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Top
Dirty Linking Tricks
By Lee Roberts (c) 2006,
Rose Rock Design, Inc.
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Part
of achieving top search engine positions is through links from other Web
pages. These links can come from people who like your site (natural links),
reciprocal linking, directory submissions and a few other ways.
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The
goal of trading links is to get quality links for quality links. True
quality links will carry benefits far beyond that of attaining a coveted
position in the search engine results. The links will bring traffïc
from the Web page linking to your Web page. Therefore, you want to ensure
you trade or barter links from quality partners.
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Sometimes
it's hard to determine who is a quality linking partner, even for the
expert. So, how can you tell if your link is on a Web page where its value
will not be very good?
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The
short list below highlights ways of diminishing or nullifying the value
of a link to your site from another Web page.
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Meta
Tag Masking - this old trick simply used CGI codes to hide
the Meta tags from browsers while allowing search engines to actually
see the Meta tags.
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Robots
Meta Instructions - using noindex and nofollow attributes let's
the novice link partner see the visible page with their link while telling
the search engines to ignore the page and the links found on the page.
Nofollow can be used while allowing the page to be indexed which gives
the impression that the search engines will eventually count the link.
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Rel=nofollow
Attributes - this is not a real attribute based upon HTML standards,
but rather it is an attribute approved by the search engines to help
identify which links should not be followed. This attribute is often
used with blogs to prevent comment and link sp@m. The link will appear
on the Web page and in the search engine's cache, but nevër be
counted.
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Dynamic
Listing - dynamic listing is a result of having links appear
randomly across a series of pages. Each time the link is found on a
new page, the search engines count consider the freshness of the link.
It is extremely possible that the link won't be on the same page upon
the next search engine visitation. So, the link from a partner displaying
rotating, dynamic link listings rarely helps.
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Floating
List - this can be easily missed when checking link partners.
Essentially, your link could be number one today, but as new link partners
are added your link is moved down the list. This is harmful because
the values of the links near the bottom of the list are considered to
be of lesser value than the links at the top. With the floating list,
it is possible to have your link moved to a new page whose PR value
is significantly less or non-existent and the new page may not be visited
and indexed for months.
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Old
Cache - the caching date provided by Google indicates the last
time the page was cached. Pages with lower PR values tend to be visited
and cached less often than pages that have medium to high PR values.
If the cache is more than six months old, it can be surmised that Google
has little or no desire to revisit the page.
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Denver
Pages - while Denver, CO is a nice place to visit, Denver Pages
are not a place you want to find your link in a trade. Denver Pages
typically have a large amount of links grouped into categories on the
same page. Some people call this the mile high list. These types of
pages do not have any true value in the search engines and are not topically
matched to your site.
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Muddy
Water Pages - these are dangerous and easy to spot. Your link
will be piled in with non-topically matched links with no sense of order.
It's like someone took all the links and threw them in the air to see
where they land. These are worse than the Denver Pages.
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Cloaking -
cloaking is the process of providing a page to people while providing
a different page to search engines. You could be seeing your link on the
Web page, but the search engines could possibly nevër see the link
because they are provided with a different copy. Checking Google's cache
is the only way to catch this ploy.
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Dancing
Robots - this can be easily performed with server-side scripting
like PHP and is rarely easy to catch. In this situation people that
attempt to view the robots.txt file receive a copy of the robots.txt
file that does not include exclusion instructions for the search engines.
However, when the search engines request the robots.txt file they receive
the exclusion instructions. With this situation the links pages will
nevër be linked and you'll nevër know why without expert assistance.
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Meta
Tags and Robots.txt Confusion - which instructions have the
most weïght? Don't know the answer? Shame. Search engines do. If
they conflict, the page Meta tags are typically considered the rule
to follow.
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Link
the Head - while these links do not count in the search engines
and do not show up on the Web page, they do get counted by scripts or
programs designed to verify the links exist. These programs only look
for the URL within the source codes for the Web page.
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Empty
Anchors - this is a nästy trick, but can be an honest
mistake. The links exist and are counted by the search engines, but
unfortunately are neither visible nor clickable on the Web page. So,
there are no traffïc values from the link.
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The
goal of trading links is to trade them for equal value. Understanding
the ways people will attempt to prevent passing a quality value from their
Web page to your Web page can help you avoid these useless links. If your
link partner pulls under-handed tricks the links they trade you are useless.
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While
you may nevër be an expert in knowing all the latest tricks, traps
and tests, you can nöw become an expert in knowing the thirteen
mentioned above. Ensuring your link partners are not following or using
these tactics can help improve the quality of links you gain from other
Web pages. By having quality links pointing to your Web page you will
gain additional traffïc through organic search engine results and
visitors driven directly from your linking partners.
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Author:
Lee Roberts, The Web Doctor®, is President/Founder of Rose
Rock Design, Inc. a website design company and Founder of the Apple
Pie Shopping Cart, an ecommerce
shopping cart
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Disclaimer
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