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For example, we have one site with 200 inbound links and 70% of traffic comes search engines and 25% from inbound links.
While search engines are great and provide the majority of traffic, I am trying to get a very rough idea of how many links it will take before the majority of our traffic comes from inbound links. 1000? 2000?
Thanks
50% comes from links.
85% of search engine referrals for me come from Google and its partners.
I have approx. 1500 pages.
I would guess less than 15%-20% of traffic for my site is coming from external inbound links.
Problem is statistics can get troubled.
[webmasterworld.com...]
I pay since 2 years utmost attention to devellop links from linked sites because the past showed very irregular behaviour by AltaVista and Google, causing wild fluctuations and jumpy results. At the other hand, a link is a very steady source, depending on profile and value of the linked site. In my view an insurance against the centralised power of Google.
If you depend too much from just one SE = dangerous, no matter how 'good' he is.
Why don't I get more traffic from inbound links? I think it's because most sites place links on a "links" page instead of using them in context. I know that I send a lot of traffic to other sites, and I'm sure it's because I'm linking from articles or directory pages on specific topics. (In other words, a user finds my article on blue widgets in Google, then uses the article's links to visit other sources of information on blue widgets.)