Step 6 - Link Popularity Analysis
What is link popularity?
Link popularity is a measure of how many websites are pointing hyperlinks at another
website. A hyperlink is an HTML tag element that is able to take a user from site-to-site or
from page-to-page.
When a hyperlink is displayed in an HTML document, it turns into blue colored text that can
be clicked on like this sample link below pointing to www.anotherdomain.com:
This is a link to another domain
And here is the HTML code below to create this hyperlink:
Hyperlinks also serve a very special purpose for the search engines. A hyperlink is made up
of two main parts. The target URL and the clickable link text, or anchor text. The target URL
above is highlighted in green (<a href="http://www.anotherdomain.com">) and the anchor
text ( This is a link to another domain ) is highlighted in yellow. The anchor text tells the
search engines a great deal about the website where the link is pointing to. For now, just
remember the anchor text is a very important part of successful link building.
Here is a brief illustration below of how the search engines may see a few golf related
websites linked together.
The search engines' view of hyper links.
The Web by its very nature is based on hyperlinks where sites link to other sites. Each site
linking to another site is in fact casting a vote in favor of the sites they link to. Since search
engines can organize and count these links in their vast databases, they are able to
determine which sites get more inbound links related to specific search topics. However, the
search engines go way beyond just simply counting links. Just imagine how easy it would be
to get top ranking based on link quantity alone. The search engines combine the ranking
scores of on-page factors and the link popularity scores to come up with a final ranking order
in response to user queries. While it is still possible to achieve high rankings for moderately
competitive terms without a great deal of link popularity, it is unlikely your site will ever rank
well for very popular terms without it.
Every inbound link is considered a citation for a particular website. In turn, every citation is
interpreted as a recommendation for a site's quality by the search engines. The more
citations the search engines can find, the more trusted a site becomes through the power of
links. Most of the major crawler based search engines: Google, Yahoo!, and MSN employ
some type of link analysis as part of their ranking algorithms and can easily discover newly
created links on any site pointing somewhere else.
The benefits of link popularity
Link Popularity is one of the most important and critical aspects of any effective search
engine optimization campaign today. Link popularity is the most important off-page factors
to consider improving for all websites. The key concept to understand about link building is,
you don't need thousands of links to successfully compete, you just need the links that are
the most related to your site with the highest quality possible.
In other words, it's not just about getting lots of links from instead, you want links from high
quality web pages that are topically relevant to your website with the target keywords
inserted into the anchor text of the inbound links. Please refer to this handy checklist below
to analyze the backlinks of your competitor's websites and your own.
Off-Page ranking factor checklist
| |
Off-Page Factors - Links (70%-
80% Ranking Score) |
How to find out? |
| 1. |
How long the domain has been online? |
Use the Archive.org website and type
in the domain name or use the Links
Plus+ tool to retrieve automatically. |
| 2. |
What is the total number of unique
inbound links to the site not counting
site-wide links?
Note:Site-wide links are links that
appear on nearly every page of an
external site pointing to a specific
domain. |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the number of sites linking in using
the Yahoo! API. Yahoo! provides the
most accurate backlink results and
the API allows safe and legal link
popularity checking |
| 3. |
What is the inbound link anchor text
focus? Are there a various keywords
used in the link text? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the anchor text of sites linking in
using the Yahoo! API. |
| 4. |
How long the linking websites has
been online and how long the links
have been there? |
Use the Archive.org website and type
in the domain or use the Links Plus
tool to retrieve automatically. There
is no reliable way to find out when a
particular link was posted first, but
the last modified date of the page
may help to narrow down the date
range. |
| 5. |
Do the inbound link pages contain
optimized titles and body text with
similar keywords to the link text? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the Title tag of sites linking using the
Yahoo! API. The body text has to be
analyzed manually for the presence
of related keywords. |
| 6. |
What is the Google PageRank of the
site and the inbound links sites? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the Google PageRank of sites linking
in using the Yahoo! API. |
| 7. |
Are website and the inbound linking
sites listed in the DMOZ and the
Yahoo! directory? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the Yahoo! and DMOZ listing
description of sites linking in using
the Yahoo! API. |
| 8. |
Are website and the inbound linking
sites listed in any important niche
directories? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the URLs of sites linking in using the
Yahoo! API and visually review the
niche directories. |
| 9. |
Are there any links from authority
sites, trade publications, blogs or
forums to the website and the inbound
links sites? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the URLs of sites linking in using the
Yahoo! API and visually review the
list of URLs. |
| 10. |
What is the domain registration
length? |
Use the Domaintools.com site to
retrieve the WHOIS domain
information or use the Links Plus tool
to retrieve domain's registration
length in the Link Campaign
Manager. |
| 11. |
What is the inbound link placement on
the link pages, are the links inserted
in the body text or they are listed in
link directory style? |
Visually inspect the URLs in your
default web browser after Links
Plus+ had retrieved the inbound
links. |
| 12. |
Are the inbound links reciprocated or
they are one-way? |
Visually inspect the URLs in your
default web browser after Links
Plus+ has retrieved the inbound
links. |
| 13. |
Are the links coming from a large
number of unique C Class IP
addresses?
