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This might be relevant to some of the linklist problems
This thread on groups.google google webmaster help might have some clues.
The question raised by this talk of Lasnik's is - how are they detecting and deciding that content isn't of value? http://groups.google.com/group/Googl...61be809ce2ce5/ Starting with this post by Adam Lasnik: ======== Adam Lasnik I think it's time for some tough love here, Alan. Imagine this scenario. You walk into a store and some guy -- surprisingly the owner -- grabs you by the shoulder. "How'd you like some beer? Oh, hey, we also sell coffee. Hmm... you don't want something to drink? We specialize in air purifiers, too! And you know what... after you drink some beer next to your new air purifier, I bet you could use a date, right? No, no, not the eating kind... I'm talking a really nice lady! And if she ends up stealing your identity, well, no problem! I sell Identity Theft protection services... and... wait! Wait...come back!!!" How much would you trust that guy? Or his store? Sure, he may have small leaflets on a zillion topics, but he's not an expert in any. If you, as an independent observer, came across such a store online, would you trust it anymore? If not, why should Google see this as an important and relevant site? The reductions in rankings you've experienced are not going to be reversed by simple technical or structural changes. You may wish to focus your efforts, add compelling, original, and substantive content or tools, and *then* file a reconsideration request. ============= ============ Adam Lasnik I'd like to thank you (and so many other folks here) for the thoughtful and insightful discussion. I respect you for being open with what you've done and what your goals are and so on and for taking in constructive criticism in such a friendly manner :) I do want to clarify one more thing: I don't think it'd be worth your time to spin stuff off to different domains... unless you have a substantive user-centric reason for doing so (branding, easier navigation, etc.). In general, we encourage webmasters to stick with fewer domains, and beef up quality content/ tools within that domain. As has been pointed out, the issue of dissimilar topics within a domain isn't itself a problem; lots of well-respected sites do that, including some that have been named here and elsewhere. It all comes down to unique and compelling content and tools; to the extent that my teasing anecdote muddied the waters by suggesting that thematic focus was the core issue here, mea culpa! :o ============ |
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It's less of a concern when you know you're building an original and valuable site. Like I said before, one obvious problem with link lists is that 99% of links going in and going out are artificial. The bigger LLs have more one-ways due to higher precentage of rejections, higher submits/day, etc. Still those one-ways are losing their power too because they still leave an obvious pattern (identical anchor text, link in a table cell, instead of a paragraph block, etc), and also because even when one side drops a link, it doesn't mean Google forgets who *used* to link to what. And I'm sure algorithms and heuristics Google uses to detect low-value content is way more involved than any of that. (e.g. looking at ratio between affiliate links vs outbounds to non-commercial sites, percentage of links from low quality site vs authority sites, visitor bounce rate, visitor behavior once they arrive at a site, how long they stay, etc). Sidebar/footer Link trades for the sake of higher search ranking (instead of branding/traffic) and indiscriminate reciprocal linking tactics are things of the past. As long as small LL owners refuse to accept that fact, they will have a long road ahead of them. |
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One way to solve the identical recips problem is to use rotating recips on your webmaster page as I do on tripleXworld.com. This gives me about 9 different link text variations (could be more) on my freesites that are submitted to me. |
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We'll assume that those who already link to me wouldn't drop their links, and that others would, over time, link to me from hubs, blogs, or where ever (because they love me). I have no intention of doing the standard traffic trade link exchanges with other lists, though I do sometimes link to a submitter's own list or page from within one of my new, beefy descriptions. (though I don't think any of them have ever noticed) What are your thoughts? I am more than willing tinker with this list to see how Google would react. |
Well, to start out, I want to say that I've decided that I may be wrong about my initial thinking about this case.
What I was interested in, when I was reading this, is the question of how they were detecting and deciding the domain in question was low-quality content, and thereby banning it. Upon studying it more, I realized I had left out one critical consideration - it's a mainstream site running adsense. So, it's subject to manual review. My initial thinking on this was based on the idea that they were combining a low linking "score" (that is, the algo had decided that it had low quality links, and had given it a low score for link quality), combined with some kind of manual review. Because, while low quality links could be detected by an algo, low quality content can pretty much only be decided by a human. But I didn't think about the human review part of adsense. Occams razor says the most likely cause of the banning was the adsense review. So, I was wrong, this case doesn't necessarily tell us anything about what's happening with some of the linklists. |
I've got some thoughts on experiments the smaller linklists could try, UW, but since I've decided my initial speculations about this particular case were mistaken, we should probably do this in another thread, so as not to confuse the two issues.
