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PR7 Links with Irrelevant Content

High PR Links - Quantity versus Relevance

         

benc007

1:25 am on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



From recents threads, it seems that the quantity of high PR links is more important that relevant content?

If PR7 pages link to your site and their content / theme is totally irrelevant to your site, would this help boost PR and SERPS?

Eg. Your site is about Electronics, and you have a lot of PR7 links from a Fashion site

Please share your opinions and experiences. Thank you.

Marcia

11:04 am on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It appears that the PR is helped, but aside from the PR factor it would be more the anchor text of the link than the actual content of the page itself. I keep hearing whispers that that'll change, that topic will be considered but haven't seen it yet. Maybe others have.

doc_z

11:27 am on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I haven't seen any hint so far that topic plays a role.

Net_Wizard

1:44 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)



IMO, right now, if content is ever considered in the equation, has less weight than links pointing to the site. That's why you are seeing irrelevant sites coming up high because of its backlinks and PR of those links regardless the relevancy of those backlinks to the current content of the page/site.

martinibuster

2:17 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

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Let me toss this out:
  • How are they figuring out that a guestbook link is an irrelevant link?
  • The AdSense overview has this to say about their algo:
    We go beyond simple keyword matching to understand the context and content of web pages. Based on an algorithm that includes such factors as keyword analysis, word frequency, font size, and the overall link structure of the web, we know what a page is about...
  • Google is not the only search engine- Ask Jeeves examines who is linking to you, and what "link communities" you belong to. One of the algo components Ask Jeeves uses to determine what you are relevant for is to examine what "neighborhood" you belong to.
  • Wisenut, Looksmart's SE, has been using link context for years
  • Google looks at your web neighborhood, too:
    avoid links to web spammers or "bad neighborhoods" on the web
  • From a purely Link Development perspective, do you really want to muddy up your relevancy for other search engines, and possibly Google (if not now, then in the future) by belonging to the wrong neighborhood?
  • Many today are finding that their higher PR websites are being trounced by lower PR websites- take a moment to think about the reasons why
  • Many search engine representatives advise on-topic links: why do you think they care?

Remember, always look at a proposition from at least two vantage points: Look at the close at hand as if it were from a distance, look at things that are far away as if they were close at hand (swordmaster Musashi). In other words, if you decide that Google is the only game in town (and it isn't), and even if Google does not consider the context of your inbound link (and there's a question of whether they are currently doing it, and to what extent), how do you know they won't add it to the algo in the future with the result that your website is blown out of the water? To take this thought one step further, How would you ever repair the damage?

These are just a few considerations in regard to a high non-relevant PR link. And I haven't even touched upon Inktomi, alltheweb, altavista, and overture technologies.

Fiver

2:26 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



martinibuster:

as correct as your statements are... my five most profitable keywords are all being beaten this month and last, and I fully expect next, by a network of new sites buying their PR from far outside the content domain.

when the short run lasts more than three or four months, it can get painful only looking at the long run.

doc_z

2:44 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



martinibuster,

of course, nobody knows if Google will consider the context of inbound links in the future. However, why are you assuming that considering only 'relevant' links yields better results?

Net_Wizard

2:47 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)



Ideally, I would agree with Martinibuster, however, realistically, I agree with Fiver.

Eventually, search engines(Google, etc) would get better, no doubt about that. Meanwhile, as a businessperson, there's an issue in regards to the time frame as to 'when' the search engines would get better.

If it is economically feasible to do what 'seems' to be working right now then it is worth the risk, IMO.

Otherwise, people wouldn't bother using practices where we considered unethical. Such as cloaking, doorway sites, keyword stuffing, etc..

Eventually, these sites will be caught and filtered, however, from the time the site is in the index to the time that it's removed from the index, have already payed off its investment and possibly made a hefty profit in the process.

These cycle will continue...Search Engines vs. Spammers...simply because there's profit on it.

martinibuster

2:59 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



However, why are you assuming that considering only 'relevant' links yields better results?

Good question. My answer is that the assumption that you refer to is not mine.

The assumption that relevant links brings better results belongs to Ask Jeeves, Wisenut, and to a certain extent the AdSense program, and quite possibly Google (read below).

I've stated this elsewhere, but, at the recent SES conference, a Google panelist insisted that they were already deprecating non-relevant links. To what extent this is actually being done (guestbook links,anyone?) or even the truth of her statement, can be debated forever.

