educational

Creating Doorway Pages, Part 1

Doorway pages are pages which repeat a particular keyword a number of times and are designed to get a high ranking in a particular search engine. Since each search engine uses a different algorithm to rank pages, those who use this technique of creating doorway pages to get a high ranking for a particular keyword have to create separate doorway pages for each search engine.

Before I discuss how you can create such doorway pages, I must tell you that I am no fan of these doorway pages. Firstly, if you are targeting a reasonably high number of keywords, you'll have to create hundreds of doorway pages. Keeping track of these hundreds of doorway pages can quickly become an administrative nightmare. Secondly, since the search engines change their algorithms every now and then, you'll also need to update the different doorway pages frequently. In this case, you can soon find yourself spending more time on search engine optimization than on carrying on your normal business activities. Thirdly, the search engines themselves, by and large, don't like such doorway pages. If they manage to detect that you have created such doorway pages, they will often penalize or even ban your site. Hence, I would recommend that you think of doorway pages only as a last resort - consider using them only when everything else fails. And even then, think thrice before using them.

If you have decided that you really want to create such doorway pages, your objective would be to locate a top ranking page which has optimal placement of the target keyword. You would then emulate the way this page has used the target keyword in your doorway page. Here's how you should go about creating doorway pages:

Step 1: Go to the search engine that you are targeting and search for the keyword that you are creating the doorway page for. Once the search engine has displayed the results, download and save the top 20 pages in a temporary directory in your hard drive. Also, download and save the first two pages of results as displayed by the search engine.

Step 2: Now it's time to eliminate those pages which have changed since the time the search engines spidered them and those pages which are using page cloaking. Page cloaking is a technique (a technique which I do not recommend that you even think of using) by which you can show one page to your visitors and one page to the search engines. It is achieved by using CGI scripts. Firstly, have a look at the title of the first page displayed in the search engine results and the actual title of that page when you open it in your browser. If there is even a small discrepancy between the title that is shown by the search engine and the title that is displayed in the browser, delete that page from your hard drive.

If the titles are the same, it is time to look at the Meta Description tag. Apart from Fast, Google, Lycos and Northern Light, all the major search engines support the Meta Description tag. If you are targeting a search engine other than the four mentioned above, see whether the description that is displayed by the search engine is the same as the first few words of the text that is present in the Meta Description tag of that page. If there is even a small discrepancy, delete that page from your hard drive. However, if you are targeting one of the four search engines mentioned above, see whether the description that is displayed by the search engine is present in the body of the page. If it is not, again delete the page from your hard drive. If the title and the description match, open that page in a text editor and search for your target keyword. If you do not find any occurrence of the keyword in that page, again delete it. Repeat this process for each of the top 20 pages that you downloaded. This will eliminate most of the pages which are either using cloaking or which have changed since the last time the search engines spidered them.

Step 3: Most search engines now use link popularity as a factor when calculating the rank of a page. It is not only the number of links that counts - the quality of the sites that are linking to that particular site is also important. Most search engines will give a certain amount of preference to sites which have been registered by The Open Directory and Yahoo!. This implies that a site may get a higher ranking compared to another site if the first site is listed by The Open Directory and Yahoo! but the second site isn't, even though the second site may have had better placement of keywords. Hence, since our objective is to locate the pages which have optimal placement of keywords, it is important to eliminate those sites (among the sites which are not using page cloaking and which have not changed since the last time the search engine spidered the site) which are listed by Yahoo! and The Open Directory.

In order to check whether a site is listed by Yahoo!, simply go to Yahoo! and type in the domain name of that site in Yahoo!'s search box. For instance, if one of the pages which has come up at the top is https://www.mysite.com/mypage.html, simply type in mysite.com in Yahoo!'s search box. If that site is listed by Yahoo!, it will be shown in Yahoo!'s Web Directory. Note that a listing under Yahoo! Web Pages does not mean that a site has been listed by Yahoo! - a listing under Yahoo! Web Pages only shows that the site has been listed by Google. If a site is listed by Yahoo!, it has to come up in Yahoo!'s Web Directory. In this way, type in the domain name of each of the top ranking pages in Yahoo! and eliminate the pages belonging to the sites which have been listed by Yahoo!. For reasons which I will outline later on, don't delete those pages as yet - simply transfer them to a different directory of your hard drive.

Step 4: Once you have eliminated the pages belonging to the sites which have been listed by Yahoo!, it is time to eliminate the pages belonging to the sites which have not been listed by Yahoo! but which have been listed by The Open Directory. In this case too, simply type in the domain name of the site in The Open Directory's search box. If the site has been listed by The Open Directory, it will come up in the search results. In this way, eliminate all the pages belonging to the sites which have been registered by The Open Directory. Again, don't delete them - transfer them to a different directory in your hard drive (but not the same directory where you transferred the pages from the sites which have been registered by Yahoo!).

