Google Penguin explained

One of the most painful Google updates that can hit a website is called Penguin. Google Penguin aims to remove sites from the search results that have been trying to game Google by buying or otherwise “unnaturally acquiring” links to their website. It does that by basically applying a negative value to specific links. So if you have certain links, your rankings will become lower, not higher.

“Luckily”, if a site is hit by Google Penguin, 9 times out of 10, the owner has been gaming the search engine and could have seen it coming. Most of the sites hit by Google Penguin have bought links from so called link networks, or “private blog networks” or whatever name you want to give it.

Getting rid of Google Penguin

If you’ve been hit by Google Penguin you probably need help. You’ll need to identify which links are bad and either have those links removed or “disavow” those links. Disavowing links is something you can do through Google’s disavow tool. It allows you to upload a file with URLs and domains that you have links from, saying: “I don’t want these links to count”. The file has to be in a specific format, explained here.

We have written about this before, this post goes into more detail about cleaning up bad backlinks.

Google Penguin and Negative SEO

There’s one very nasty side effect of Google Penguin, one that’s usually not talked about by Google but I’ve seen to be very real. Because certain links have a negative value, you can use them negatively. You can buy links towards your competitor and have them be hit by Penguin. This is not easily done, but it does happen and it can be very bad for business if it does.

Several services out there can look at your backlink profile and can help you do pro-active disavowing, we personally like both LinkResearchTools and Kerboo. This, luckily, isn’t needed in most niches, but in some of the more aggressive niches it might be something you need.

Google Penguin becoming real time?

In the video I still speak about Penguin running “every once in a while”. Google has for a while now said that it will make Google Penguin real time, but so far, we’ve seen no evidence of that yet. If this happens though, the risks of negative SEO become a lot bigger.

Be sure to follow my Weekly SEO Recap, published every Friday, to make sure that if things change in that regard you’ll be among the first to know!

Conclusion

You shouldn’t buy links. Ever. The risk is just too big. Google Penguin has made very sure of that. There are some negative side effects to Google Penguin that most people won’t have to worry about but if they affect you, they can be very painful.

The basic idea about links is simple: if you can buy a link, it’s not worth anything and in general should be considered a risk. Links have to be earned, through good PR, cool tools, nice marketing, etc. Marieke will start a series of posts on link building soon that explains how we think link building should be done from a holistic SEO perspective. On top of that we already have a couple of nice posts about link building, so start reading those!

Weekly SEO Recap: Google app indexing & rel=author

Joost's weekly SEO recapAt Yoast, we’ve been ridiculously busy getting ready for all the product launches we’ve got coming up, like our new eBook and our upcoming Basic SEO training course. Luckily, we also still have time to look at the news because Google has been rather busy and there was other stuff to tell too, regarding new Apple releases.

Google Panda & Penguin

So… Google Panda 4.2 is apparently “still rolling out“. This makes it harder for people like us to diagnose whether a site got hit by Panda, but luckily not undoable (the signs are usually relatively clear for the trained eye). You’d hope that more info would come with that, but there was nothing else.

Google Penguin on the other hand seems to be truly becoming “real-time”. Gary Ilyes of Google said at SMX that he “hoped” it would be ready by the end of the year.

I have to say that it’s getting harder and harder to trust specifically Gary when he says things because it’s been kind of hit and miss. We’ll have to see what comes of it.

Google wants your app data

In other Google news, Google seems to understand that it’s slowly missing the boat. They now say that they’ll give a ranking boost if you use app indexing. They’re afraid that if they don’t get everyone to include app-indexing, which allows Google to index the contents of mobile phone apps, they won’t be a complete search engine anymore and platforms like Facebook might beat them at some point.

The problem with remarks like this from Google is knowing whether it’s actually true. It’s very easy for them to say that they’ll give you a ranking boost, it’s now up to the global SEO community to prove whether they did or not.