I'm just throwing this out as food for thought. I'm not representing my statements as the final word on the algo, or the only way to optimize.

vitaplease

3:02 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



[webmasterworld.com...]

whenever and if ever, if not already that patent kicks in, it would take care of some of the above.

In general take every link you can get, even better if the anchortext is good, even better if its related or on topic. For now or for the future.

Mohamed_E

3:03 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



There are huge problems with the algorithmic definition of relevance.

Take a completely non-commercail site dedicated to an outdoors activity in a geographic region. The following links out from it may well seem "irrelevant" to an algorithm that relies on ODP categories (or something similar), but are in practice higly relevant:

  1. Weather services. Outdoors activities are extremely weather dependednt.
  2. Meals and lodging. Many people travel for their outdoors activities, those out for the day may well want pointers to restaurants, while those out for the weekend may want pointers to lodging.
  3. More general "touristy" things. People going a bit further afield for a vacation centered on an outdoors activity may well want to take a day off, shopping or sightseeing.

So is a link from a hiking site to a museum off topic? That seems very hard for a dumb computer to decide.

caine

3:12 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have to agree with MB on this one.

As Ask Jeeves calls it, the

Subject-Specific Popularity
. The amount of incoming page links that are related to the subject matter at hand.

This ain't new, and all the engines hve been using this technology for years. However they have also been using popularity technologies, as in site visit rate's that, have been focused on traffic throughput of a site and connected sites, without any concern of topic - i.e. Direct Hit.

Google, certainly seems to me to be alot closer to the related-communities view of the web, than to a pure popularity (association) contest.

I concur with Martini, that highly specialised tightly related website's can kill sites with PR double of the site. A careful execution of strategy mixed with ultra-specific linking wins hands down on the key-words, as G views the web.

However i would not always say this is the case in extremely competitive area's where related communities can come in a vast majority of cases, such as a term like 'insurance' - can link demographically, medically, economically, financially - loads of ways of picking up tight linking - if the site is designed structurally to encompass it.

Hence. think site structure -> content structure -> related links & pr

martinibuster

3:25 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



So is a link from a hiking site to a museum off topic? That seems very hard for a dumb computer to decide.

Whoops, looks like caine is a faster typer. Well, for what it's worth, here's a view of community building.

Ask Jeeves looks at the online communities that are formed by link patterns. Visualize a cluster of communities, all related to the outdoors, all interlinked, in one way or another, to each other. You will find the hiking site, camping site, hunting site and the weather site within this super-cluster of communities.

Now, within this super-cluster, there will be smaller clusters (or neighborhoods), all linking directly to each other. These neighborhoods can comprise Camping site communities, Hiking site communities, Hunting site communities.

They all come together in an outdoor topic super-cluster because some Hunting Sites will link out to Camping Sites, BUT, the majority of the Hunting Site links will be shared Hunting to Hunting, Camping to Camping, Hiking to Hiking.

This is what is meant by Relevant Links. Who you link to, and who links to you, determines what cluster of websites you belong to.

Imagine what a FFA cluster would look like if a search engine were looking at neighborhood clusters.

Here are some related questions to consider:

  • How does Google identify these FFA neighborhoods, these so called, "bad neighborhoods" (Google's terminology, not mine.)
  • Why does Google use the rhetoric of "neighborhoods?"
  • What do neighborhoods have to do with links?
  • What is Google's so-called Hub Score?

[edited by: martinibuster at 3:30 pm (utc) on Sep. 16, 2003]

john316

3:29 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Sometimes we need to look at the problem from the other side:

How do I get a good result?

Matching page relevance with anchor text pretty much throws the baby out with the bath water. My site is about tornadoes..my link to hurricanes is no good? How about a site about corn linking to a green bean site or a site about baseball linking to umpires.

I think the process starts with finding a good result, to weed out the relatively few who exploit link text is probably a manual thing, I doubt the algo will ever do it.

pmac

3:57 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Message # 51

[webmasterworld.com...]

caine

4:11 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



good memory pmac,

real-world expose' - well if they can figure that one out there a better whatever than i am.

seriously though, GG's making a strong comment for both website popularity and also for related linking, hence a case for both together, which obviously makes sense, who wants to top out the SERPs with no traffic, and who wants to have shed loads of traffic for nothing that they are trying to sell.

Getting tight with tight-related-linking and content is the key to a good overall strategy.

