches.
Include a “Who Is This For?” / Problem Identification Section High
Audifort uses this brilliantly with three H2 pain-point questions: “Are you worried about damaging your hearing?”, “Have you experienced any mental fog?”, “Is the thought of having to rely on a hearing aid frightening to you?” — each answered with how the product helps. This section speaks directly to the reader’s problem, increases scroll depth, and adds topical relevance.
Testimonials: Minimum 3–6, With Location and Photo High
All analyzed pages include 3–6 customer testimonials. Each testimonial has: a name, a location (e.g., “James P., California”), a star rating image, a photo, and a substantive 50–100 word review. Arialief uses H3s for testimonial names: “Amazing Relief with Arialief — James P., California”. The testimonial section is a natural place to repeat the product name and key benefits.
Add Unique, Factual Statistics and Numbers Medium
Numbers in body content increase credibility and differentiate content from AI-generated fluff. ProDentim uses “3.5 billion probiotics” — a specific, memorable number. Include: clinical study success rates, number of customers served, years of research, number of ingredients, satisfaction guarantee days, etc.
“Over 120,000 customers have tried [Brand] with remarkable results”
“[Brand] contains [X] carefully selected natural ingredients”
“97% of 6-bottle customers report noticeable improvement within 30 days”
“Formulated with 3.5 billion CFU probiotic strains”
“Backed by 8+ years of clinical research at [Institution]”
Answer PAA (People Also Ask) Questions in Body Content High
Search “[Product Name]” in Google and note the PAA questions. Integrate these as subheadings or body paragraphs. For the health niche, common PAA patterns: “Is [Brand] safe?”, “How long does [Brand] take to work?”, “Can I take [Brand] with other medications?”, “Is [Brand] FDA approved?”, “Where can I buy [Brand]?”. Answer each in NLP-friendly concise format.
NLP-friendly answer format (for featured snippet potential):
Q: “Is Tonic Greens safe?”
A: “Tonic Greens is generally considered safe for most adults. It is manufactured in an FDA-registered and GMP-certified facility in the United States using natural ingredients. However, consult your doctor before use if you are pregnant, nursing, or taking medications.”
07
Trust, Authority & Social Proof (E-E-A-T)
Google’s Quality Rater Guidelines judge health pages on Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness
Trust signals found across all 8 pages
Every page uses multiple overlapping trust signals: FDA registration, GMP certification, “Made in USA”, doctor quotes, clinical research references, money-back guarantees, and satisfaction badges. These are non-negotiable for health YMYL pages. Google’s manual reviewers will assess these directly.
Certification & Manufacturing Trust
Display FDA Registered + GMP Certified Badges Above the Fold Critical
Every analyzed page shows these badges near the top of the page, typically below the hero section. Common badges: “FDA Registered Facility”, “GMP Certified”, “Made in USA”, “Non-GMO”, “100% Natural”. Arialief’s official site uses “arialief fda approved” as the alt text for the certification badge image — perfect keyword + trust signal combination.
Standard badge set found across all 8 pages:
✅ FDA Registered Facility
✅ GMP (cGMP) Certified
✅ Made in the USA
✅ 100% Natural Ingredients
✅ Non-GMO / Gluten-Free
✅ Third-Party Tested (if applicable)
Include Doctor / Expert Endorsement Quote Critical
All pages include a doctor or medical professional quote near the top, usually right after the H1. Arialief uses: “Arialief is formulated with ingredients I’d confidently recommend to my own family.” — attributed to the medical advisor. Billionaire Brain Wave prominently features “Dr. Summers” (MIT neuroscientist). The expert’s credentials should be stated clearly.
Reference Clinical Studies and Research (With Links) High
Tonic Greens and Synadentix link individual ingredients to WebMD and PubMed/NCBI: Spirulina → webmd.com, Resveratrol → ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. These external links to authority sources are powerful E-E-A-T signals. Label them rel=”nofollow” but include them. The reference page in Arialief (reference.html in the footer) is also a good practice.
Guarantee & Risk Reversal
Prominent Money-Back Guarantee Section with Badge Critical
Every single analyzed page has a dedicated money-back guarantee section (always an H2) with a guarantee badge/seal image. Guarantee lengths: 60 days (Arialief, ProDentim), 90 days (Audifort, Billionaire Brain Wave), 180 days (Arialief official alt version). Longer guarantee = higher conversion AND higher SERP trust. The guarantee section always includes: number of days, exactly what’s covered, and how to claim.