Rel=author making a comeback?

In what I’d clearly call the weirdest news of the week, Gary Ilyes also said you shouldn’t remove your rel=author markup. I was personally involved in getting that markup on millions of sites (by adding it to our plugins and to WordPress core). I took it out the day Google dropped the author highlight. I’d be happy to add it back in, but I’ll need some more info before we do, so I’ve reached out to an engineer at Google to see if he could comment.

Mac OS X 10.11: el Capitan

Safari Pinned TabsWhen a new OS X comes out, experienced Mac users will often go straight to Ars Technica for their review of the newest version of OS X to see what’s new. You should too. I read it and the pinned tab feature was the one that made me think “hah, I might need to do that”. So I added a pinned tab icon to Yoast.com this morning, and then wrote a quick tutorial on adding one of these so called mask-icons just now.

Not exactly SEO, but branding is incredibly important for your long term search rankings too.

That’s it, see you next week!

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Clean up your bad backlinks

Websites that have made the mistake of hiring some shady SEO company to buy bad backlinks for their website can loose almost all their rankings. In this post, we will go beyond on-site optimization and explain a bit more about bad backlinks for your website and how to clean them up.

Although buying bad links might give you short term wins, it will backfire in the end; you’re at risk of a Google Penguin penalty. Unnatural links indicate that your website might not have the quality or content to be interesting enough to get proper backlinks on its own. At the end of this article, we’ll mention a way to get great backlinks without buying any. 

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How to find bad backlinks

The main difference between good and bad backlinks is the quality of the website they are on. Sometimes bad backlinks are easy to find, sometimes you do have to check the website itself to see if and why the backlink can have a negative impact on your website.

There are a couple of categories in this.

If a website has a ton of articles that lack all coherence, chances are the website is set up solely for the purpose of linking other websites. If the website is a WordPress site, most of the times a default WordPress themes like TwentyEleven is used. These websites are usually not linked from other websites, or are part of an odd link network designed just to link these lousy websites.

Links from the comments of other websites

MajesticSEO link profile

At Yoast, we use the link profiles provided by Majesticseo.com a lot. The combination of a Trust flow and a Citation flow gives you a nice overview of how good your backlink profile actually is.

Link profile in MajesticSEO: Trust and Citation Flow

Trust flow refers to the authority given to the website that links to you (by MajesticSEO, based on a number of chosen factors), and Citation flow refers to the number of links the website has. Low quality backlinks come from websites that are low on both trust and citation.

We get dozens of these on a daily basis, here at yoast.com. Bots populating your website’s comment forms telling you ‘great article, love the info, hope you can elaborate more about the topic soon’. Personalized comments even, including author name. Spambots get more intelligent by the week, unfortunately. We’ve reviewed a site that was run by an older man replying to all of these comments, thanking them for the kind words. Don’t get fooled. Comment spam links are bad for your backlink profile.

Links with over optimized anchor texts

In general, one can assume the most backlinks to a websites are linked using the website name as the anchor text (link text). The URL itself is also often used. If your website has a huge number of websites linking to your website using exact keywords, as the shady companies we mentioned tend to do, that looks very suspicious. If our main backlinks would have Yoast SEO Premium as an anchor, that will ring some alarm bells at Google. The most used anchor for links to our site should be ‘Yoast’ in a natural link profile. And it is, of course.

Usually, websites that are just set up for the links have content that just doesn’t make sense, or is scraped from related websites. Some black hat companies create sites per subject, to make it look like the links are on related, quality websites. In most cases Google Panda will hit these sites eventually, resulting in yet another low quality backlink for your site. Duplicate content is a sign of low quality in most cases, and that is (among others,) what the Google Panda updates are about.

Links from Russia, while your local audience is in the US

As the websites linking to you are likely to be related to your business, you’ll understand that a link from a Russian or Dutch website (for that matter) for your local consultancy company site in Kansas City doesn’t look natural at all.

