Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

An SEO"s Guidance: the value of repairing outgoing links

Fixing linksThis attends post by Michael Martinez.


As Bing and Google eliminate more cherished link structure techniques, online marketers progressively turn to supposedly “safe” methods like busted link replacement (a form of “link improvement”). I’m not convinced this is as safe a link building strategy as its proponents wish to believe, but up until now the internet search engine are not hinting at future modifications in their standards.


You will always can request for a link. No online search engine can take that far from you. However when you do ask for a link because you believe it will assist you develop your search referral traffic then you need to assume there is some possible risk included with that request. The completely understood prospective threat is that you will be punished (delisted) by an internet search engine for obtaining the link. However you must believe of potential threat as a partially-filled balloon that might or may not inflate up until it takes off.


Danger prospective changes gradually, but not all the threats you deal with concern search engine standards, penalties, and algorithms. Let’s just discuss the basic act of placing a link in an article that you release today.


WIKI HYPERLINKS:Among my favorite examples of a high-risk outbound link is a link to any Wiki website that can be altered by its visitors or an active user neighborhood. Wiki posts may appear excellent to you today however in 2-3 years (or 10 years) they will be extremely, extremely different from the content you connected to.


I am a long-time critic of Wikipedia since of the incompetent go back wars that experienced Wiki editors begin in order to pervert the content. The method Wikipedia deals with these disputes is to penalize the 2nd person (the one who reacts to the reversion) rather of the trouble-maker. Many tens of thousands of individuals have gone into Wikipedia, made good changes, then seen in horror as some more skilled user comes along, changes everything back, and views the short article to guarantee that the initial contributor is blocked by Wikipedia’s reversion guideline from keeping the great modifications in the article.


If you wish to connect to a Wiki site that is your option but you are connecting to every moron, giant, and well-meaning however unaware admin who uses the guidelines making excellent material look bad. There is a lot of risk involved in connecting to any Wiki site, specifically if you are revealing an opinion and you feel you are linking to a short article that supports your viewpoint. Someone who disagrees with you can alter the Wiki article to contradict exactly what you are saying. Best of luck taking care of that.


CONNECT TO BLOGS: As blog writers we should be connecting to other individuals’s blog sites. After all, supporting the community that supports you keeps the neighborhood strong. But the majority of bloggers do not stick with their blog sites. If you just link to the house page of the blog in 3 years you might be connecting to a dead blog that hasn’t been upgraded in 2 years.


If you deep-link to a short article on a blog site your link might make it through for a few years however eventually something will alter. Blog sites are commonly deleted. They are commonly moved. The URL structures are changed. And the worst part of this is that you may be the worst transgressor in your rogues gallery of blog writers who have actually altered things without informing you.


I began the SEO Theory blog as a subdomain on Blogspot in December 2006. In early 2007 we moved it to the SEO Theory domain everybody knows today. So that was a double-whammy on modifications in URL structures: we went from subdomain.domain.tld to domain.tld.


The article URLs were converted to make use of the proper root, but at the time we decided to choose simply seo-theory. com instead of www.seo-theory.com because we thought the shorter domain URL would be the visitors’ preferred option (that turned out not to be the case).


When we lastly added the www-prefix to the domain and rerouted the non-www variation I chose that would suffice. But another decision I made at the time was to host the blog in a subdirectory. I did that due to the fact that I thought that my employer (who at the time owned all legal rights to the blog site) might wish to establish some marketing content on the root page. However they currently had an “official” Website and, honestly, their offline sales channel was bringing in adequate business that they didn’t seem like marketing straight to the Web.


Ultimately we dropped the “/ wordpress/” folder from all the URLs and moved the content as much as the root folder. But I never ever went back and changed all the links (it would have required far excessive time for evaluation since I was writing 5 posts a week at the time AND doing my day task).


But as the years rolled by I typically found myself connecting back to older posts, and the more of those links I generated with the domain.tld/ wordpress/ format in the early days the more I inadvertently set up TWO automated redirects. This is one reason pages on the site sometimes flash when you load them (another being the speed optimizations we have carried out).


Search engines can now manage approximately 5 hops in a redirect chain. That’s terrific for SEO however honestly it develops a bad user experience for me. As I reshare old posts that I feel are relevant I occasionally discover to my entertained scary that the self-referential links do not reflect the proper structure. I have actually learned that leaving a lot of legacy structures in self-referential links ultimately leads to problem so now I examine old articles on a random basis to improve the quality of self-referential linking.


