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| SEO Site Linking Everyone knows that other sites that link to your site helps in the SEO process. Everyone should also know that reputable sites will help you while some other sites will actually hurt you. How do know differentiate between these two types of site though??? |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking There is no such thing as a bad incoming link. The worst that can a link can do is nothing at all. It only gets better from there. If this wasn't true your competitors could ruin you by linking to you with crappy sites. And it should be very easy to tell if a link is good or bad. Look at the site/page it is on. Is the site any good? Or does it suck? Does it rank well? Or not? It really is easy to tell. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking Using seo tools will help you get which the best backlinks to your web site. there are many free tools but the best way is to get a software that will manage your building links campaigns. high quality link is determined by the page rank and the number of the outbound links. |
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A high quality link is from a page that has content related to yours, uses the anchor text you hope to rank well for, ranks well for the terms you hope to rank well for, and has a high PageRank. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking The page rank affect the quality of the backlinks. and there are many difference to get a link from a web page with PR=7 than a web page that have PR=0. page rank is the first thing for people to determine the quality because we have not the exact formula used by google and we have not tools to do this job. - anchor text is not related to backlinks quality when you will link to another web site. |
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The reason why people consider PageRank the most important is because they don't know any better. That's why those same people start threads here saying, "My PageRank is so high but I don't rank well for my search terms". It's because they were after the wrong thing. They clearly don't understand PageRank and what it really means. And anchor text matters a lot for inbound links. It's effect is huge. And it plays a role in your outbound linking as well. That anchor text is on your page and affects how your pages are viewed by Google. If your anchor text contains words you want to rank well for it is better then if it contains terms that are unrelated to your website. That's one reason why linking to unrelated sites is bad for SEO. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking I believe you're contradicting yourself stymiee. First you say links don't matter and now you're saying they do? |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking I've never said links don't matter. They very clearly do. I just said PR is not an indicator of link quality. Not all links are created equal. Using PR to determine link quality is an inaccurate system to do so. The other factors I mentioned above is what someone should be using instead. |
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Google : ... Don't participate in link schemes designed to increase your site's ranking or PageRank. In particular, avoid links to web spammers or "bad neighborhoods" on the web, as your own ranking may be affected adversely by those links ... |
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If a web site has incoming links from spammy sources, it will suffer from losing authenticity and credibility with the major search engines, whether it is the SEO's fault or not. One of the responsibilities an ethical SEO has when working on a web site is to extract the web site from the clutches of an unsavoury linking past and to avoid the temptation of gaining inbound links using a haphazardly approach or with a careless attitude. The obsession to gain incoming links is driven by a common SEO misunderstanding. Any attempt to artificially increase a web site's importance by acquiring unearned links to the web site is an attempt at search engine manipulation. Search engine optimizers, web site designers and website developers should concentrate on crafting the highest caliber, uniquely important content possible rather than chasing links. There is a huge difference in skill needed between being and SEO and being a linking strategist. Most link strategists think they are performing SEO when they chase links, but they are not. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking My personal belief is that a site will not suffer if every so often a bad neighborhood links to them, especially if the number of "bad" links is far outweighed by the number of high quality backlinks. As a site becomes more well known and mainstream, it can only be expected that a wide array of quality and non-quality sites link to them. However, if only bad neighborhoods link to a particular site, or the majority of backlinks a site has are from hundreds of free-for-all link pages, then it could be assumed by the SEs that this site travels in the wrong circles. |