Of course there are more and more specific indications that a backlink is of low quality. Alan Bleiweiss listed some more in his article How To Clean Up Bad Backlinks and Establish Trust With Link Vendors (2013, still valid IMO).

How to remove backlinks

Now that we have a general idea of the links that you don’t want for your website, let’s get rid of them. In general, we have a number of ways of disabling these links so they won’t hurt your Google rankings:

  1. This is the easy one: find the contact details of the website owner and ask him to remove the link. Don’t demand the other website to take the link down, but ask this politely. That usually works better :) However, you will most likely also be faced with webmasters who ask you to pay for link removal or who don’t reply at all. In such cases, you should disavow the unwanted links that can’t be removed.
  2. Check which low-quality pages on your website are linked by bad backlinks and get rid of the pages (404/410) instead of the links. That is probably not what you want, as most pages will have value for your website. Besides that, too many 404s send a wrong message to Google as well. In addition to getting rid of the page, you should also disavow these bad backlinks.
  3. Get rid of the domain and start all over. Drastic, but if your site isn’t worth investing to clean up these bad backlinks, that might be an effective way. I wouldn’t do that unless Google has clearly penalized you for Penguin, Panda and more, though.
  4. If you have just too many backlinks you want to get rid of, or webmasters aren’t responding to your call to remove the link, you can also disavow these links. That’s basically telling Google you’d prefer these links not to be taken in account when assessing your site.

Now there is one thing I have to warn you about: you will probably lose traffic. Your website will have less links pointing to it after this, so less people will visit your website via these links. In the case of disavowing, the links will still be there, but the sudden drop in backlinks (bad or not) will trigger something at Google, telling it your website is less interesting. That’s the signal Google gets when these links disappear. It will work out in the end, but traffic will probably go down at first. There is no telling how much and how long, to be honest.

Of course, this is a lengthy process. It will take a lot of steps and therefore time. However, there is a way to speed this process up.

Let’s speed up the bad backlink cleaning process

If your website suffers from negative SEO (the competitor buying bad backlinks for your website), or you have made the mistake of buying bad backlinks via that shady SEO company in the past, cleaning up your backlink profile is quite a hassle. We tried to explain that above.

LinkResearchTools (LTR) provide excellent value for money when it comes to cleaning up your bad backlinks. They have helped us out on more than one occasion, where one of our customers had made the mistake of buying bad backlinks.

Especially when Google Search Console is telling you that you have bad backlinks via their Manual Spam Actions, you want these links cleaned up as soon as possible. No matter the cause of these backlinks! But also, keep in mind that you need a tool that shows you as many links as possible, so you have a chance to see all the links Google knows about.

LTR provides monthly subscriptions for their link tools that help you to for instance:

  • manage your backlinks and find the links that actually harm your site. LTR will show you which links should be removed or disavowed asap;
  • get rid of a Manual Action and/or algorithmic Google Penalties by cleaning up your backlink profile that way;
  • compare your backlinks to competitors and find great new backlink opportunities;
  • find possible linking partners and be notified of new links to your website.

linkresearchtoolsFor $649, LinkResearchTools offers their Superhero plan, which will include their Link Detox Boost, Link Alerts, Competitive Link Detox and many more tools. You can analyze up to 600.000 links with this plan, but also have the chance to upgrade to a plan that fits the size of any domain, even multiple millions.

In the philosophy of LRT, link audits are about “all or nothing”, and they will support you finding the right plan, so that you can give your domain a complete audit. They do that by combining and re-crawling link data from up to 25 different link data sources.

Sign up for a LinkResearchTools (LRT) plan »

Note that this isn’t an affiliate link! We trust LinkResearchTools and recommend them based on our own experience.

Clean up your site!

Can’t wait to start with a spring cleaning on your site? Go ahead and give your website a good clear-out:

Read more: ‘Link building from an holistic point of view’ »