{"id":62690,"date":"2019-03-12T20:48:04","date_gmt":"2019-03-13T03:48:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/?page_id=62690"},"modified":"2023-09-17T22:34:14","modified_gmt":"2023-09-18T05:34:14","slug":"link-pruning","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.bruceclay.com\/seo\/link-pruning\/","title":{"rendered":"Monitoring Backlinks and Link Pruning"},"content":{"rendered":"
Bad links are poison,<\/strong> and most site owners cannot tell. They bought into the hype that all links help, and so they heap on more and more poison. They suffer a slow death in many cases, and sometimes, to battle losses, they add more links. The result is a near death experience.<\/p>\n As explained in the previous SEO Guide lesson, having the right kind of backlinks helps your website rise in the search engine rankings. But the wrong kind can create an SEO nightmare if your site gets hit with a Google penalty<\/a>.<\/p>\n Monitoring your website’s link profile<\/em> (including the full list of links that point to your site from other websites) is a wise defensive SEO strategy. Once you know how to find backlinks to your site, you can evaluate them and remove the bad ones from your link profile.<\/p>\n Google’s algorithms analyze a site’s link profile, and if too many of its inbound links look suspicious, the site’s rankings can plummet.<\/strong> This is still true even though the search engine can now recognize and discount many spammy links (i.e., Google may ignore the links for ranking purposes).<\/p>\n Whether you are trying to recover from a link-related penalty or safeguarding your site proactively, it’s critical to monitor backlinks \u2014 maybe not “like a hawk,” but on a regular basis \u2014 and keep your link profile clean.<\/p>\n In this lesson, you’ll learn a process for finding and removing harmful links from your link profile:<\/p>\n NOTE: We’ve included links to detailed instructions that will help you do each step in the procedure. Once you get a system down, link pruning will become a routine part of your ongoing SEO site maintenance.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n Do you know how to find backlinks for your site? Before you can start the link pruning process, you need to take inventory of your current backlinks<\/strong>. You can use a variety of backlink checker tools to monitor backlinks and find out what web pages are linking to your site. Start a spreadsheet with all the linking page URLs in a column.<\/p>\n Google \u200bSearch Console (formerly called Webmaster Tools) is a good place to start gathering your link data. \u200bChoose “Links to Your Site” under the Search Traffic menu, as shown to the left. (SEO Tip:<\/em> Here’s how to set up your free GSC account<\/a>.)<\/p>\n Unfortunately, your link profile in Google \u200bSearch Console usually won’t be complete or up-to-date. To get a fresher, more complete list to begin your link audit, add data gathered from several link-tracking sources: Bing Webmaster Tools, Majestic SEO Site Explorer, Moz’s Open Site Explorer, Ahrefs, or SEOToolSet<\/a>\u2019s Link Analysis tool.<\/p>\n Once you’ve learned how to find backlinks and compiled your link profile, you\u2019ll need to evaluate each of the links for quality and decide which ones need to be removed<\/strong>. Evaluating backlinks is a tedious business. After a while, you may be able to recognize an “inorganic” (unnatural) link just by its URL, but for most of them, you’ll need to click and examine the web page where the link resides. If it’s on a low-quality or spam site, you don’t want to be associated with it.<\/p>\n You can create your own scoring system for judging link value or use PageRank as one measurement of quality. For more advanced scoring systems, \u200bwe recommend using Majestic SEO\u2019s ranking scores called Trust Flow and Citation Flow. MozRank has a similar quality indicator. In your spreadsheet, create columns to keep track of the link information, contact information for the website owner or webmaster, and correspondence records.<\/p>\n (Click to read detailed instructions on backlink analysis<\/a>.)<\/em><\/p>\n Now that you know which links should be removed, you\u2019ll need to\u00a0create an email template you can send to website owners requesting link removal<\/strong>. The email should explain who you are and what you\u2019re trying to accomplish, with specific information, including links, needed for the site owner to process your link removal request. Record the date of this first link pruning request in your spreadsheet so you can follow up and verify whether the link has been removed. Send second and third requests, if necessary. Use your spreadsheet to keep track of everything because you\u2019ll need documentation of your efforts when communicating with Google.<\/p>\n To prune a link, you want the webmaster to either 1) remove the unwanted link from their website, or 2) add\u00a0rel=”nofollow”<\/em>\u00a0to the link tag so the search engines won’t count it.<\/p>\n In cases where your link-pruning requests are ignored or rejected, all is not lost!\u00a0<\/em>As a last resort, you can submit a disavowal request<\/strong> to Google<\/a> and Bing<\/a>\u00a0that basically says, “I don’t want these links, but all my attempts to have them removed have failed, so please disregard them.”<\/p>\n A disavow backlinks request is appropriate when you’ve repeatedly tried to get the website to remove the links, but to no avail. Your spreadsheet that contains all the details and correspondence records gives you the proof you need to go to the search engines directly (and hopefully avert a Google Penguin penalty). Disavowing backlinks should only be done selectively and with great care, so read all our tips (or contact us for help with penalty assessment and link pruning<\/a>). \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n (Click to read details on how to disavow links<\/a>.)<\/em><\/p>\n\n
<\/a>#1: Monitor Backlinks<\/h3>\n
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<\/a>#2: Evaluate the Links<\/h3>\n
Photo by\u00a0Paul Williams<\/a>\u00a0(CC BY 2.0)<\/a>, modified <\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/a>#3: Remove Inorganic Links (Link Pruning)<\/h3>\n
<\/a>#4: Disavow Link Domains as a Last Resort<\/h3>\n