H2: “[Brand]: 100% Money-Back Guarantee”
[Badge image with “180 Day Money Back Guarantee”]
“If you’re not completely satisfied with [Brand] for any reason within 180 days of your purchase, simply contact our support team and we’ll give you a full refund — no questions asked, no hassle, no risk to you.”
Page Legitimacy Signals
Include Complete Footer with Legal Pages High
All analyzed pages have a footer with: Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy, Disclaimer, Contact page, Refund Policy, Shipping Policy. These are trust signals for both Google and users. Google’s Quality Raters specifically check for contact information and legal pages on health sites. Include a physical address if possible.
Add FTC-Compliant Disclaimer High
Every analyzed page has a “Disclaimer” link in the footer and a disclaimer note near CTAs stating something like: “These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.” This is legally required and also signals to Google that the site is compliant and trustworthy.
08
Image & Media Optimization
Images carry SEO weight through alt text, file names, format, and engagement signals
Image SEO
Use WebP Format for All Images High
Arialief, Synadentix, and TonicGreens use .webp format — 25–35% smaller than JPEG at same quality, critical for Core Web Vitals (LCP score). Convert all PNG/JPEG to WebP. Use the <picture> element with JPEG fallback for older browsers. Product hero images found: product.webp, synadentix-supplement-1036×1036.webp.
Keyword-Rich Alt Text for Every Image (Unique, Descriptive) Critical
ProDentim has BLANK alt texts on all images — a critical error on a health affiliate page. Every image needs a unique, descriptive alt text. The pattern from the best pages: hero image = “[Brand]”, product variants = “[Brand] [bottle count]”, ingredient images = “[Ingredient Name]”, testimonial images = “[Brand] reviews”, trust badges = “[Brand] fda approved gmp certified”.
Product hero: alt=”Arialief neuropathy supplement official”
3-bottle option: alt=”Arialief 3 bottle 90 day supply”
6-bottle option: alt=”Arialief 6 bottle 180 day supply best value”
Ingredient image: alt=”Alpha Lipoic Acid Arialief ingredient”
Trust badge: alt=”Arialief FDA registered GMP certified made in USA”
Testimonial photo: alt=”Arialief customer review James California”
Guarantee badge: alt=”Arialief 60 day money back guarantee”
Keyword-Rich Image File Names High
File names before upload matter for image SEO. Use: arialief-supplement-official.webp, arialief-ingredients-list.webp, arialief-customer-reviews.webp. Use hyphens (not underscores) between words. Avoid: IMG_001.jpg, hero-img.png (Audifort does this wrong), screenshot-43.png (Billionaire Brain Wave does this wrong).
Unique Product Images (Not Vendor-Provided Only) High
All affiliates for the same product have the same vendor-provided product images. Google’s reverse image search can identify duplicate images across affiliate sites, which weakens uniqueness signals. Create: custom product mockups with different backgrounds, unique infographics for ingredients, custom comparison tables as images. At minimum, crop/resize/recompose vendor images differently.
Add Lazy Loading to Below-Fold Images Medium
Add loading=”lazy” attribute to all images below the fold to improve initial page load speed. The hero/above-fold image should use loading=”eager” (or no attribute) to ensure fast LCP. Specify width and height attributes on all images to prevent layout shift (CLS score).
<img src=”arialief-supplement.webp” alt=”Arialief supplement” width=”500″ height=”500″ loading=”eager”> ← Hero image
<img src=”arialief-ingredients.webp” alt=”Arialief ingredients” width=”600″ height=”400″ loading=”lazy”> ← Below fold
Embed Relevant YouTube Video (If Available) Medium
None of the analyzed pages embed a YouTube video — a missed opportunity. Adding a YouTube video (product explainer, doctor review, customer testimonial video) increases time-on-page, which is a positive engagement signal. Google owns YouTube; embedding relevant videos can also help your page appear in video-enhanced SERP results. Use lazy-loading for video embeds (load iframe on click/scroll).
Add as a section: “Watch: How [Brand] Works”
[Embedded YouTube video: “brand-name review” or “how brand works”]
Or: Use the official product video from the vendor’s affiliate resources
09
Internal & External Linking Strategy
How to build link equity flow, support cluster architecture, and use authority external links
Internal Linking (Single-Page Sites)
Use Jump Links (Anchor Links) for Navigation High
All analyzed pages use jump/anchor links in the nav: #ingredients, #reviews, #pricing, #faq. These create a crawlable internal link structure even on single-page sites. Billionaire Brain Wave USA uses: #content9-p (benefits), #features16-x (refund), #content4-r (bonuses). These anchor links appear as internal links with anchor text in Google’s link graph.
