Natural Vs Unnatural Link Profiles in Link Development
I don’t need to go on about the importance of links in relation to your natural search positions. We all know that having great links leads to great positions.
One of the things that I’d heard could be affecting your natural search performance is whether these great links you’ve been out link baiting, link spamming or have been growing organically to your web sites is whether they created a link profile that was seen as ‘natural’ or ‘unnatural’. I’ve seen unnatural link profiles referred to as ‘artifical’. I prefer unnatural as you could develop an unnatural link profile without doing anything on purpose - artifical indicates to me, at least, that you’ve been actively going out of your way to get links.
Having a natural link profile is what every website apparently needs to consistently rank well for all of its appropriate search terms. Unnatural link patterns are suppossed to damge your search engine positions, at least in the short term.
I’ve been thinking about this ideas for a while and it seems logical. Unnatural linking = Spamming = penalty in the SERPs (Search Engine Result Pages).
Before I could go and test out this I had to define were natural and unnatural link profiles.
What is a ‘natural link’ profile?
A natural link profile is one that grows organically with no, or little, interference.
I believe that natural link prfoiles would have five defining components:
- Links likely to grow at a consistent rate
- The majority of links are on pages, within sites, on a related themes
- These pages would be unlikely to have high PageRank
- Links would often be within fresh content
- Links would often be in non-duplicate content
I know these rules are subjective but I felt they could be used as a way to use a system of trigger level penalties: when your link profile displays an unnatural level of any of these the penalty starts to interact with your rankings.
- Links could grow dramatically to your domain - but these links could be natural if they were to a page about a hot topic. So there would be a trigger point inside the search engine algorithm to give leeway for this.
- It is likely that not all links would be on topic, nor should they ever be - human variation in language etc would determine that some links would be seen as ‘off topic’ by a search engine. Espescially when you have a brand name that means nothing in itsel: I was thinking about Diageo or something similar.
- Having exclusively links from high PageRank pages may indicate that you are operating within a hot topic again, or you could be spamming. The natural distribution curve for your website will be different from other websites but there may be points in time when your natural distribution changes drastically in terms of PageRank.
What is an ‘unnatural link’ profile?
If a natural link profile conforms to the rules above, but doesn’t need to obey all five at the same time. An unnatural link profile would be one where the rules of natural linking were broken often enough to trigger the filter(s).
This would be reasonably simple for a search engine to use as you could use threshhold trigger points within an algorithm to indicate when a website went from having a natural to an unnatural link proflile and vice versa, with various stages inbetween.
Testing Natural and Unnatural Link profiles
Base line test involved:
- Five domains
- All had been spidered for more than three months
- No keywords in the domain names
- All were .co.ukdomain extensions
- All hosted on the same server
I’ll be putting the test results in our next post. If you have any thoughts in advance of our publishing the results please let us know.
Interesting and useful post.
My hunch definetly goes with links coming in consistenly - not all at one go.
Comment by Eamon — March 22, 2008 @ 7:50 pm
Natural link building is vital in link development. Hopes that I manage to make my links to look naturally.
Good info, thumbs up!
Comment by Myneral — May 30, 2008 @ 3:58 pm
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