Google has quietly updated the link schemes document
under their Webmaster guidelines to add large-scale guest posting, advertorials
and optimized anchor text in articles or press releases to the list of types of
links that violate their guidelines.
The new guideline examples that were added to this
document include:
·
Large-scale article marketing or guest posting campaigns with
keyword-rich anchor text links
·
Advertorials or native advertising where payment is received for
articles that include links that pass PageRank
·
Links with optimized anchor text in articles or press releases
distributed on other sites.
Google also removed these guideline examples:
·
Linking to web spammers or unrelated sites with the intent to
manipulate PageRank
·
Links that are inserted into articles with little coherence
Large-Scale
Guest Posts
This should come as no surprise,
it is a topic we covered earlier this month. If you are guest blogging
with the intent to build links, and those blog posts are done large-scale with
very little quality built into them, Google may take action against the links
in those articles or guest blog posts.
You can do guest blog posts but if you are doing it with
the intent to gain keyword-rich anchor text, then be warned.
Advertorials
Again, this should also come as
no surprise. We had a detailed video from Google’s Matt Cutts on why
advertorials with links need to be nofollwed. We even had major e-commerce
sites getpenalized for
using this technique to build links.
Optimized
Anchor Text In Press Releases
This is one of the big changes that may have not been so
clear for many webmasters. Google said, “links with optimized anchor text in
articles or press releases distributed on other sites,” is an example of an
unnatural link that violate their guidelines. The key are the examples given
and the phrase “distributed on other sites.” If you are publishing a press
release or an article on your site and distribute it through a wire or through
an article site, you must make sure to nofollow the links if those links are
“optimized anchor text.”
The example Google gives is:
There are many wedding rings on
the market. If you want to have a wedding,
you will have to pick the best ring.
You will also need to buy flowers and a wedding dress.
Google
Removed Some Examples Of Link Schemes:
Why did Google specifically remove those examples of link
schemes? It is unclear and we hope to clarify. I do think that those examples
are still covered in the overall theme of the link schemes document. In fact, I
think the other examples, for the most part, cover the examples removed.
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