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Well, I think there is, at the very least, a marketing lesson in your opening post, and apparently some insight on the mindset of Google's human reviewers. We do tend to toss a dozen handfuls of different colored shit against the walls of every page on a link list. Tighter targeting could probably serve us all well.
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Not to mention the site isn't banned. Quote:
For example, a list of possible quality factors when ranking blogs in Google's Blogsearch:
Negative indicators:
Just to drive the point home, here's a list of quality score factors for Google Ads: Quote:
Google can judge content quality without humans (though Google is far from perfect and of course they do have thousands of people looking over the SERPs). |
As mentioned, I have been thinking, if LL trades such as catagory page trades are being seen as a bad pattern (if true), then why couldn't free site submits be seen as a pattern? As Halfdeck mentions. Does'nt seem like there is a good solution if it's all true.
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I don't know if it's just me or what, but I am not in agreement with most of what is being said against recip links. My opinion on this matter is if the link offers something valuable to your visitors that they will be interested in, then it's not a bad thing.
Of course these are not the best type of links to have, but I think if done right, they can be effective in helping your rankings. Useless, your idea sounds nice, but you might as well call it a hub. |
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I like the idea of listing clean sites also, but then it's the same old question, how would you get link backs? I don't think any one can say you will rise in the serps without linkbacks and even more so in the saturated adult market. I think a big part of the problem is the adult market, and many mainstream markets, it's all about the money. No one wants to give unless they get. Not always, but for the most part. I don't mind helping out people, friends, ect, but I am here to make money so I guess I am in that mode also, of give and get. Where in the adult market can you get a linkback without giving a recip, or something? Where can surfers post links to "good" porn sites? Just thinking...:) |
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LL owners do similar things. Banning certian hosts, blacklisting IP's, ect. Sponsors do it by not allowing certian countries. Are these not the same type "patterns". Though they might not all be bad, it's a pretty good chance they are. Maybe I am off base or getting off topic. |
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Of course, the list in question lists a variety of pages, so I'd have to decide if I'd also list recip-free AVS sites, galleries, etc. Also, I've been working on extra features that push the site far beyond the definition of a standard link list, which I hope will make it even more sticky. |
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My memory of what the thread said may be flawed, it's been several days now since I read it. I don't ordinarily check to see wether a site is actually banned, that's not the part that interests me, and as you know, people use the word banned when they may have merely dropped in the results. |
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It's not that I think traffic cannot be built in that manner, but I do believe there's more to it than that simple change. It is a very interesting idea though, and I'd like to see how it performs for you. |
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But many LLs not only have thousands of recips pointing at them but 99.99% of their backlinks are from reciprocal links. I believe a site with a more balanced link profile will perform better. In this post, Matt Cutts says: Quote:
Take link list A with 100 reciprocal links, TBPR 1 each. Due to them being reciprocal, Google devalues them by 2%, so those links are really worth TBPR 98 total (I know TBPR 1+1 doesn't add up to 2, but lets pretend they do for a sec. I'm also not saying TBPR = higher ranking; its a metric of inbound juice that hints at how much anchor text and other factors are coming through). Now the site owner receives 1000 more submissions each link worth TBPR 1. Say Google devalues IBL now at 5%. So instead of 1100 TBPR you got 1045. Still, 1045 is better than 0. Throw on 10,000 more submits. Say that triggers the "excessive reciprocal link" flag. Devaluation goes up to 60%. Initially, you see higher and higher rankings, but as you pile on more and more recips, you hit a ceiling - more submits = more devaluation so even if your ranking improves the rate of movement becomes slower and slower. |
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Question: What if you are able to cut down on the identical anchor text that is being placed on your submissions as well as change the recip url to a page that would not be linking back directly? For example, I have a freesites page, a pics galleries page, and a vids gallery page per niche. If I was to change my recip url to point to pics or vids gallery pages instead of my freesites page, then my recip links would not be direct anymore. Would that be a better way of handling my recips in your opinion? Also, what's the best way to fight the devaluation process? Simply gain more high quality incoming links? |huh |
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