Forum Moderators: skibum
We want to use an affliate programme for booking hotels on the website but we have been worried by rumours that if we use an affiliate site it will somehow take some of our page ranking and we will lose out in the SEOs.
Is there any truth to this?
Would we be better linking from our website on the front page to a totally different website we have created, and run the affiliate programme from there so we do not risk losing page ranking on our main website?
Any help for some newbies be much appreciated, thanks in advance.
The big problem most encounter with affiliate programs and ranking, is a site that is nothing but a conduit for the affiliate program. If you have a site, and are now adding an affiliate program that is suitable to the content you shouldn't have a problem. The key is to have pages that are of value to the user, and not just a doorway to the affiliate program.
To avoid the loss of PR/WR, you could either cloak off the links for spiders, or hide the link with javascript. These could be considered risky by some, and if you have a squeeky clean site may not be worth the minimal loss in PR/WR.
Pagerank is Google's measure of the importance of your site (or, more accurately, of each different page of your site). You can get a rough indication of this (a number from 1 to 10) by installing the Google toolbar. Outgoing links will diminish your PR.
PR, however, is only one of many factors in determining where your page ranks on the SERPs (Search Engine Results Page), and is now much less important than it used to be. Losing PR may not have an adverse impact on your position in the SERPs.
I don't think that setting up a second site for your affiliate links is a good idea. First of all, the links on your main site will leak the same amount of PR no matter where they go to. Second, by complicating the buying process, you're likely to reduce the number of visitors that convert into customers.
Sorry, not mastered the Quote feature on here yet!
"The big problem most encounter with affiliate programs and ranking, is a site that is nothing but a conduit for the affiliate program. If you have a site, and are now adding an affiliate program that is suitable to the content you shouldn't have a problem. The key is to have pages that are of value to the user, and not just a doorway to the affiliate program."
The sites very large and not made purely for the affilate programme, it will just be a small part of the site really the rest(130-150 pages so far) is all related information to the area we are offering to book the hotels in.
"To avoid the loss of PR/WR, you could either cloak off the links for spiders, or hide the link with javascript."
We don't want to do anything that risks us getting penalized.
"Outgoing links will diminish your PR."
If the website we have an outgoing link to has a high PR will that dimish us more or less than if it had a low PR?
"I don't think that setting up a second site for your affiliate links is a good idea. First of all, the links on your main site will leak the same amount of PR no matter where they go to. Second, by complicating the buying process, you're likely to reduce the number of visitors that convert into customers."
The first point is very useful. The second point I was worried about myself, I didn't want to take buyers to a whole new site that may put them off with the last second internet buying jitters.
"Outgoing links will diminish your PR."If the website we have an outgoing link to has a high PR will that dimish us more or less than if it had a low PR?
That makes no difference. Your link passes the same amount of PR to the site that you're linking to irrespective of where the link goes.
Two things that do make a difference, though:
(1) The more links on the page, the less PR is passed through each of them.
(2) If the page that you're linking to links back, then you'll get some of the PR back.
Don't fall into the trap of thinking that PR is everything for ranking well. Getting incoming links with keyword rich anchor text is much more important (as are a couple of other things). Someone even started a thread in the Google News forum recently asking whether PR is factor at all anymore.
To quote, enclose the text in "quote" and "/quote" tags, with the tags enclosed in square brackets.
"I'm the author of this page but I didn't put this link here. The presence of this link on this page is not an endorsement of the content it leads to."
If you do not want the affiliate program to get PR from your links and profit from it by competing with you in the SERPS, nofollow should work.