Though here comes the biggy what is a related link too your site?, this is where i feel most fall down, imagination and implimentation of a good linking strategy can help in the general scope and sub specialisation of a site. Personally i am up for building a community if it does not exist, in which it centre's at my site, drawing in loads of intricate relationships that are shared between related links. Rather than have a PRn linking reciprocally that skews the algo's of G and the others into thinking that there is a real life relatedness between the subject matters.

As it stands now, Marcia is correct that there seems to be no real penalties for linking to unrelated sites with high PR, unless they are on a list, or your industry is capped by the algo's.

john316

4:43 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>what is a related link too your site?, this is where i feel most fall down

Yep, The SE's can read, but they just don't *understand*.

BigDave

4:58 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



As it stands now, Marcia is correct that there seems to be no real penalties for linking to unrelated sites with high PR

I think there is a real problem with members of WW where they are always thinking in penalty mode, as compared to bonus mode. And even worse, they seem to think that the penalty is always related to PR.

I would expect that relevant (in-neighborhood, or whatever you want to call it) links would give you a bonus, but links that appear to be from unrelated neighborhoods will still give you the standard boost.

In fact, I think that your site will probably do better, on the engines that have given it much thought, if you have a mix of most links from within your neighborhood, and several from outside your neighborhood.

If we go back to that outdoor site, if it gets a writeup in the NY Times, or BBC, those off topic links might just mark it as THE entry point to the neighborhood.

As for a site like weather.gov getting links from outdoor sites, if many outdoor sites link to it, it will be viewed as at least related to that neighborhood.

berli

5:49 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It seems like there's a misunderstanding here. As long as Google (and the others) are determining what sites are related based on linking behavior (rather than looking at on-site content) then you're looking at a fairly objective picture of the structure of the web, not some clumsy machine determination of relevance.

However, I think rewarding based on the existing structure could be misleading. Consider these scenarios:

a) A lone and usual link from a site about apples to a site about oranges. Seems totally irrelevant, right? But the apples site owner thinks the oranges site is really cool--and his visitors agree. The oranges site is getting tons of site referrals.

This is one of those great things about linking. And an apples site owner wouldn't be linking to an oranges site owner if the oranges site wasn't really cool and exceptional. (Leaving aside the question of SEO for the moment.)

b) A blogger posts to the oranges site, because it's so "kewl." Within days there are links to the oranges site from hundreds of blogs. Meanwhile, the oranges site gal, surprised at all the traffic, posts some links back to some of those blogs. Or maybe she has webstats online which end up doing that automatically.

At the next update, the SE's are going to start placing the oranges site within a blogging hub simply because of all the incestuous links--even though there's no true connection. Thus, the "communities" algo has been fooled by the wiles of the "blogosphere."

This is why I have a problem with machine-based relevance as it now stands.

BigDave

6:10 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



berli,

You are right, there are a lot of misunderstandings here. That is because none of use "know" exactly what google or the other SEs are doing. Not even GoogleGuy knows exactly what is going on with the google algo at all times. After looking in to things there, he has come back a little surprised sometimes.

One of the big misunderstandings around here is that people tend to underestimate the hackers at the plex. If you can figure out a possible problem with something in a few minutes, you can be fairly certain that someone at Google has thought about it too.

No matter what they do about figuring out neighborhoods, there will still be cases that do not work out well. And it will suck to be that site. But Google has to worry whether the change improve the index as a whole, not about whether it is being fair to a specific site.

As for your blogging example, if a site is only willing to link back to blogs and not to any other fruit related sites, then they really are more a part of the blogging community. They become the Bloggers Favorite Orange Vendor. They don't deserve to do as well as the sites that choose to participate in their own fields as opposed to those that are all over the place.

mil2k

8:48 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I would expect that relevant (in-neighborhood, or whatever you want to call it) links would give you a bonus, but links that appear to be from unrelated neighborhoods will still give you the standard boost.

I find this much more logical.

dazzlindonna

10:43 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



My opinion only - take the link from the non-related PR7 site. I believe Google is very far away from dealing with this, and until then, you can only gain from it. Just as an example, Google has supposedly been able to detect hidden, same-color text for a very long time, but there are still many many sites out there still using it with Google being none the wiser. If they can't even get this simple thing right after so much time, I really don't think they will be able to understand topic relationships any time soon. PR7 links don't come easily. Take it, smile, and continue on.

caine

10:57 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



if the site is a short time high earning burn and drop, the strategy is fine (quick paced affiliate marketing). If its any thing to do with brand - no chance not worth the risk.

martinibuster

11:02 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Your site is about Electronics, and you have a lot of PR7 links from a Fashion site...

dazzlindonna, benc007 is talking about a lot of links, not just one. If it's just one here and another there, I don't really see a problem with that.