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1) You can't stop people from linking to you. It's impossible. 2) Why would Google penalize a site for what someone else does? That the site owner has absolutely no control over? Seriously. Have you even thought about that for a minute? If Google did that then everyone would be out to sabotage their competitors and they would all succeed. The search results would be a mess and irrelevant (and only showing people who haven't yet been attacked). That's why the worst thing an incoming link can do is nothing. That's why all links are not created equal. 3) That's why outbound linking can be harmful because the webmaster controls that. By linking to a bad site (the reason why the site is "bad" is irrelevant) the website owner is acknowledging their participation in it and thus is is fair and right to punish them. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking You don't have to. It's been proven over and over again. The only people who need to worry are those who actively participate in such schemes. But they never succeed anyway. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking I still believe that if the vast majority of sites that link to you are just bad neighborhoods, it could have an ill effect on your rankings. One reason: Because if the site was legitimate, there would at least be SOME real backlinks in the mix, or enough to make the site known to competitors who want to sabotage it. If all backlinks are spammy, that means that the site has no real backlinks at all, and no content worthy of backlinks (and competitors probably don't know about the site to care to sabotage it), meaning it was most likely the site owner who got their own site involved in bad neighborhoods. Just my take on it. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking Even then it wouldn't matter. If you only have crappy sites linking back to your site you won't rank well for anything anyway. So there is no need to apply a penalty. Plus if that were true then a competitor can bring down a website simply through sheer quantity of bad links. Once, again, that is completely beyond the control of the webmaster and cannot be held against them. |
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Man, you are living in a fairy tale world. I don't care how wonderfully optimized a web site is, if it has a significant amount of incoming links from unreliable or pre-determined bad linking neighbourhoods, it will suffer. It doesn't matter whose fault it is. One of the first things to do when removing penalties from a web site is to shake off as many of these bad incoming links as possible. Ever try that? Not fun but well worth the rewards. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking Sorry, forgot to mention this. Google : " Google goes far beyond the number of times a term appears on a page and examines dozens of aspects of the page's content (and the content of the pages linking to it) to determine if it's a good match for your query. " www google com/technology/index html |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking Well what he's saying is that Google has confirmed that they consider the content of pages that link to a page in determining it's ranking in the serps. Which I guess means bad content on backlink pages = lower in serps. Good content on backlink pages = higher in serps. But then this stems back to Google's premise that the whole point of pagerank is that if a lot of pages all link to a particular page, that page must have some pretty quality information on it. So in Google's eyes, a page with "good content" might be equivalent to a page with a high PR (since a lot of pages are linking to it because it does have quality linkable content). So they might just be saying that a high PR backlink is worth more than a low or 0-PR backlink. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking canadafred and stymiee, I don't think that your two theories are that far off, actually. canadafred is saying that a high-quality backlink has a positive effect and a low-quality backlink has a negative effect. stymiee is saying that a high-quality backlink has a positive effect and a low-quality backlink has no effect at all. Whichever theory you believe, just having low-quality backlinks or having a majority of low-quality backlinks will result in being virtually invisible in the serps. After all, if your internal pagerank is nil, lowering it will still be nil, and keeping it the same will still be nil. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking We definitely both agree on two important points: 1) As you mentioned, high quality links are good 2) High quality content is what people need to focus on as that gets high quality links |
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Great links = could have a positive effect on rankings Shitty Links = could have a negative effect on rankings Now let me say this then. In general keyphrase competitions, nothing, and I mean nothing affects a web page in rankings more than the web page itself. There are exceptions but these are glitches and not the norm. |
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And, with Google, links are far more powerful then page content. That's why Googlebombs succeed. It's very clear evidence of the power of incoming links in Google's algorithm. |
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** Warning ** Moose Hunting Pictures ( sorry folks I work in the Canadian tourism industry ). This web page is graphic in nature. It shows pictures of harvested moose during the fall hunt so all you animal lovers out there try and control yourselves as I show this example. Take a look at the Google Backlinks for : www polarbearoutfitters com/fishing-hunting/moose-hunting-pictures htm There are two Backlinks that Google acknowledges are significant. One is mine the other is spam. Therefore, half of the recognized important linking pages to my page are spam, and not just regular spam. No. No. No. No. No. This is spam of the worse sort. This spam link comes complete with hidden and covered up text, hidden and covered up images, one single solitary URL amongst this cloud of crap which points to my web page and it is using irrelevant anchor text to do so, hidden dirty words, etc. etc. Although my web page is a simple page, it used to bring in its own search engine traffic to the web site. Now it brings none. It brings none now John. Four months ago it was #4 at google com for moose hunting pictures, now all of a sudden this link appears and it is dropped to #19. I've sent email requesting removal of the link of course. No movement yet. Tell me man, am I really missing something here or has this link caused my web page some problems. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking This is a poor example. 1) Google rankings fluctuate all of the time. Every day in fact. If you look throughout this forum, or any forum, you'll see threads started virtually every day about how someone's site has dropped. You'll also see reports of they they recovered. You'll see reports of everything. Google's algorithm is constantly in flux and thus so are their results. 2) Google doesn't report all backlinks when you do a backlink search. They also only update their link: search results every three months or so. This means the information you see is stale. This means you can't correlate what you see in their link: searches with anything you see in the SERPs because not only do you not have all of the information but that information is stale. Even better, they update their rankings daily which means as soon as they find a link it would affect your rankings. So that link couldn't suddenly appear and hurt your rankings. It would have happened the moment they found it although you wouldn't have seen that link for weeks or months doing a link: search. 3) Did you take into account other factors in how sites are ranked? How do you know the sites ahead of yours didn't acquire quality links or do other things to improve their position? Maybe you had a quality link to your site removed and never knew about it? There are lots of reasons why a site moves around in the SERPs. And this search term is so uncompetitive that a site can move up in the SERPs quickly with one good link. Losing a good link can have an equal affect. 4) This wasn't a controlled experiment. Not even close actually. You literally made a declaration that link hurt your rankings based on a simple incorrect observation. 5) This still doesn't address why links would hurt a site. There is no logic to it and I haven't seen any logic given. Again, if this was true everyone could take out their competitors with poor links. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking 1) [more indicators for ya]None of the other web pages on the website were negatively affected recently[/more indicators for ya] 2) "Google doesn't report all backlinks ..." [sarcasm]no kidding eh, where have I been?[/sarcasm] 3) I watch the keyphrase competitors closely and they aren't doing anything particularly different than normal. That's SEO 101, watching the keyphrase challengers that is. 4) [polite response]Your opinion is noted.[/polite response] 5) [Cutts]... Reciprocal links by themselves aren’t automatically bad, but we’ve communicated before that there is such a thing as excessive reciprocal linking ... and ... Now I didn’t click through to check out that site; it could be the best SEO site in the world. But the entry doesn’t give great experience for users; heck, it’s not even a complete sentence. And it didn’t look really relevant for users for a diamond ring site to exchange links like this in potentially up to 329 different categories. As Google changes algorithms over time, excessive reciprocal links will probably carry less weight. That could also account for a site having more pages in supplemental results if excessive reciprocal links (or other link-building techniques) begin to be counted less. As I said in January: “The approach I’d recommend in that case is to use solid white-hat SEO to get high-quality links (e.g. editorially given by other sites on the basis of merit).” ...[/Cutts] counted less ... think about that John. Is not being less awarded the same as being penalized. If you can't have the reward, that sucks doesn't it? |
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Plus factors go deeper then what they are doing directly. Links to your site may have been devalued while links to the other sites may have gained in value. Those changes trickle down and benefit them and hurt you. That's SEO 201. Kinda advanced. Quote:
1) Reciprocal links are not one way bad links. So this is irrelevant to what we are talking about. 2) Reciprocal links require the webmaster actively participating in the scheme. Like I have have said already, you won't be penalized for something you can't control. Webmasters have full control over reciprocal links and thus they can be penalized for them. 3) That Matt Cutts post talked about poor content on the website that was having problems. Once again, that is in full control of the webmaster. They made a crappy site intend to manipulate the SERPs and they paid the price for it. Once again, my argument is sound and you haven't provided a counter theory. |
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Two things. First, I have been in the exact same keyphrase competitions from between 8 to 12 years now. That's friggin' near the beginning of the Internet. Where were you when I started understanding my niche markets? Point is, there is no one that knows my keyphrase arenas better than I do, and so I should. That being 101 again. I have watched them all. Challengers moving up and down. Oh, here comes a good one right on my ass. Nice techniques. Oh there is a cluster of spamshits that just passed me by again on its way down the ladder to SERP oblivion. I wonder what they did to get detected. Oh I see, that should keep them outa' the way for a bit. Darn it, got myself banned again for that? Oh well, better start coming back from the dead, again. Get the picture? Secondly, there is life beyond Google? It is not the supreme god of link information, not even close to being a good priest of the god of link information. Quote:
What is important in Cutts' quote lies inside the parentheses. (or other link-building techniques) Techniques. He didn't say schemes and he's not writing about recips. Techniques John. What techniques do you think that includes John? We all expect the penalties ( or un-rewards ) to intensify for webpages that have bought and rented links, whenever the search engine figures out how to do that fairly. What other types of links do you feel may be harmful? What other types of incoming links do you think are useless and should not-rewarded for possessing. How about shit like what Google deems an important sampling of what is glued to my webpage that I showed you. I don't give a hoot about any of your SEO theories and I certainly don't want to burst your little pride bubble. I neither want to prove nor disprove anything. The only thing I really want to do is leave a warning, similar to that which the Cutts quote implies. Be careful those SEOs and Linking Strategists who wish to solicit, buy, swap, rent, steal, replicate, harvest, extort or inherit links to the web pages for the purpose of artificially inflating the web pages importance. Your power weakens daily and your days of decent SERP performances are near. Perhaps it is you that is spewing the SEO caca today. Why don’t you tell people to craft content that is worthy to be linked. Forget about the little green bar and the trendy search engine manipulation tactics. Lead junior SEOs and lead them far from search engine manipulation techniques. Giving linking advice in these times could be misinterpreted as a a reflection of your obsoletism. |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking I'd like to interrupt your argument a moment to bring up something you quoted Matt: Quote:
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Let's look at the link exchange we have between your Search Engine Optimization Directory Listing and my Ethical SEO Expert web site. I link to Daniweb four, five maybe six times throughout my web site promotion blog and my SEO web site. I do this for my Internet visitor almost exclusively as I find this resource to be of good value. This resource is also a big part of my SEO training. I write a great deal about my Internet marketing passions and whenever Daniweb comes into my paragraph, out of courtesy for my visitor and the entity of which I speak, I link to it. It is offering relevant content to my visitor primarily. It isn't about whether I help your web site trick the search engine or if you help my web site manipulate the search engines into thinking that my stuff is more important than it actually is. It is natural in this case to have cross references of our relevant content. Our links seem to be like the ones that Google wants us to have : [quote=Cutts]... editorially given by other sites on the basis of merit ...[/quote=Cutts] I co-incidentally, am given a couple of links from your web site because I keep your link in a particular place on my web site and people click it once in a while. In my case, it could be argued that since I actively participate within your web site, not frequently enough mind you, I should naturally have links offering your web visitor my additional source of quality relevant content. My gut feeling is that if you eliminated all your Directory listing and shook off most of your link partners, your web site wouldn’t be much affected, neither positively nor negatively. It is the irrelevant ones who are never to be seen or heard of again that you need to concern yourself with, I would think, especially from any junk web sites you may have picked up along the way. Again, in a very real sense, our web sites have a natural relationship. It is the unnatural ones that should drag a web site to chopping block. Go to Cutts blog, the article is entitled Google Hell? and read the entire article to more clearly see the differences between attaining links naturally and artificially. |
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Now words that did come out of my mouth back up what you just quoted. I said if a webmaster linked back to a link farm then they would be penalized. Because participating in a link farm is a "technique" that is in full control of the webmaster. Thus the penalty is deserved. Quote:
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Although content is clearly king, that content exists to get the links you need to rank well. The two go hand in hand. Great content without the links goes nowhere. |
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I never said all links are good. I just said links can never hurt you. The worst a link can be is worthless. |
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There is such a thing as a bad incoming link. Bad incoming links can cause webpages not to earn search engine rewards. This is almost the same thing as being penalized. Keyphrase competitors who have not these linked meatheads troubles have yet to have their reputations tarnished. Reputation in itself being an increasingly important ranking factor. My position goes even further, it is my opinion based on my experiences that some really bad incoming links can damage a webpage's reputation to the point where the webpages can incur penalties. I know the drill of having webpages with bad reputations. I also know the degree of effort required to regain a search engine's confidence for webpages once it has lost its confidence. end of discussion |
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| Re: SEO Site Linking It's not the end of the discussion. You have yet to state why they would hurt and why it would work in a search engine;s algorithm. You went on a tangent about content and reciprocal links and more but you never were able to explain why they would hurt. I have clearly stated why they can't. I am still waiting to hear why they can. |
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I'm outa' here |
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