Nav: <a href=”#what-is”>About [Brand]</a> | <a href=”#ingredients”>Ingredients</a>
| <a href=”#reviews”>Reviews</a> | <a href=”#pricing”>Pricing</a> | <a href=”#faq”>FAQ</a>
Deep links in content: “…learn more about our <a href=”#ingredients”>[Brand] ingredients</a>…”
Build Cluster Pages and Link to Money Page with Exact-Match Anchor Critical
For multi-page sites (or a blog/review cluster around the main domain), create supporting pages: “[Brand] Reviews”, “[Brand] Ingredients”, “[Brand] vs [Competitor]”, “[Brand] Side Effects”, “[Brand] Discount Code”. Link from these cluster pages to the main money page using exact-match anchor text (“[Brand Name]”) from the strongest pages, and partial-match from weaker ones.
Strong cluster → Money page: anchor = “Arialief” (exact match)
Weak cluster → Money page: anchor = “Arialief neuropathy supplement” (partial)
Review cluster → Money page: anchor = “official Arialief website” (branded)
Ingredient cluster → Money page: anchor = “buy Arialief” (transactional)
Rule: anchor text in a paragraph should relate to the heading above it
Semantic Internal Links in Top Section; Related Links at Bottom High
Top of article: link to semantically related pages on the same site (e.g., ingredient pages, “how it works” page). Bottom of article: link to loosely related content (e.g., related supplement categories, comparison pages). This mirrors Wikipedia’s link distribution pattern and helps Google understand topical relationships.
External Linking
Link Ingredients to PubMed, NIH, WebMD (With rel=”nofollow”) High
Tonic Greens links Spirulina → WebMD, Quercetin → WebMD, Resveratrol → NCBI/PubMed. Synadentix links Peppermint, Spearmint, Aloe Vera → Wikipedia. These outbound links to authoritative health sources are a massive E-E-A-T signal — they show you’re citing credible science. Use rel=”nofollow” on all external links so you don’t pass PageRank out. Open in new tab (target=”_blank” + rel=”noopener”).
Best external link targets for health affiliate content:
→ PubMed (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) — clinical studies
→ NIH (nih.gov) — research summaries
→ WebMD (webmd.com) — ingredient profiles
→ Healthline (healthline.com) — condition explanations
→ Wikipedia — general ingredient/compound pages
NO External Links to Competitor Products or Similar Supplements Critical
Never link externally to competitor products, ClickBank marketplace, or similar supplements. Only link out for: scientific studies, ingredient information, and official certifying bodies. Every outbound link that isn’t to an authority source is potentially sending a user away from your conversion funnel.
10
CTA & Conversion Architecture
How the analyzed pages structure their calls-to-action, pricing, and purchase flow
Universal CTA pattern from all 8 pages
Every page has 4–7 CTA buttons placed at strategic intervals: after the hero section, after the testimonials, in the pricing section, and at the end. The 3-tier pricing structure (1/3/6 bottles) is used by ALL supplement pages. “6 bottle” is always labeled “Most Popular” with the highest savings.
Place CTAs at These 5 Exact Positions Critical
Based on the analyzed pages, the optimal CTA placement points are: (1) Above the fold / hero section, (2) After the creator story / “What is it” section, (3) After testimonials, (4) Pricing table section (primary CTA), (5) After the guarantee section. Some pages also add a sticky header CTA that appears after scrolling past the fold.
CTA 1 (Hero): “Order Now →” [right after H1 + opening paragraph]
CTA 2 (Post-intro): “Order Now” [after 2nd paragraph or “What is” section]
CTA 3 (Post-reviews): “Order Now” [after testimonials section]
CTA 4 (Pricing): Primary CTA with price displayed in button
CTA 5 (Guarantee): Final CTA after guarantee section
Optional: Sticky nav CTA (appears after 300px scroll)
Use Both Keyword and Non-Keyword CTA Variants High
Mix CTA text: some with keyword (“Order Arialief Now”), some without (“Get Instant Access”, “Claim Your Discount”). This looks natural to Google (over-optimized identical anchor text is a red flag) and A/B-tests which CTA converts better. Billionaire Brain Wave uses “Get Instant Access” exclusively — no brand name. Arialief uses “Order Now” consistently.