But when you're talking about a large quantity of off-topic links, then you're walking into a gray area, if not with Google, then with other search engines.

If benc007 is talking about many links from one site, my advice would be to take just one link then walk away- and don't look back.

caine

11:10 pm on Sep 16, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



martinibuster,

as i said in my earlier posts today, i do agree with you, and reading the posts, that purport not too agree with you, seem also to agree in the crux of their arguments. worth a re-read of the thread.

Personally unless its directly related subject, im not interested - reciprocal links for me are meant to be beneficial for the user, related to the subject, not just some questionable junk that raises an eyebrow as in why its there.

give me 10 pr4's from related sites, rather than 1 pr7 from a unrelated site. Adding to injury, i usually link out with no return to high PR site's to increase the hub feature of a particular site, i.e. maybe your surfing through though if i provide access to the relevant goodies, one day you maybe looking for what i sell - word of site - word of mouth - people remember just the same, hence filling a site with high PR but junk links ain't on.

benc007

12:21 am on Sep 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"If benc007 is talking about many links from one site, my advice would be to take just one link then walk away- and don't look back."

martinibuster - I am talking about getting many unrelated PR7 links from one or two sites to link to me without having to link back. It seems a lot of my competitors are using this strategy and are getting away with it. It will definitely take awhile for SEs to figure out what is relevant is what isn't. SEs would have to develop some kind of artificial intelligence and I think that's awhile away.

"As it stands now, Marcia is correct that there seems to be no real penalties for linking to unrelated sites with high PR"

caine - this definitely seems to be the case.

benc007

12:21 am on Sep 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"I would expect that relevant (in-neighborhood, or whatever you want to call it) links would give you a bonus, but links that appear to be from unrelated neighborhoods will still give you the standard boost."

bigdave - I think I have to agree with you here.

Arnett

1:24 am on Sep 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I haven't seen any hint so far that topic plays a role.

I've read that Google does consider the title and heading text of pages that link to yours. I don't know that other context related factors are considered when calculating the effect of inbound links.

My objection to the use of pagerank has always been the same. It is very easy,as Marcia has stated,to "play pagerank like a fiddle". All you have to do is find cooperative sites with high pr to either give or sell you a link to gain position. In recent months that doesn't seem to remain true. I have index pages with PR as low as 2 ranking higher than pages with higher PR. There are other factors which make my pages more relevant to the search than just the rank of pages with links to mine. I,for one,am glad to see that.

Google strives to maintain as objective a system as possible. Just as "machine" politics severely smeared the "democratic" system in the late 1800s,"Pagerank" politics attempt to skew the ranking results in Google. That has to be addressed and dealt with. Google should have never published the pagerank spec and never included the pagerank indicator in their toolbar. It was just an invitation to corrupt the system by overemphasizing pagerank. Pagerank has been decreasing in relation to other factors that determine SERP position in an attempt to deal with those who choose to manipulate pagerank in order to gain higher ranking in the SERPs.

I'd like to see context based ranking. It's just a question of how to code the software to evaluate pages based on context. I don't see how it could be done. A page on motorcyle maintenance is also of interest to people in other fields that involve all sorts of machines and equipment. It could also interest dealers and distributors. How are you going to determine the relevance of a link from a lawm mower repair shop/dealer to an page on motorcycle maintenace using program code?

Marcia

1:40 am on Sep 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Exactly, regardless of the topic of the pages.

It is very easy,as Marcia has stated,to "play pagerank like a fiddle". All you have to do is find cooperative sites with high pr to either give or sell you a link to gain position.

That's what effective SEO amounts to now in certain markets, in increasing numbers. Knowing where to buy the links.

You can play PR like a fiddle, and the same goes for other parts of it, for when PR isn't all that critical. Google is very musical. ;)

>>>In recent months that doesn't seem to remain true.

Not so, it still is true; I've been seeing them in searches that normally are the types who would buy text advertising for PR.

martinibuster

3:37 am on Sep 17, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



benc007

We'll be waiting for you to come back and tell us how you are finally number one because of your fistful of irrelevant links.

Seriously and on the level, I really want to hear, a month from now, that your irrelevant links have pushed you into Search Engine Nirvana. You owe it to the membership to report your results, in the same spirit of sharing that we have contributed to this thread.

No offense intended, just offering my opinion, but I doubt I'll see you there because it takes more than simple shortcuts to get there.

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