Anchor Text, Links, & How To Quickly Increase your Search Engine Ranking
June 5th, 2008Open up a new browser window and do a quick Google search for the term ‘Click here’. Notice that the first page that appears is Adobe Reader’s website. If you click that link, you will see that nowhere on that page do the terms ‘click’ or ‘here’ appear. Why in the world would Google rank a website that doesn’t even contain the keywords we are searching for at the very top of their results?
The reason is because of how Google’s algorithm works. Google looks at the Anchor text, that is the text used to link to other webpages, to try and determine what a webpage is all about. Google figures that if other websites, or your other internal webpages, are linking to a specific page, they must be providing a description to their visitors about what to expect on the next page.
For example, a real estate website may link to their condo listing page by saying, Click here for our condo listings. In this case, they have effectively told their visitors, and Google, what the next page is all about.
Keep this in mind when linking between pages on your website, and getting links from other websites. You want to make sure that your anchor text contains the keywords you want to rank high for in search engines. Keep this techniques in mind;
- Use descriptive anchor text when linking between pages on your website
- Use your keywords in your anchor text that you want to rank high for
- Try to keep your anchor text consistent when linking to the same page
- Avoid generic terms such as ‘click here’ or ‘download’ or ‘more information
- If you are using images to link to other pages, make sure you are using the ALT attribute to specify alternative text for your image. This is never seen by your visitors (unless they are using a text only web browser or your image does not load), but is used by search engines
- Include your keywords in your web page file names, separated by hyphens (-) and NOT underscores (_)
The last point provides two benefits. The first being that you now have your keywords in your urls which may help with your search engine rankings. The second is that if a third party website decides to link to your website and simply uses your URL as the anchor text, you are assured that your keywords are being used in their anchor text.
June 13th, 2008 at 12:14 pm
Hi, does it make a difference if a enable as a hyperlink the text box and not the text (as I have done here http://web.mac.com/epasquel/iWeb/Website%20de%20Enrique%20Pasquel/publicaciones.html )
Thanks a lot for the advice!
June 17th, 2008 at 8:35 am
Can you be more specific about what you mean by “text box”?
June 17th, 2008 at 9:11 am
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June 21st, 2008 at 10:39 am
The point about using underscores instead of hyphens is really interesting. I never thought about that before but I noticed how Google splits up the keywords in my Google webmaster tools account when the entire link is used as anchor text so it does appear to work.
July 14th, 2008 at 1:12 pm
[…] to link between pages, is also a really important place to include your keywords. See our post on anchor text for more tips on how to properly use […]
March 13th, 2009 at 4:11 pm
For the last 2 weeks I have been putting together a webpage using Iweb. I initially tried to publish to a folder and upload it to lunarpages but when I did all that would come up on the internet was a black page with only the hyperlinks. You could see text if you held down the shift button and scrolled. So I decided to publish to iweb. Now I see that I cannot add key words and keyphrases. Could look at my webpage and tell me what else I can do.
Thanks
Charles