Wednesday, April 17, 2013

How Google Looks at Back links nowadays to Rank Your Site

I talked concerning link value last year but I thought I’d go a few steps additional and add to that, covering how Google values links nowadays when link building isn't the center of awareness or the entire game that it once was.

Total Number: First and foremost, Google considers the total amount of links which you have. This isn't a mainly influential factor considering one good one from a high ranking, established, trustworthy site (more on this later) will be more important than thousands of spammy, low quality site links.

Number of Domains/Source: If you have thousands of links from the same site then it’s not really going to be helping you. For instance, if the greater part of your links were all coming from the same article directory, Google is going to reduce the influence of most of those links. Some people disagree that Google discounts influence after the first link from an exacting site. Therefore, link diversity is tremendously important, so you should be getting links from all types of sites from directories to blogs to video sites and so on.

Google can recognize where your links are coming from not just from the sites themselves but through varied IP addresses, so you certainly want your links coming from different IP addresses around the globe as this suggests you’re getting links from different people.

Anchor Text: I’ve talked a lot about anchor text lately in terms of how significant it is to vary up the anchor text which you use when creating links to your site. This works to keep your link profile diverse and natural looking because you have to think that if someone was linking to your site from his site, he likely wouldn't use the keyword you’re targeting on that page when pointing to your site.

Age: While some people consider that older links – links you've had for years pointing to your site – are more expensive and powerful than newer links you receive, when I refer to “age” here I’m referring to the age of the sites you’re receiving links from. Older, more established site links will be more powerful whereas links from newer sites won’t make as much of an impact. This goes with the idea that older sites have more authority and page rank and Google trusts them more.

Variation: I’ll take in “variation” here to once more drive home the point that diversity is significant in terms of anchor text and source of links. It doesn't stop there, however; variation is significant in terms of image versus text, placement of them on a choice of sites linking to you (high up in the content is best as opposed to sidebars or menu bars which are signs of link buying or exchanges), and dofollow versus nofollow links, as well.

Years ago, Google said that only DoFollow links would pass influence. After hearing that, everyone began concentrating completely on DoFollow and discounting going after NoFollow links in total. While a lot of webmasters still focus completely on DoFollow, a lot of SEOers believe that NoFollow links pass more power than before because Google will do what is necessary to reduce the success of those who are trying to game or play to Google’s algorithm and reward those who are not.

Quality: Quality is still a factor as I mentioned in opening. Receiving one link from a highly ranked and trusted site is far more precious than thousands of links from spammy blogs. If you are going to spend your time trying to get links, you want to spotlight on getting links from highly trusted and established sites which it’s hard to receive links from because they’re more conventional in whom they link to. In this case, it’s less about “getting” links and more about “earning” links through techniques like creating and sharing link bait or guest blogging for them.

Another sign of quality is significance, in that you want links from sites which are applicable to your site. If you’re getting one from a site about cars when your site is all about puppies, Google is likely going to discount the influence that it has as it is very likely that you created that link yourself because naturally a webmaster of a car site would not link to your puppy themed site on their own. In keeping with the variation point, it’s all right to have a few links from unrelated sites, but generally you’ll be staying in your niche.

Bad Links: On the other hand, the opposed of quality links, bad links will detract from and have an unpleasant effect on your ranking, so do what you can to limit the number of bad links pointing to your site.

Velocity: Link velocity refers to the rate and plan at which you’re building links to your site. The key here is to make your link velocity look natural or, in other words, you shouldn't get 10,000 links one month and 100 the next month. There shouldn't be a lot of curves in your velocity. You should continue to build more links each month than the one before it.

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