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I have 158 back-links for my site and here is the breakdown of how the anchor text is used (what is displayed in the anchor text):
Company name 41%
URL 23%
Banner 2%
keyword phrase - company name 20%
keyword phrase 14%
So then I decided to look at what is number one for that keyword phrase (26 backlinks, same PR as mine)
URL 58%
Company name – keyword phrase 42%
So then I looked at number two (163 back-links, same PR)
Company name 24%
URL 21%
Banner 26%
company name - keyword phrase 24%
keyword phrase 5%
I did two more sites and I noticed the trend was that % for “company name - keyword phrase” decrease as I went down the list.
I thought to myself maybe it has to do with order of the keyword phrase:
“company name - keyword phrase” (does this do better?)
“keyword phrase - company name” (does this do worse?)
So then I found another site like mine that has the “filter” applied too. (This site was ranked 250 with similar PR and 89 back-links).
keyword phrase - company name 98%
keyword phrase 2%
So I am coming to the conclusion that if you are going to use keywords in anchor text of your back-links you should position the "company name" or something else before the keyword phrase.
Has anyone else noticed this? I know there are a lot of other parameters at play here, but I thought this might be one small part of the puzzle.
I have expected that. My feeling since florida was that keyword phrase at the beginning of the title is weighted less now than keyword phrase in the middle/end of the page title. So your analyzes seem like a proof of that. I'm not sure if this has anything to do with anchor though ... Will build my newest page with mixed titles then and see if there'll be any difference.
So I am coming to the conclusion that if you are going to use keywords in anchor text of your back-links you should position the "company name" or something else before the keyword phrase.
this might be correct, i have followed the logic since i began my link exchnage program. But i use the keypharse+company name format for anchor text. To add - i see my competitors who have more links (even back links) than me but just use keyphares as anchor text have been pushed back to page 3-4.
Overall very good observation.
[edited by: nileshkurhade at 6:21 pm (utc) on Jan. 11, 2004]
So therefore it is logical to assume that Google is just ignoring alot of the anchor text in our backlinks.
No it isn't logical at all to assume that, especially when you use the term "new" to describe the other site.
Sites that engage in garbage link exchanges seldom show those as backlinks, but could have thousands of anchor text links from junky link pages, or have thoudands of internal pages.
Comparing backlinks to allinanchor sometimes is useful, but often the two don't relate much... especially in a competitive area and when looking at a spammy site.
No it isn't logical at all to assume that, especially when you use the term "new" to describe the other site.Sites that engage in garbage link exchanges seldom show those as backlinks, but could have thousands of anchor text links from junky link pages, or have thoudands of internal pages.
Comparing backlinks to allinanchor sometimes is useful, but often the two don't relate much... especially in a competitive area and when looking at a spammy site.
And we have many thousands (50,000+) links that don't show up in a link search and there is no way the site that I mentioned has more links than us.
of course what actually is happening is that the anchor text is being reduced in weighting and surrounding text and the keyword relationship of the linking page is greatly increased in weighting added to the already mentioned over seo links filter....this explains why multiple sub swapping works..because most of the say 40 links have common words such as say discount widgets...artificially inflating the importance of the linking page for that word/words and incresing the value of the individual links...
Your last paragraph disproves that on its own. It's a serious mistake to think there is a necessary correlation.
The site at #1 for allinanchor for a 20million+ keyword shows under 150 backlinks. The site at #4 shows 108 backlinks... but has over 20,000 pages in the index (down from 39,000 when it ranked #2 for allinanchor), and of course all of its pages links to its main page. The site at #1 for allinanchor has 352 pages in the index... literally 351 are reciprocal link pages.
Oh and all but four of those 20,000 pages are link or add your link pages.
The #3 allinanchor site shows 1450 backlinks, and almost certainly has more total links pointing at it than the above two combined. (It's a "real" site rather than a seo phantom.)
Each individual bit of the above information doesn't necessarily extrapolate out the rest of the information for that site, nor explain its rankings. It is a serious error to think that things are definitely connected that are not.
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more to the point, as soapystar says, right now allinanchor definitely is not purely an anchor text ranking.
PageRank has a published definition of how that "ranking" is developed. The allin searches only say that they will return the sites that meet that definition. There is not guaranteed or even implied order.
If you go and decide that allin is an accurate ranking tool, and start depending on it, google can make a very minor tweak each mont and really mess up all your grand plans.
Use the allin to find out who your competition is, but it doesn't necessarily tell accurately how they rank for that keyphrase.
if indeed there has been an update already....has there?
Looks like there's been a backlinks update. See
[webmasterworld.com...] .