REBRANDING KILLS LINKS: I don’t have an estimate of the number of websites I have actually connected to through the years that transferred to brand-new domains, but there are a Great Deal Of them. Offered the number of Sites for which I compose content it is humanly difficult to keep an eye on all the outbound links and keep them upgraded. Even my close individual pals, who have actually paid attention to me rant on and on about how Websites break with rebranded moves, sometimes break links by rebranding their sites.


“Oh, but we constantly encourage people to establish 301 Redirects,” you say. Yes, I inform individuals to do that, too. In my visions people pay attention to me. In genuine life they “simply do not have time” or “forgot to do that” or “asked IT to take care of it” and have a thousand other descriptions for why it never ever took place. And there are many of YOU digital online marketers whose content I have actually connected to who have broken my outgoing links. Even the most experienced marketers don’t always repair their issues.


Old material might be taken offline simply since it’s “old, out-of-date, and unimportant”. And for worry of incurring some sort of imaginary search engine charge people will not even redirect the dead URLs to a “that content is gone” page. So there I am, left with dead outbound links on my page and my visitors have no idea regarding what I was connecting to or why.


Whenever possible I change rebranded links either with the proper URLs or, if the material has altered (or if the page now loads 20 ads) I just connect to the oldest understandable copy I can discover on Archive.Org.


But even Archive.Org can fail me because if you set up a “robots.txt” file that prohibits ia_archiver it won’t show people the page. I have done this myself just to combat Site scraping (which, fortunately, is not nearly as bad as it utilized to be).


My last option for fixing a rebranded link is to convert the anchor text to an italicized expression, to indicate to me (not so much to you) that there was as soon as a link there to something I felt worked and the other person eliminated it.


iStock_000001241176XSmallIDIOCY KILLS LINKS: In some cases I will link to a post written by someone I have no idea. They may be saying something I concur with today however ultimately it becomes evident to me that they got lucky with that first article. It’s a bit like being a Skeptic who links to a short article about the silliness of Paranormal Research, only to find a year later that the writer is someone who promotes an alternative type of paranormal research (for the record, I attempt to avoid of Skeptics-vs-Paranormal debates as much as possible).


So there you are, connecting to a Site that you now believe teems with nonsense. What should you do? Keep sending your visitors to a lunatic asylum and they will ultimately presume you must belong there, too.


Possibly you feel I’m using too strong language here: “idiocy”, ” asylum” are insulting, after all. But believe about the method a website you connected to in the past now makes you feel. Would you connect to it today? If not, why not? And if you did connect to it in the previous then you require to recognize that you ARE connecting to it today as long as your old link is still published and indexable.


Your feelings should play a big function in how you choose where to direct your links. Trust your sensations, Luke, the Force of your feelings will assist you.


When I see that I when connected to a site that I now feel is substandard I eliminate the links. If possible I’ll discover something else to connect to however about half the time I simply throw the carcass out into the cold and don’t even italicize the old anchor text. I wish to forget that I ever linked to such a website. I desire the online search engine to stop passing credit, too.


OPTIMIZATION ELIMINATES LINKS: If you have actually composed 10-15 articles on the very same subject over the previous 3-5 years you’ll eventually pertain to the awareness that you have to tidy up that mess. It doesn’t constantly turn out to be a mess. News websites, for example, have to keep their content differentiated chronologically (and shame on the sites that continuously add updates to old material).


However we as digital online marketers realize that eventually we start restarting ourselves, and so we either reduce the quantity of content we release on a site or we start combining content. I just recently did that on SEO Theory and I have done it for other websites. Material consolidation is a great way to reset the clock and offer you some breathing time so that you can blog about the subject once more.


But every now and then when I am evaluating old links I discover they now cause rerouted locations which are terrible attempts to consolidate old content. For instance, just prior to I decided to compose this article I reviewed some outbound links on an old SEO Theory post. Among them led to a particular short article that has been included in some sort of a classification page. I could not find any trace of the post itself on the first page of results in the category listings, so I changed the link with a link on Archive.Org.


When you redirect your old URLs to a consolidation page you have to show visitors who follow old links that the content they desire is still there, quickly reached, and essential to you. Simply following my (and may other SEO bloggers’) advice to execute redirects when you consolidate old content is unsatisfactory (at least not for me).