Note: C Class IP addresses are
classified as the first three numbers of
an IP address. Webmaster can install
hundreds of websites on the same
web server, which could be used to
fool other webmasters into thinking
they are getting unique inbound links.
The search engines discount links
originating from the same C Class IP
address |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the IP address of sites linking in
using the Yahoo! API. If you want
test for duplicate Class C IP address
on multiple sites, use the Ip-
Report.com tool. |
| 14. |
Are the outgoing links from the site
closely related to the website's theme? |
Use the MSN "linkfromdomain"
operator to find outgoing links like
this linkfromdomain:your
domain.com. |
| 15. |
In which country the website is
hosted? |
Use the Domaintools.com site to
retrieve the hosting server's IP
address and geographical location. |
| 16. |
What does the text say surrounding
the inbound link? |
Visually inspect the text close to the
inbound links. |
| 17. |
Are the inbound links site-wide or
coming from single unique pages? |
Use the Links Plus+ tool to retrieve
the URLs of sites linking in using the
Yahoo! API and uncheckmark the
"Exclude Duplicate Domains"
advanced option. |
Understanding the Google PageRank
Fighting spam, and running a trusted search engine used daily by millions of users is not an
easy job. Google understood this very well even in their early days. The Google's Page Rank
was born in the minds of its founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin at Stanford University. The
Google PageRank simply put is the measure of a website's external and internal links on a
logarithmic scale, also known as PR. The Google PageRank is the foundation for Google's link
popularity calculations.
The Google PageRank scale starts at zero for brand new sites and it can reach a
maximum of ten for well established sites with thousands of inbound links. Only a
handful of sites can ever reach a PageRank of ten, for example, Google and Adobe have a
PageRank of ten with a handful of other sites. An average website will normally have a
PageRank of between 4 and 6. The more popular websites will have a PageRank of 7 or
higher. As an example MSN and Yahoo! both have a PageRank of 9. Google PageRank is used
to assign a value to the importance of every web page on the internet. To arrive at this value
Google measures the links pointing to your website found on other web pages. Links from
each site linking in counts as a 'vote' for your site. 'Votes' from sites with a higher page rank
are weighed more than votes from sites with a lower page rank or no PageRank at all. Also,
pages with a lot of links on them will pass a lot lower page rank value to the target page
than link pages that have only a handful of external links. So acquiring links to your site from
other websites is an important strategy for achieving a high PageRank value and ultimately a
higher search engine ranking with Google.
The PageRank correlates to the number of inbound links to a site, but it's not a linear
relationship. The pure number of inbound links can't be compared alone. For example two
websites reporting identical number of inbound links could have different PageRank values
due to the variance of PageRank of individual back links. It suffices to say, the number of
backward links are a very important measure of a website's ability to compete in the natural
search results. The Google PageRank and the anchor text in incoming links play a major role
in your sites ranking in the search engine results pages (SERP).
A higher Google PageRank also delivers some other benefits. One of them is the increased
spider visits by the search engines, which will guarantee freshness of your web pages in the
search results and likely more pages indexed as well.
Download and install the Google Toolbar
The Google Toolbar is one of the most widely used tools by search engine optimizers and it
can provide invaluable information about any website's popularity on the Internet. It also
comes with some very handy web browser utilities, including pop-up blocking and automatic
web form filling.
