Skip to main content

How Google Rates Facebook and Twitter links

The first Matt Cutts Answers Questions About Google video of the year has been posted, and in it Matt addresses links from Twitter and Facebook, after talking about his shaved head again. Specifically, the submitted question he answers is:

Links from relevant and important sites have always been a great way to get traffic & acceptance for a website. How do you rate links from new platforms like Twitter, FB to a website?

Essentially, Matt says Google treats links the same whether they are from Facebook or Twitter, as they would if they were from any other site. It's just an extension of the pagerank formula, where its not the amount of links, but how reputable those links are (the company uses a similar strategy for ranking Tweets themselves in real-time search).



While Facebook and Twitter links may be treated like any other links, they do still come with things to keep in mind. For one, with Facebook, you have to keep in mind that a lot of profiles are not public. When a profile is not public, Google can't crawl it, and it can't assign pagerank on the outgoing links if it can't fetch the page to see what the outgoing links are. If the page is public, it might be able to flow pagerank, Matt says. With Twitter, most links are nofollowed anyway.

"At least in our web search (our organic rankings), we treat links the same from Twitter or Facebook or, you know, pick your favorite platform or website, just like we'd treat links from Wordpress or .edus or.govs or anything like that," says Cutts. "It's not like a link from an .edu automatically carries more weight or a link from a .gov automatically carries more weight. But, the specific platforms might have issues, whether it's not being crawled or it might be nofollow. It would keep those particular links from flowing pagerank."

There you have it. Matt's response probably doesn't come as much of a surprise to most of you, but it's always nice to hear information like this straight from Google.

Article Source:- Webpronews.com

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Christmas Selling Tips for Amazon Sellers

Update Your Account Settings and Policies As a seller on Amazon, you have a lot going on over the festive period. Spare yourself unnecessary headaches by making sure the information on your seller account is up to date. Confirm that your email contact information in Seller Central is up to date. Confirm that communications from Amazon are not being processed as junk mail by your email program. Explain your delivery and return polices clearly, and display other delivery information such as options and prices. Post a customer service phone number Make sure you follow our policies by not displaying any portion or version of your URL (e.g., .com, dot com, .net, etc.) anywhere on Amazon. Offer Promotions and Free Delivery Customers love promotions because they offer ways to save money. When considering online purchases, your buyers will be looking at the whole range of promotional offerings – for example, a percentage or a few pounds...

BookMarking Directory List

Social bookmarks and the "nofollow" link relation Social bookmarking and tagging networks let you save and organize your favorite web sites online. They are also a good resource for webmarters, as they let you build incoming links by storing bookmarks to the desired sites. However, many of this networks use the nofollow link relation to prevent spam. This has come to degrade the usefulness of this kind of sites for link building.

The Top 7 Facebook and Twitter Strategies

The Top 7 Facebook and Twitter Strategies that are Working Right Now One of the great things about the work I do is that I have a bird's eye view of what's working and what's not when it comes to Social media . Every so often I like to give sort of a "state of the union" on Facebook and Twitter best practices, because as I am sure you know, social media is constantly growing, changing and evolving. As you'll see, some of the strategies I am recommending are tried and true - they have been working since day one and will probably continue to for the foreseeable future. [Links From PR9 Sites!]