Step 5: Once you have eliminated the pages belonging to sites which have been registered by The Open Directory and Yahoo!, you should be left with a few pages. Since, as I mentioned earlier, link popularity is an increasingly important factor these days, it implies that a site with higher link popularity may be ranked higher than a site with lower link popularity, even though the second site may have had better placement of keywords. Hence, the page that you emulate should be the one with the lowest link popularity since this page has managed to come up at the top primarily because it has optimal placement of keywords. …barring a few exceptions, the search engines consider the link popularity of the site as a whole - not the link popularity of the individual pages.

Now the question arises as to whether you should be concerned about the link popularity of an individual page or of the site which owns the page. The research that I have conducted indicates that barring a few exceptions, the search engines consider the link popularity of the site as a whole - not the link popularity of the individual pages. The search engines make an exception when dealing with sites which are hosted by the free hosts like Geocities, Tripod etc. For the free hosts, it is the link popularity of the individual pages which count. Hence, assuming that the page is not lying in one of the free hosts, you should check the link popularity of the site which contains the page and not the individual page. If you are targeting search engines like Excite which do not allow you to measure link popularity, I recommend that you measure link popularity in AltaVista. Once you have measured the link popularity of the individual sites, the page that you should emulate is the one which belongs to the site with the lowest link popularity.

In my next installment we’ll create the doorway page, stay tuned.

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

opinion

How to Reinvest Revenue Back Into Your Creator Brand

Early in their careers, most creators necessarily focus on survival. Money goes toward basic expenses, equipment upgrades and keeping content flowing. Once income becomes more consistent, however, it’s time to begin thinking about growth and sustainability. How can you build something that lasts beyond the next release or trend?

Megan Stokes ·
profile

Stripchat's Jessica on Building Creator Success, One Step at a Time

At most industry events, the spotlight naturally falls on the creators whose personalities light up screens and social feeds. Behind the booths, parties and perfectly timed photo ops, however, there is someone else shaping the experience.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

Inside the OCC's Debanking Review and Its Impact on the Adult Industry

For years, adult performers, creators, producers and adjacent businesses have routinely had their access to basic financial services curtailed — not because they are inherently higher-risk customers, but because a whole category of lawful work has long been treated as unacceptable.

Corey Silverstein ·
opinion

How to Build Operational Resilience Into Your Payment Ecosystem

Over the past year, we’ve watched adult merchants weather a variety of disruptions and speedbumps. Some even lost entire revenue streams overnight — simply because they relied too heavily on a single cloud provider that suffered an outage, lacked sufficient redundancy and failover, or otherwise fell short when it came to making sure their business was protected in case of unwelcome surprises.

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

Building a Stronger Strategy Against Card-Testing Bots

It’s a scenario every high-risk merchant dreads. You wake up one morning, check your dashboard and see a massive spike in transaction volume. For a fleeting moment, you’re excited at the premise that something went viral — but then reality sets in. You find thousands of transactions, all for $0.50 and all declined.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

A Creator's Guide to Starting the Year With Strong Financial Habits

Every January brings that familiar rush of new ideas and big goals. Creators feel ready to overhaul their content, commit to new posting schedules and jump on fresh opportunities.

Megan Stokes ·
opinion

Pornnhub's Jade Talks Trust and Community

If you’ve ever interacted with Jade at Pornhub, you already know one thing to be true: Whether you’re coordinating an event, confirming deliverables or simply trying to get an answer quickly, things move more smoothly when she’s involved. Emails get answered. Details are confirmed. Deadlines don’t drift. And through it all, her tone remains warm, friendly and grounded.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Outlook 2026: Industry Execs Weigh In on Strategy, Monetization and Risk

The adult industry enters 2026 at a moment of concentrated change. Over the past year, the sector’s evolution has accelerated. Creators have become full-scale businesses, managing branding, compliance, distribution and community under intensifying competition. Studios and platforms are refining production and business models in response to pressures ranging from regulatory mandates to shifting consumer preferences.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

How Platforms Can Tap AI to Moderate Content at Scale

Every day, billions of posts, images and videos are uploaded to platforms like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and X. As social media has grown, so has the amount of content that must be reviewed — including hate speech, misinformation, deepfakes, violent material and coordinated manipulation campaigns.

Christoph Hermes ·
opinion

What DSA and GDPR Enforcement Means for Adult Platforms

Adult platforms have never been more visible to regulators than they are right now. For years, the industry operated in a gray zone: enormous traffic, massive data volume and minimal oversight. Those days are over.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
Show More