The Google toolbar as displayed in Internet Explorer
The Google toolbar is available for Internet Explorer version 5.5 and higher. A newly released
FireFox compatible Google toolbar is also available.
The most important feature of the Google Toolbar is the Google PageRank gauge. You may
have to enable it in the options menu if it's not visible on the toolbar. The PageRank gauge is
displayed on every page you visit in the middle of the toolbar as a green bar.
When you move your mouse over the toolbar, the PageRank displays a number
between 0-10 called the Google PageRank. Simply put, the PageRank helps Google
determine the importance of a web page. The Google PageRank constantly fluctuates
internally and it's a floating point calculation. This means when you see a value of 4, for
example on the toolbar, it can be any value between 3.5 and 4. The Google toolbar
PageRank public interface is normally updated only about 3-4 times a year.
Checking backward links
Another important feature of the Google toolbar is the "Backward Links" search, which is
displayed as a menu option directly below the Google PageRank.
One important thing to note about the Google Toolbar "Backward Links" checking feature is
that it will only display a filtered set of inbound links to a website, and it's not a reliable way
to determine the true number of inbound links. According to some SEO professionals, Google
only displays inbound links from pages that have a minimum of PageRank 4, but this can't be
reliably confirmed. The reason for Google's continued secrecy about the true number of
backlinks is to keep webmasters guessing about how top rankings are achieved. So please
don't use Google as the sole means of checking inbound links for your own site or your
competitors as it's highly unreliable.
Luckily, Yahoo! is a very trustworthy source of inbound link checking and they even have a
set of Site Explorer tools for webmasters to use for free. SEO Studio also has a built in
capability to check inbound links using the Yahoo! API to any website. Using the Yahoo! API
ensures your IP address will not be banned for running a larger number of link checking
queries. The Links Plus+ tool's link popularity checking features goes way beyond the Yahoo!
Site Explorer's linking data. We'll cover in detail later how to use the SEO Studio link analysis
tools to your maximum benefit.
A better SEO toolbar for FireFox
Aaron Wall, a well know and respected author of SEO Book and many industry articles has released a free Firefox based SEO tool called SEO Firefox. The SEO Firefox extension gathers
a wealth of information about link popularity and many other off-page factors under the
listing of each search result. It's a very convenient ad-hoc tool to complete a quick off-page
analysis on top ranking competitors without leaving your web browser.
Proper Google PageRank distribution through internal
links
Internal linking techniques and outbound links originating from your site can play a big role
in how well your site will rank. Internal and external linking can also affect the Google
PageRank value of your home page and internal pages.
The rule of thumb to follow for all sites is to ensure the footer, header or side navigation
contains links back to the important pages of the website from every page. This can be
accomplished with the use of some type of search engine friendly menu system. To further
simplify the maintenance of adding and removing menu items, the use HTML server side
includes or server side scripting languages like ASP, PHP, CGI or .NET is highly
recommended. A well interlinked website is not only great for search engine ranking, but it
also increases your site's usability.
Let's illustrate a well laid out website that is heavily interlinked:
The menu system in the side bar and the footer of this site ensures that every important
page receives the Google PageRank.
Beyond the basic steps of directing the Google PageRank to your main pages, you may also
want to protect your site from "leaking" valuable PageRank to other pages on your site that
are not as important to rank well, but still need to be found by your visitors. We are referring
to privacy policy, or terms of service pages and many other non search engine relevant
pages. In these cases, you may want to use the "nofollow" link attribute as illustrated below
in the links. The nofollow link attribute tells the search engines the link does not pass any
link reputation or Google PageRank value to the target page whether it's an internal or
external page. All major search engines respect the nofollow link attribute.
An example of using the "rel=nofollow" attribute:
<a href="http://www.mydomain.com/privacy.htm" rel="nofollow">Privacy
Policy</a>
The "nofollow" links will function as normal links. There will be no noticeable difference to the
website user. The search engines, however, will take note of the attribute and will not pass
link reputation or Google PageRank to external or internal pages. The benefit of this
approach is being able to control and channel the Google PageRank throughout the site to our advantage without leaking valuable PageRank to internal or external pages we don't want
link reputation to flow to.
