There are many reasons to build links to your website, and sometimes, it is hard to determine if one link is better than another, or if it is worth anything at all. For example, a dofollow link is better than a nofollow for some purposes, but not for others. And a redirected link may hold no value for SEO, but may still prove valuable. Here are the types of links that you can build to your website, and why you should take advantage of a mixture of each. Traffic Generating
Tag Archives: pagerank
Beginner’s Guide to Link Metrics
In the beginning, search engines were crap. I don’t mean to knock the pioneers, but they simply relied too heavily on what webmasters said their websites were about. That’s why porn sites ranked for searches like, “the whitehouse.” People are shameless – if they can scam their way into money, you’d better believe they’ll do it. Follow the incentives. When Google came onto the scene, touting founder Larry Page’s new PageRank metric, things changed. PageRank was a way to measure websites not by how relevant their webmasters said they were – but by how relevant and authoritative other webmasters said they were. Since then, links have been central to getting sites to rank in search results. It’s nearly impossible to rank without them. PageRank is definitely not a tell-all metric, but one of its core theories still holds true: Not all links are created equal. If you’re getting into the SEO game now you probably already know you need links to rank. And you’ve probably been run through the gamut on how you can build/attract them. This post assumes manual link building (i.e. everything other than linkbait) is at least part of your strategy. Link metrics essentially answer (or attempt to answer) this question: how strong is the page where the link will be published? The stronger the page, the stronger the link it passes. What follows is an introductory guide to metrics we can use to evaluate links. PageRank To learn the basics of PageRank it’s a good idea to read Larry Page and Sergey Brin’s thesis paper, The Anatomy of a Large-scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine , from their PhD work at Stanford. Yes, it’s academic writing, so you may want to stab your eyes out with a pretzel at some point, but this document formed the basis of one of the biggest technology revolutions in modern history, so buck up. Alright, I know probably 95% of you won’t read the paper – so have a look at this graphic. It gives you the basic idea. (Arrows represent links.) Things have changed since PageRank was first conceived (quite a bit), but the basics are still in play. PageRank is basically a 1-10 score for a page based on how many links it has (and how strong those links are). It’s logorithmic, meaning it’s 10x harder to get from 2 to 3 as it is to get from 1 to 2. It generally follows that the higher the PageRank of a particular page, the more PageRank (or “link juice”) that page can pass to other pages through its links. While most SEOs worth their salt will tell you to ignore PageRank, they still secretly check it when nobody’s looking. How can you collect PageRank data? With a toolbar ( Google Toolbar , SEOQuake ) With live SERP displays ( SEOmoz Toolbar does it , SEOQuake ) mozRank & mozTrust (from
2010 Google Toolbar PageRank Update : PageRank Bunny
Did the Google PageRank Bunny visit your site over this past weekend to drop off a basket of juicy Google [Toolbar] PageRank goodness? Or did he raid your fridge and hop away with some of your site’s PageRank? Over the weekend the first Google ‘Toolbar’ PageRank update of 2010 occurred which left some site owners quite happy, some a bit bewildered and did not affect many. Now, we should all be reminded that ‘Toolbar’ PageRank is different than Google PageRank because the PageRank displayed in the toolbar is not 100% reflective of the way Google judges the value of a website. A site without PageRank can still rank well in the Google index. A Site with a PageRank 2 can outrank a PageRank 8. Sometimes, Google will taketh PageRank away, but that will not result in your site ranking lower or less traffic. It’s just one of many metrics that Google may use, and they seem to have a lot of fun sharing this Toolbar PageRank ’snapshot’ with webmasters and bloggers, as a rise and drop in PageRank can lead to many new decisions by publishers and moreso, lead them to the temptation of monetizing that PageRank with paid links … a BIG NO NO according to Google Webmaster Guidelines. So, that being said … I still know that PageRank is the center of the Google universe according to many webmasters and publishers AND although it’s just a “little green bar” … I’d like to know .. How did the 2010 Google PageRank Update affect your website? Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . 2010 Google Toolbar PageRank Update : PageRank
Twitter Thinks I Am You
Not so long ago twitter added nofollow to when you mention someone using @ However they also added a small popup which provides extra information. This popup is only shown when you are logged in. Quite useful to easily see their bio and activity. That way you can decide much faster if you want to follow someone. But to show how much twitter thinks things through when implementing something new. Here is a weird anomaly. When you use the retweet button the retweet gets added to your timeline and is added to your profile page. Under the retweet is says: “Retweeted by you (and # other(s))”. The word ‘you’ is a link to your own personal twitter profile. http://twitter.com/BajaCa in my case. But when you perform a mouse-over and the popup shows the bio and activity of the user ‘you’. Alongside is a followed link to his profile . Seems twitter thinks I am you
Of course Matt Cutts posted an video last Monday where he explains whether the pagerank of twitter profiles matter. Since twitter nofollows all internal links, profiles should only get high pageranks through external links. However http://twitter.com/you has a pagerank of 5. When we look at the link profile for that page we see this is mostly thanks to the internal links from twitter profiles. Now you might say Google only sees internal nofollowed links to that profile since the popups aren’t shown to Google (Googlebot isn’t logged in). But many of the links in Googles cache aren’t nofollowed yet as you can see at some of the cached profiles. Google hasn’t re-indexed every profile yet. We can see this when we do this search . Note: the link operator doesn’t provide any accurate results on Google, but usually it shows a small number from the total number of results. We can expect a drop in pagerank for his profile-page with the next pagerank update. We can expect a drop on everyone’s twitter page! Where does all the pagerank go? All to the homepage as those links are followed. Useful? Nope, the homepage isn’t going to rank for many keywords anyway. @Twitter, get smarter! I am not you and internal nofollow doesn’t make any sense! This is a guest post by Bartjan Cazander an SEO consultant who specializes in SEO targeted for the Netherlands. He blogs about Dutch SEO at BajaCa.nl . Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Twitter Thinks I Am