Back in the old days search engines were different creatures. They’ve gradually grown more intelligent, especially to people trying to trick them.
The beast of the link exchange came about because everyone wants to rank higher. The number and quality of incoming links your website has is a very important part of search engine’s ranking algorithm. So naturally millions of website owners across the world went about inflating their incoming link count by participating in link exchanges. Often you’d get an email like this in your inbox:
Dear Webmaster,
My name is Wild Earth Adventures, and I run the web site Wild Earth Adventures: http://www.wildearth-adventures.com/
I recently found your site http://www.cairnsconnect.com and am very interested in exchanging links. I’ve gone ahead and posted a link to your site, on this page:
http://www.wildearth-adventures.com/linkmachine/resources/links_adventure_travel.html
As you know, reciprocal linking benefits both of us by raising our search rankings and generating more traffic to both of our sites. Please post a link to my site as follows:
Title: Wild Earth Adventures
URL: http://www.wildearth-adventures.com/
Description: Adventure Holidays Canada, Wilderness tours and Eco tours
This email is generic, impersonal and somewhat irrelevent to my business. There is an industry theme, travel. So how could it hurt to exchange links with them?
Years ago search engines decided they’d had enough of reciprocal linking monkeys, and removed the value attached to a reciprocal link in terms of your rankings. They now reward you when someone links to your website, without you needing to link back. That’s a real endorsement.
4 Responses for "Say NO to Link Exchanges"
I agree wholeheartedly!
Yay! No more unnecessary ‘link’ pages on our websites. This reinforces the philosophy of designing websites for the user NOT the search engines.
Link exchange is alive and well and the search engines still give you credit for links obtained through link exchange IF you do it right.
Link exchange is marketing 101.. AMEX links to Delta. Delta links to AMEX. They promote each other because they target the same demographic.
Nothing wrong with link exchange when you keep it natural (slow and steady) and highly relevant to your site’s theme of interest. It’s right there in Google’s webmaster guidelines!
While I agree with Karen to a point, I think she is missing the point.
IF the link is mutually beneficial to each others company, and you have other business relations, exchanging links can be very beneficial (although still not very much weight are given to these links); however if you are exchanging links for the purpose of increasing your rankings only you are actually violating Google’s webmaster guidelines.
Don’t participate in link schemes designed to increase your site’s ranking or PageRank. In particular, avoid links to web spammers or “bad neighborhoods” on the web, as your own ranking may be affected adversely by those links.
In this a “Link Scheme” is any technique designed to increase PageRank.
Link Exchanges are alive and well, but have no noticeable improvement in rankings. Bottom line: If you receive an email asking you to exchange links delete it. Instead look to form solid business relationships with others where it is mutually beneficial.
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