Another popular option to preserve the Google PageRank is to link to less important pages on
your site using JavaScript based dynamic links. These types of links pass no PageRank value
since the search engines can't follow them. It's important to note that JavaScript executes in
the browser window of the website visitor. Since the search engine spiders don't open
browser windows, dynamic links are not followed by the engines. Here is an example of a
dynamic link not followed by the search engines.
An example of using a dynamic JavaScript based link:
<a href="JavaScript:window.open('somepage.html', 'MyNewWindow')"
How can external links lift your sites ranking?
Grasping the concept of link popularity for novice web masters can be fairly complex. Link
popularity can be expressed in rather simple terms of links equal votes. Just like in a
democratic election, votes are cast for the favorite candidates. As a webmaster, you want to
make sure your website becomes a favorite site to link to by others site within your topic
because it has some value to offer. Your ongoing job as a webmaster will be to make a
quality site and seek inbound links from as many related sites as you can.
Let's illustrate the linking of sites on the web, and the ranking factors behind each incoming
link. As you look at this diagram, you will notice how the Google PageRank from high PR sites
pushes the Google PageRank value of our own imaginary site to PR6. Each incoming links to
our site will pass a certain amount of its PageRank to our home page increasing its own
PageRank. For the purposes of this illustration, we'll assume the inbound links are coming
from sites which don't use the "nofollow" link attribute or dynamic linking and therefore pass
the full PageRank value to us.
Sites linking to us with high a PageRank value are contributing a higher PageRank than sites
that have a lower PageRank of only 1 or 2. The sites linking to us with a PageRank of zero
still could be valuable provided they are indexed by Google and are closely related to our
topic.
An illustration of Passing the Google PageRank.
Beyond the PageRank value being passed to us, we are also receiving direct votes for our site
from those external pages, increasing our site's overall link popularity.
Although each link can be a valuable vote for us, the real question is:
- Do the websites linking in have a similar keyword theme to our site?
- Do the link pages contain relevant title tags, body text and internal links to
our site?
- How many other links are present on those link pages linking to us?
- What is the Google PageRank of the site and link page linking to us?
- Are the linking in sites considered an authority on the subject matter?
The search engines definitively notice these seemingly subtle differences, and therefore you
should also ensure you only request links from relevant sites with the same keywords in their
titles, web pages and internal links. In the upcoming lessons well be discussing the most
effective techniques to acquire links, and the various ways of requesting links from other
webmaster. You'll also learn about specific inbound link formatting options that can make or
break your link building campaign.
Link manipulation and the rise of link spam
The reason search engines develop and continually tweak their link popularity algorithm is to
minimize the effect of unscrupulous web masters who might use spamming techniques to
help their sites rank higher. The manipulation of inbound links by webmasters to gain
commercial advantage continues to be the biggest challenge for the search engine to tame
and control. Link analysis gives search engines a new way of determining which pages are
more relevant for particular topics or query phrases. Google even defines and warns
webmasters against using link schemes in their webmaster guidelines. There is a very good
description of what links spam is and how the search engines deal with link popularity
manipulation in a university research paper titled SpamRank Fully Automatic Link Spam
Detection (PDF Document Link).
Here are the most popular link spamming techniques:
- Guest book spam. Guest books used to be very popular a few years ago. Guest
books allowed visitors to leave comments and feedback, but soon dishonest
marketers started using guest book forms to submit unrelated and unwanted links.
Although the number of guest books is on the decline due to other user generated
content options emerging, guest books are still exploited today by link spammers
for gaining link popularity and Google PageRank.
- Blog comment and Trackback spam. This link schemes involves some type of
automated tool or script that inject promotional links into other people's blogs who
are unaware of the available comment protection methods such as captchas which
presents a small image for human verification. The spammers always look for the
path to least resistance and search out vulnerable blogs running older versions of
Wordpress and other blogging scripts that automatically approve blog comments.
The search engines recommended webmaster to use the "no-follow" link attribute
tag in all blog comments posted by users to avoid passing link reputation and the
Google PageRank to sites that had not been reviewed by the blog owner.
- Forum post and forum profile spam. Not much different from blog comment
spam, forum posts are generated by automated scripts as well and look for
loopholes in popular forum softwares such as PHPpbb and other open sources forum
packages. The automated scripts can create a fake user IDs on forums and start
making forum posts laden with spammy links within minutes. Because forums don't
use the "no-follow" link attribute, the spammers prefer to post to forums or create
profiles with self serving promotional links.