Include Price in CTA Button Text High
Arialief uses: “Order 6 Bottles Save $780 Get Free Shipping”. Billionaire Brain Wave uses: “Today’s OFFER @ $39” and “Buy Today Only @ $39”. Including the price in the CTA reduces friction (visitor already knows the price before clicking) and improves qualified click-throughs. Show both the original crossed-out price and the discounted price.
“Order [Brand] — Only $49/Bottle (Save $300)”
“Get [Brand] Today @ $39 — 90-Day Guarantee”
“YES! I Want [Brand] — Save 73% Today”
Show 3-Tier Pricing with Most Popular Highlighted Critical
The 3-tier pricing table is universal across ALL analyzed supplement pages: 1 bottle (basic/starter), 3 bottles (standard/value), 6 bottles (most popular/best value). Arialief labels the 6-bottle “97% Of Customers Order 6 Bottles (Our Recommended Option)”. The 6-bottle always has the biggest savings and free shipping. This is anchoring psychology — the middle option feels “safe”, the 6-bottle feels like the smart choice.
Tier 1: 1 Bottle — 30 Day Supply — $69/bottle (most expensive per bottle)
Tier 2: 3 Bottles — 90 Day Supply — $59/bottle — Save $120 ← “Good Value”
Tier 3: 6 Bottles — 180 Day Supply — $49/bottle — Save $300 + FREE Shipping ← “MOST POPULAR” (highlighted)
Add Urgency and Scarcity Elements Near CTAs High
All pages use urgency copy near CTAs. Common patterns found: “Limited Time Offer”, “Today Only”, “While Stocks Last”, “Hurry — Save X% Today”, “This Offer May Expire Soon”. Arialief uses: “Limited”, “Save”, “Last”. TonicGreens uses: “HURRY”, “Limited Time Special Pricing — Act Now!”, “Secure Your Reserved Tonic Greens While Stocks Last”.
Include 2 Free Bonuses with Largest Package High
7 of 8 analyzed pages offer 2 free bonus ebooks or programs with the 6-bottle purchase. This is a proven conversion enhancer. Bonuses should: (a) have a stated value (“Worth $97 — Yours FREE”), (b) be relevant to the product’s niche, (c) have custom cover images with the bonus title, (d) appear in a dedicated H2 section before or after the pricing table.
H2: “Order 6 Bottles or 3 Bottles and Get 2 FREE Bonuses!”
BONUS #1: “[Title Related to Product Niche]” — Valued at $97 — FREE Today
[Book cover image]
BONUS #2: “[Title Related to Lifestyle/Health]” — Valued at $79 — FREE Today
[Book cover image]
11
FAQ & Featured Snippet Optimization
Target PAA boxes, featured snippets, and voice search with structured Q&A content
Include 6–10 FAQ Questions Using Exact PAA Language Critical
All 8 pages have FAQ sections. The best FAQs (Billionaire Brain Wave Dr. Summers, TonicGreens) contain 6+ questions that mirror exactly what users type into Google. Research PAA questions by searching the product name + “?” in Google and Bing. Billionaire Brain Wave FAQ: “What is Billionaire Brain Wave?”, “How does it work?”, “Is there a guarantee or refund policy?”, “Who is this program best suited for?” — all real search queries.
Standard FAQ template for health affiliates:
1. “What is [Brand Name]?”
2. “How does [Brand Name] work?”
3. “What are the ingredients in [Brand Name]?”
4. “Is [Brand Name] safe to use?”
5. “How long does [Brand Name] take to work?”
6. “Does [Brand Name] have any side effects?”
7. “Is there a money-back guarantee for [Brand Name]?”
8. “Where can I buy [Brand Name]?”
9. “How much does [Brand Name] cost?”
10. “Can I take [Brand Name] with other medications?”
Write NLP-Optimized “Robot Format” Answers High
For featured snippet potential, answers should: (a) directly answer the question in the first sentence, (b) use the question keywords in the answer, (c) be 40–60 words (concise enough for a snippet). The “robot format”: “To [action], you should [answer].” or “[Product] is [definition]. [Explanation in 1-2 sentences].”
Q: “What is Arialief?”