I would like to know exactly what happened to the old material. I desire my visitors to understand that I am still supplying a significant linking experience.


I hardly ever receive any demands from online marketers for link recovery. I would virtually never accept such a request anyway unless I knew the individual and thought they were legally making a good recommendation for my website. Sorry, digital marketing world, however many of you seem hawking truly bad content with your guest posting and link recovery methods. I have actually most likely accepted 2 link improvement demands in the last 5 years.


Optimization outreach might lead me to change old links, but the new links may not be as good as the old links were. At best I am enhancing an abject user experience; at worst I am jeopardizing with fact and eliminating bad links. Exactly what I would choose is for the old post publishers to be consistent in supporting the sites that linked to them in the past.


Sure, it may be hard to show that those links still exist (or still help in any way), however if individuals are visiting your website through old links you owe it to them and yourself to provide them the most relevant experience possible.


WHY IT ‘S ESSENTIAL TO ME


As a supporter of writing timeless content (and I concede that not all my content is ageless), I feel that the links are simply as vital as the words and images on the page. I desire individuals to understand that when they land on an old article (and those old short articles get a LOT of traffic) that they can trust exactly what I am informing them.


Often I do upgrade the old short articles. It’s needed to offer some context (such as “this post refers to a service that went offline in 2012”).


Often I take the old short articles offline. When I do so I need to decide if I wish to reroute the URLs to some other material or leave them “dead”. Yes, I do occasionally orphan incoming links that other individuals provided me in the past (or that I provided myself).


I understand I am creating a bad user experience, but if you have actually done this then you’ll probably agree that you are jeopardizing with truth and replacing a less bad user experience for a worse one. We may be best or wrong in our judgements.


Ultimately I’ll figure out exactly what to do about the content I have taken offline. I do not desire to leave a disappointment in location. But at least now that I can mark posts a PRIVATE on WordPress installations I can quickly see which short articles are not beneficial and I’ll have the ability to think of methods to handle that user traffic.


To me, it says a lot about a marketer’s commitment to the customer experience when I see them make an effort to solve dead link issues in a significant, user-friendly method. When you simply do it for online search engine you truly indicate that you do not think much about exactly what kind of impression your website makes on visitors. I feel YOUR discomfort when I take content offline. I desire you to feel MY pain when you take content offline.


About Michael Martinez


Michael Martinez has actually been establishing and promoting Websites because 1996 and started practicing search engine optimization in 1998. He is the principal author of the SEO Theory blog site.Marketing Pilgrim



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Saturday, March 14, 2015

Are On-Topic Links Important? - Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish


How much does the context of a link really matter? In today’s Whiteboard Friday, Rand looks at on- and off-topic links to uncover what packs the greatest SEO punch and shares what you should be looking for when building a high-quality link.





For reference, here’s a still of this week’s whiteboard!


On-Topic Links Whiteboard


Video Transcription



Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we’re going to chat a little bit about on-topic and off-topic links. One of the questions and one of the topics that you see discussed all the time in the SEO world is: Do on-topic links matter more than off-topic links? By on topic, people generally mean they come from sites and pages that are on the same or very similar subject matter to the site or page that I’m trying to get the link to.


It sort of makes intuitive sense to us that Google would care somewhat about this, that they would say, “Oh, well, here’s our friend over here,” we’ll call him Steve. No we’re going to call him Carl, because Carl is a great name.


Carl, of course, has CarlsCloset.net, CarlsCloset.net being a home organization site. Carl is going out, and he’s doing some link building, which he should, and so he’s got some link targets in mind. He looks at places like RealSimple.com, the magazine site, Sunset Magazine, UnderwaterHoagies.com, Carl being a great fan of all things underwater and sandwich related. So as he’s looking at these sites, he’s thinking to himself, well, from an SEO perspective, is it necessary the case that Real Simple, which has a lot of content on home organization and on cleaning up clutter and those kinds of things, is that going to help Carl’s Closet site rank better than, say, a link from UnderwaterHoagies.com?


The answer is a little tough here. It could be the case that UnderwaterHoagies.com has a feature article all about how submariners can keep their home in order, even as they brunch under the sea. But maybe the link from RealSimple.com is coming from a less on-topic article and page. So this starts to get really messy. Is it the site that matters, or is it the page that matters? Is it the context that matters? Is it the link itself and where that’s embedded in the site? What is the real understanding that Google has between relationships of on-topic and off-topic? That’s where you get a lot of convoluted information.