- Cross linking involves creating a network of unique domains for the
purpose of manipulating link popularity and the Google PageRank. The spammers
heavily interlink the sites to distribute link popularity and PageRank among all the
participating domains. Most often than not, all the websites are hosted on the same
server, which makes the detection of this type of linking scheme very easy to
identify by the search engines.
Who do you trust?
Let us introduce you to a new term called "TrustRank." TrustRank is Google's refinement of
the purely PageRank driven algorithm which doesn't take into consideration a website's
quality and authority. The Google PageRank is strictly driven by the number of inbound links,
and the PageRank distribution of the links flowing between the pages from external and
internal sources. The PageRank doesn't care about topical relevance or whether or not the
site contains any useful information. While the Google PageRank could help evaluate web
pages' importance globally, it was ill equipped to deal with spam and PageRank manipulation
in specific market segments. For example, the insurance and financial sectors are notorious
for attracting the most spammers, but we could list a number of other niches, such as cell
phone ring tones, mp3 download site and many others.
In order to combat web spam, Google introduced a new algorithm called Trustrank in a
research paper titled "Combating Web Spam with TrustRank." Essentially TrustRank gives
higher ranking scores to sites that get links from high quality "seed" websites that are
considered an authority on a specific subject matter.
Here is how the Stanford research paper defines the inner workings of TrustRank:
"The algorithm first selects a small seed set of pages whose "spam status" needs to be
determined. A human expert then examines the seed pages, and tells the algorithm if they
are spam (bad pages) or not (good pages). Finally, the algorithm identifies other pages that
are likely to be good based on their connectivity with the good seed pages."
What does this mean for your site? Getting links directly from topically relevant sites
considered "seed" sites or links from sites who have links from "seed" sites is the key to
higher ranking. The "seed" sites are also referred to as authority sites or hubs. You can find
hubs by searching for sites that provide links to many top ranking sites. Fore example if you
wanted to find the best authority sites, you would do a search for the top 10 sites and than
looking at their backlinks, you would find which backlinks they have in common. The top
sites most likely have links from the DMOZ and Yahoo! directories and a few other industry specific organizations, blogs or forums.
You can speed up the manual link analysis process a great deal with the help of a fantastic
online tool called the HubFinder created by SEOBook.com. Just enter your keyword phrase
and select the number of top ranking sites to check and the minimum number of matches for
sites linking in. Start with a lower number of minimum matches to make sure you don't miss
any important sites to consider getting links from.
The magic of the link anchor text
Every one of the above off-page factors are very important, but probably none of these
factors have as much influence on your search engine ranking as the inbound link anchor
text. Since the search engines can only understand links in terms of the clickable link text it
crucial to ask your link partners for very specific link text formatting with your keywords in
the inbound links.
Here are the most affective tips for inbound link anchor text selection and formatting using a
website selling golf shoes as an example.
- Request your keywords to be inserted into the linking text, but vary the
anchor text of the keywords. Pay special attention to how many times you
request the same keywords to be used in the inbound link text by your link
partners. If every one of your inbound links will look like the one below, the search
engines will suspect there is some unnatural link building happening to the site.
They may discount the value of other links with the same anchor text, or they may
penalize your site for other related terms as well.
Below is a sample link pointing to the home page targeting the main keyword
phrase "golf shoes":
<a href="www.greatgolfshoes.com/">Home of Great Golf Shoes</a>
The resulting link will look like this Home of Great Golf Shoes
- Request some of the inbound links to point to sub pages of your site with
anchor text that matches the title tag of the target page. Ask for some of
your links to be pointed to internal pages like the illustration below targeting a
different keyword phrase. This type of linking is also referred to as "deep linking.
Ensure, you point at least 30%40% of all links to the sub pages of your site with
the appropriate target keywords that match some of the keywords in the target
page title.