A: “Arialief is a dietary supplement designed to relieve neuropathy pain and support nerve health. It is formulated with natural ingredients including Magnesium Glycinate, Alpha Lipoic Acid, and L-Carnitine, manufactured in an FDA-registered, GMP-certified facility in the United States.”
Q: “How does Arialief work?”
A: “Arialief works by targeting the root causes of neuropathic pain through a blend of nerve-supporting nutrients. Its key ingredients reduce inflammation, improve circulation, and support the regeneration of myelin sheaths that protect nerve fibers.”
Use Accordion/Collapsible FAQ Format High
All analyzed pages with FAQ sections use collapsible accordion elements (click to expand). Billionaire Brain Wave uses: #collapse1_30, #collapse2_30 etc. This format: (a) improves UX by not overwhelming with text, (b) is compatible with FAQPage schema markup, (c) keeps page clean for users while still serving full content to Google’s crawler.
Use Question-Format H2/H3 Outside of FAQ Section Too High
Audifort uses pain-point questions as H2s in the body: “Are you worried about damaging your hearing?”, “Have you experienced any mental fog?”. Billionaire Brain Wave uses: “What is Billionaire Brain Wave?”, “How Does Billionaire Brain Wave Work?” as H3s in the body. These question headings capture voice search and PAA traffic even outside the dedicated FAQ section.
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Schema Markup (Structured Data)
The highest-impact technical differentiation — most analyzed pages are leaving significant SERP features on the table
Schema is the biggest gap found across all pages
Only ONE page (Billionaire Brain Wave Dr. Summers) has complete schema: Product + AggregateRating + Offer + FAQPage. Arialief has ZERO schema. Audifort has ZERO schema. This is the single biggest opportunity — Product schema with AggregateRating enables star ratings in Google SERPs, which dramatically increases CTR.
Add Product Schema with AggregateRating (Star Ratings in SERPs) Critical
Product schema + AggregateRating is the #1 schema type for health supplement affiliate pages. It enables star rating displays (★★★★☆) in Google search results, which can increase CTR by 15–30%. Billionaire Brain Wave Dr. Summers has this implemented correctly. Every analyzed page that lacks it is leaving clicks on the table.
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org/”,
“@type”: “Product”,
“name”: “[Brand Name]”,
“image”: “https://yourdomain.com/product-image.webp”,
“description”: “[Meta description text]”,
“brand”: { “@type”: “Brand”, “name”: “[Brand Name]” },
“aggregateRating”: {
“@type”: “AggregateRating”,
“ratingValue”: “4.8”,
“reviewCount”: “2847”,
“bestRating”: “5”,
“worstRating”: “1”
},
“offers”: {
“@type”: “Offer”,
“url”: “https://yourdomain.com/”,
“priceCurrency”: “USD”,
“price”: “49.00”,
“availability”: “https://schema.org/InStock”,
“seller”: { “@type”: “Organization”, “name”: “[Brand Name]” }
}
}
Add FAQPage Schema for Every FAQ Item Critical
FAQPage schema enables Google to show FAQ accordions directly in the SERP (FAQ rich results), taking up significantly more SERP real estate and sometimes pushing competitors below the fold. Billionaire Brain Wave Dr. Summers has this: FAQPage → Question → Answer for each FAQ item. Implement this for all FAQ items on the page.
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “FAQPage”,
“mainEntity”: [
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is [Brand Name]?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “[Brand Name] is a dietary supplement designed to… [full answer text]”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How does [Brand Name] work?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “[Brand Name] works by… [full answer text]”
}
}
]
}
Add WebSite Schema with SearchAction Medium
Billionaire Brain Wave Dr. Summers has this — it signals to Google the site name and enables the “Search [Site]” feature in some SERPs. For affiliate sites, this also helps Google associate the domain with the brand name in its knowledge graph.
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “WebSite”,
“name”: “[Brand Name]”,
“url”: “https://yourdomain.com/”,
“potentialAction”: {
“@type”: “SearchAction”,
“target”: “https://yourdomain.com/?s={search_term_string}”,
“query-input”: “required name=search_term_string”
}
}
Add BreadcrumbList Schema (For Multi-Page Sites) Medium
ProDentim uses BreadcrumbList schema on its WordPress site. For single-page sites, this is less relevant, but if you build a cluster with multiple pages (reviews, ingredients, buy), add breadcrumb schema on subpages to show the hierarchy in SERPs: Home > [Brand Name] Reviews.