I have seen and we have probably all heard a ton of anecdotal evidence on both sides. There are SEOs who will argue passionately from their experience that what they’ve seen is that on-topic links are hugely more beneficial than off-topic ones. You’ll see the complete opposite from some other folks. In fact, most of my personal experiences, when I was doing more directed link building for clients way back in my SEO consulting days and even more recently as I’ve helped startups and advised folks, has been that off-topic links, UnderwaterHoagies.com linking to Carl’s Closet, that still seems to provide quite a bit of benefit, and it’s very had to gauge whether it’s as much, less than, more than any of these other ones. So I think, on the anecdotal side, we’re in a tough spot.


What we can say is that probably there’s some additional value from on-topic sites, on-topic pages, or on-topic link connections, that Google has some idea of context. We’ve seen them make huge strides with algorithms like Hummingbird, certainly with their keyword matching and topic modeling algorithms. It seems very unlikely that there would be nothing in Google’s algorithm that looks at the context or relationship of content between linking pages and linking websites.


However, in the real world, things are almost never equal. It’s not like they’re going to get exactly the same anchor text from the same importance of a page that has the same number of external links, that the content is exactly the same on all three of these websites pointing over to Carl’s Closet. In the real world, Carl is going to struggle much harder to get some of these links than others. So I think that the questions we need to ask ourselves, as folks who are doing directed marketing and trying to earn links, is: Will the link actually help people? Is that link going to be clicked?


If you’re on a page on Real Simple that you think very few people ever reach, you think very few people will ever click that link because it just doesn’t appear to provide much value, versus you’re in an article all about home organization on Underwater Hoagies, and it was featured on their home page, and you’re pretty sure that a lot of the submariners who are eating their subs under the sea are very interested in this topic and they’re going to click on that link, well you know what? That’s a link that helps people. That probably means search engines are going to treat it with some reverence as well.


Does the link make sense in context? This is a good one to ask yourself when you are doing any kind of link building that’s directed that could potentially be manipulative. If the link makes sense in context, it tends to be the case that it’s going to be more useful. So if Carl contributes the article to UnderwaterHoagies.com, and the link makes sense in context, and it will help people, I think it’s appropriate to put it there. If that’s not the case, it could look a little manipulative. It could certainly be perceived as self-serving.


Then, can you actually acquire the link? It’s wonderful when you go out and you make a list of, hey, here’s the most important and relevant sites in our sector and niche, and this is how we’re going to build topical authority. But if you can’t get those links, hey that’s tough potatoes, man. It’s no better than putting a list of links and just sorting them by, God knows, a horrible metric like PageRank or Alexa rank or something like that.


I would instead ask yourself if it’s realistic for you to be able to get those links and pursue those as well as pursuing or looking at the metrics, and the importance, and the topical relevance.


Let’s think about this from a broad perspective. Search engines are caring about what? They’re caring about matching the content relevance to the searcher’s query. They care about raw link popularity. That’s sort of like the old-school algorithms of PageRank and number of links and that kind of thing. They do care about topical authority and brand authority. We talked about on Whiteboard Friday previously around some topical authorities and how Google determines the authority and the subject matter of a site’s authority. They care about domain authority, the raw importance of a domain on the web, and they care about things like engagement, user and usage data, and given how much they can follow all of us around the web these days, they probably know pretty well whether people are clicking on these articles using these pages or not.


Then anchor text. Not every link that you might build or acquire or earn is going to provide all of these in one single package. Each of them are going to be contributing pieces of those puzzles. When it comes to the on-topic/off-topic link debate, I’m much more about caring about the answers to these kinds of questions — Can I acquire the link? Is it useful to people? Will they actually use it? Does the link make sense in context? — than I am about is it on-topic or off-topic? I’m not sure that I would ever urge you to prioritize based on that.


That said, I’m certainly looking forward to your feedback this week and hearing about your experiences with on-topic and off-topic links, and hopefully we’ll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.



Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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Are On-Topic Links Important? - Whiteboard Friday

Saturday, March 7, 2015

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Friday, February 20, 2015

5 Techniques To Safely Get Links In 2015

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