A "deep link" pointing to a sub page of the greatgolfshoes.com domain targeting the
secondary phrase "nike golf shoes":
<a href="www.greatgolfshoes.com/nike-golf-shoes.html">Nike Golf
Shoes</a>
The resulting link will look like this Nike Golf Shoes
Changing the anchor text in the inbound links and pointing links to sub pages accomplishes
two things:
-A large number of links to sub pages suggests to the search engines your
site has a wealth of information to offer its visitors and should be considered
a serious resource. A shallow inbound linking structure and nearly identical anchor
text in the majority of inbound links to the home page is a clear sign of link
manipulation by the search engines. The most likely penalty will be an almost non
existent ranking for the target keywords most often found in the inbound anchor
text.
-Secondly, getting high ranking for secondary keyword phrases can't be
accomplished easily without inbound links to sub pages targeting secondary
key phrases no matter how well you optimize those pages. If the inner pages are
not receiving any direct inbound links, they will most likely not rank well for highly
competitive keyword terms. Although they may rank for some obscure low search
volume keywords.
"Off-page" analysis example
Before we start up the SEO Studio Links Plus+ tool, we wanted to ensure you fully
understand how link analysis works by directly checking the search engines for backlinks.
Here is a brief list of the major search engines and their "backlink" checking search
commands to find inbound links to a particular domain. Try the commands out on each
search engines and observe the results and more importantly the differences. Have you
noticed the number of links from Google is grossly under reported? We have warned you
about this, so please use Yahoo! for link analysis instead.
| Search Engine |
Display Indexed Pages Command |
| AltaVista |
link:your-domain.com |
| AllTheWeb |
link:your-domain.com |
| Google |
link:your-domain.com |
| Yahoo! |
linkdomain:your-domain.com -site:your-domain.com |
| Yahoo! Site Explorer! |
enter the website address and click on "Inlinks" |
Entering the domain name with the "www" prefix or without it could have big
difference in the number of backlinks reported.
In the next lesson we'll discuss the ways you can ensure that all your links are
pointing consistently to the "www" prefixed version of your domain to insure your site
is not "splitting" the Google PageRank and its link popularity strength.
1. Open the Links Plus+ tool
Enter the website address you want to find the inbound links to and enter a keyword phase
you want to use in the keyword analysis of the link pages. The second option comes very
handy if you want to retrieve the page titles and META tags of inbound links and perform a
deep analysis on them.
The SEO Studio Links Plus+ tool configuration screen for retrieving inbound links to
Thepartsbin.com
Select the Yahoo! search API to perform the inbound links search. Please note you will need
to request your own Yahoo! developer API key from Yahoo! to use this feature. In addition to
the Yahoo! API inbound link checking, you can also use other engines such as Google, or
Hotbot, but we recommend the Yahoo! API due to safe and legal link checking that doesn't
jeopardize your PC's IP address being blocked.
Selecting the search engines for the "backlink" check in Links Plus.
Select the inbound link analysis data shown below in the Advanced options window. These
options will give us a good idea about the thepartsbins.com's linking strategy. Please note,
we have decided to exclude duplicate links and internal links to clean up the search results
prior to reviewing the links. This will help us to comb through the links much faster.
When you have selected the options below, hit the Start button to start the inbound link
retrieval process to thepartsbin.com website.
Selecting advanced options in Links Plus.
In the links search results screen below, you will see a handful of links retrieved from Yahoo!.
The Links Plus+ tool can retrieve hundreds of links and analyze them quickly. We can clearly
see this site is targeting "import car parts" as one of their main keywords in addition to their
own website name and a few other keyword terms.
Please take note of the different anchor texts used in the linking text to this site. As we have
discussed in the previous section, varying the anchor texts in the inbound links will steer you
clear of any potential link spamming penalty.
Also note the linking page titles, as you can see they are a very close matched to automotive
related key phrases. This is one of the reasons thepartsbin.com site is at top of the search
results for car parts related terms.
The results of checking inbound links to the Thepartsbin.com site in Links
Plus.
In conclusion
Link popularity is the driving force behind top engines rankings. Over the last few years
Google has gotten especially good at separating the low quality links from the really valuable
ones, and it's proven by the relevancy of their results and overall worldwide market share.
The good news is we can all learn a lot about how our competitors get top ranking by
studying carefully their inbound links and examine closely what those links say about their
site, i.e. anchor text. It's your job as a webmaster to study, and test the affects of the offpage
ranking factors. You can turn this knowledge to your advantage by building even
stronger link popularity for your site.