Validate All Schema with Google’s Rich Results Test High
After implementing schema, test at: search.google.com/test/rich-results and schema.org/validator. Common errors: missing required fields (price is required for Product + Offer), incorrectly nested types, using unavailable/discontinued schema types. Validation errors prevent rich result eligibility.
13
Technical SEO
Core Web Vitals, crawlability, indexation, and page health fundamentals
Core Web Vitals & Page Speed
Achieve LCP Under 2.5 Seconds Critical
LCP (Largest Contentful Paint) is typically the hero product image. Optimize: use WebP format (all analyzed best pages do this), preload the hero image with <link rel=”preload” as=”image”>, use a CDN, minimize render-blocking CSS/JS. Test with PageSpeed Insights (pagespeed.web.dev). A slow LCP is a direct ranking penalty since 2021.
Keep CLS Under 0.1 (No Layout Shift) High
Cumulative Layout Shift happens when images or elements load without declared dimensions, causing content to jump. Fix: always add width and height attributes to all <img> tags. Reserve space for ad/banner elements. Use CSS aspect-ratio or explicit dimensions on containers. The accordion FAQ elements can cause CLS if not handled correctly.
Minify CSS, JS and HTML High
Remove all unused CSS, minify all stylesheets and scripts. Use a CSS/JS bundler or CDN with auto-minification. Inline critical CSS (above-the-fold styles) directly in <head> to prevent render-blocking. Defer or async all non-critical JavaScript. The analyzed pages use Bootstrap/custom CSS — audit and strip unused classes.
Crawlability & Indexation
Submit XML Sitemap to GSC and Bing Webmaster Tools Critical
Create and submit a sitemap.xml. For single-page sites, the sitemap is minimal (1-3 URLs: homepage, contact, privacy) but still essential for ensuring Google/Bing discovers and indexes all pages quickly. Submit to both Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools (especially important since you’re targeting Bing too).
Configure robots.txt Correctly High
Block only pages that should NOT be indexed: /wp-admin/, /cart/, /checkout/, /thank-you/ (post-purchase pages). Allow everything else. Never accidentally disallow the entire site with “Disallow: /”. Add the sitemap URL to robots.txt: “Sitemap: https://yourdomain.com/sitemap.xml”.
Implement HTTPS (SSL Certificate) Critical
All 8 analyzed pages serve over HTTPS — non-negotiable for any site, especially health/financial/e-commerce (YMYL). Google marks HTTP pages as “Not Secure” in Chrome. Many affiliate networks require HTTPS. Use Let’s Encrypt for free SSL. Ensure all HTTP URLs redirect (301) to HTTPS including www variants.
Fix Broken Links and 404 Errors High
Crawl the site with Screaming Frog or Ahrefs to identify any broken internal links, broken image paths, or redirect chains. Arialief’s email protection links (/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection) are obfuscated — ensure these resolve correctly. All footer links (Terms, Privacy, Disclaimer, Contact, Refund, Shipping) must return 200 status.
Content Grammar & Quality
Proofread for Grammar and Spelling (Grammarly + Manual) High
Google’s Quality Raters assess grammar and writing quality for YMYL health pages. Poor grammar is a trust signal failure. Run through Grammarly Premium or equivalent. Pay attention to: product name capitalization consistency (arialief vs Arialief vs ARIALIEF), punctuation around CTAs, and FTC disclaimer phrasing. Arialief’s site inconsistently capitalizes the brand name (“arialief” vs “Arialief” within the same sentence).
Ensure Mobile Responsiveness Critical
Google uses mobile-first indexing. All analyzed pages appear to use responsive layouts. Test with Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test. Key mobile issues to check: font size readability (min 16px body), button tap targets (min 44x44px), no horizontal scroll, proper viewport meta tag: <meta name=”viewport” content=”width=device-width, initial-scale=1″>.
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Affiliate Link Compliance
The most universally broken rule across all 8 analyzed pages — and a potential manual penalty risk
Zero out of 8 pages comply with Google’s affiliate link guidelines
Every single analyzed page passes affiliate links (ClickBank hop links, CartPanda checkout links) WITHOUT rel=”nofollow” or rel=”sponsored”. Google’s webmaster guidelines explicitly require sponsored/affiliate links to be tagged. This is a manual action risk, especially for YMYL health pages which receive more manual reviews.
Add rel=”nofollow sponsored” to ALL Affiliate/Purchase Links Critical
Every ClickBank hop link (.hop.clickbank.net), CartPanda checkout link, BuyGoods link, and any other affiliate/sponsored link must have rel=”nofollow sponsored”. Google’s guidelines state: “If you’re using affiliate links, mark them with rel=”sponsored””. Failure to do this can result in manual link scheme penalties. Add both “nofollow” and “sponsored” as belt-and-suspenders.
❌ Current (all 8 pages):
<a href=”https://bd818.hop.clickbank.net”>Get Instant Access</a>
✅ Correct:
<a href=”https://bd818.hop.clickbank.net” rel=”nofollow sponsored” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Get Instant Access</a>
For CartPanda:
<a href=”https://arialief.mycartpanda.com/checkout/…” rel=”nofollow sponsored”>Order Now</a>
Add FTC Affiliate Disclosure Near the Top of Page Critical
The FTC requires clear affiliate disclosure. This is both a legal requirement and a trust signal. Place a brief disclosure near the top of the page (before the main content) and near the first affiliate link. Use clear language: “This site contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.”
Placement: Below navigation, before H1 — or as a colored banner/notice box
Text: “Affiliate Disclosure: This page contains affiliate links. We earn a commission if you purchase through these links, at no additional cost to you. Our reviews and recommendations are based on thorough research.”
Use rel=”noopener noreferrer” on External Links Opening in New Tab Medium
All external links that open in new tabs (target=”_blank”) should also have rel=”noopener noreferrer” for security. This prevents the opened tab from accessing the window.opener object (clickjacking risk) and is standard security practice that Google’s Quality Raters may check.
<a href=”https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/…”
rel=”nofollow noopener noreferrer”
target=”_blank”>View Clinical Study</a>
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Pricing, Urgency & Conversion Patterns
The psychological and copy frameworks that convert organic traffic into sales
Show Original Price Crossed Out (Anchoring) High
All analyzed pages show original (higher) price crossed out, with discounted price prominently displayed. Arialief: “$358 → $158”. Billionaire Brain Wave: “$299 → $39”. Synadentix: “$99 → $49”. This price anchoring makes the discount feel massive and urgent. The savings amount should be calculated and shown: “Save $780” or “73% OFF”.
~~$99~~ → $49/bottle — Save 50% Today
~~$297~~ → $39 — You Save $260 (87% OFF)
“Flat Sale ONLY For Today — Special Offer Save Upto $780 + Special 73% Discount”
Include “FREE Shipping” Callout on Best Package High
Every analyzed supplement page offers free shipping on the 6-bottle package. This is a major conversion driver — shipping cost is the #1 cart abandonment reason. Arialief makes this explicit: “Every 6 Bottle Order Gets FREE Shipping Too!” as an H2. Make free shipping impossible to miss.
Add Social Proof Numbers (“X Customers”, “X Stars”, “X Reviews”) High
Aggregate social proof numbers near the top of the page or near CTAs: “Join over 120,000 happy customers”, “4.8/5 stars from 2,847 verified reviews”, “Over 95% of customers would recommend to a friend”. These numbers feed the AggregateRating schema and build FOMO. Synadentix and TonicGreens use aggregateRating in their Product schema.
Add Payment Security Trust Icons Near Checkout Links High
Place payment security badges directly under the CTA buttons or pricing section: “ClickBank Secure Checkout”, credit card logos (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover), “256-bit SSL Encrypted”, “100% Secure & Encrypted”. Arialief Official shows credit card icons near the buy buttons. This reduces payment anxiety and improves conversion.
Quick Reference — Priority Stack
🚨 Critical — Do First
- ✦ EMD/PMD domain with brand name
- ✦ Canonical URL tag
- ✦ Keyword in first 100 words + H1
- ✦ Add rel=”nofollow sponsored” to affiliate links
- ✦ Product + AggregateRating + FAQPage schema
- ✦ 2,500–4,000 word content minimum
- ✦ 60–180 day money-back guarantee section
- ✦ HTTPS + mobile responsive
⚡ High — Do Next
- ✦ Meta description 150–160 chars
- ✦ Meta keywords (Bing signal)
- ✦ Complete OG tag set
- ✦ WebP images with keyword alt texts
- ✦ 6–10 NLP-optimized FAQ questions
- ✦ External links to PubMed/NIH/WebMD
- ✦ 3-tier pricing with urgency + bonuses
- ✦ FDA/GMP certification badges