I’m currently in the process of moving this site to Laughing Squid Cloud Hosting.
Comments will remain closed until the migration is complete.
Have a nice weekend.
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I’m currently in the process of moving this site to Laughing Squid Cloud Hosting.
Comments will remain closed until the migration is complete.
Have a nice weekend.
{ 1 comment }
Earlier today, during the Q&A session of a live webmaster chat event hosted by Google Italy, a Search Quality Team member explicitly confirmed what Matt Cutts was heard saying at SMX Advanced day 2 about the “rel=nofollow” attribute and PageRank sculpting: nofollowing links won’t affect the amount of PR that flows to the remaining links.
Here’s a relevant excerpt from the chat transcript, followed by its English translation:
Mr. Everfluxx - 18:37
Q: Ho un sito di 3 pagine: la home page (A) linka due pagine, B e C. Se inserisco un attributo rel=nofollow sul link da A a B, il PageRank della pagina C ne beneficerà, oppure no?
Roberto Lattanzio - 19:00
A: Ciao Everfluxx, pagina C beneficiera' di PR a prescindere dal nofollow sul link verso B
Roberto Lattanzio - 19:02
A: beneficera', chiedo scusa
_________________________________________________________________
Mr. Everfluxx - 19:08
Q: Ciao Roberto, grazie. Riformulo meglio la domanda: il PageRank della pagina C (linkata da A senza rel=nofollow) aumenterà in conseguenza dell'inserimento dell'attributo rel=nofollow sul link A->B?
Roberto Lattanzio - 19:12
A: Ciao, non c'e' conseguenza su C per l'inserimento del nofollow sul link da A verso B, spero si capisca oraMr. Everfluxx - 19:12
Q: Sì, ora è chiaro.Grazie.
Mr. Everfluxx - 6:37pm
Q: [Let's suppose] I have a three-page site: the home page (A) links to two pages, B and C. If I add a rel=nofollow attribute to the link from A to B, will the PageRank of page C benefit from it?
Roberto Lattanzio - 7:00pm
A: Hi Everfluxx, page C will benefit from PR regardless of the nofollow on the link to B
Roberto Lattanzio - 7:02pm
A: [Corrects a spelling error]
_________________________________________________________________
Mr. Everfluxx - 7:08pm
Q: Hi Roberto, thank you. I'll rephrase my question: will the PageRank of page C (linked from page A without rel=nofollow) increase as a consequence of adding the rel=nofollow to the link from A->B?
Roberto Lattanzio - 7:12pm
A: Hi, there is no consequence for C due to adding a nofollow to the link from A to B, hope that is clearer nowMr. Everfluxx - 7:12pm
Q: Yes, it's clearer now.Thanks.
So, there you have it: an unofficial yet explicit confirmation coming from a trusted source. Hopefully further and more official confirmations will follow soon about a change which has been raising so many doubts in the SEO community. Stay tuned.
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So, there’s this unprecedented rumour floating around in seotwitterspace that Google might be profiling SEO’s… Holy shmoly, Batman! Who would’ve even imagined that? And who the fish Google think they are? The FBI?
If you and/or your company feel you’ve fallen victim to being profiled as an “SEO” by Google, feel free to grab your own “Google-Profiled SEO Professional/Company/Individual” badge and proudly display it on your blog or corporate website:
Google and the Google logo are registered trademarks of IDIFTL, Inc.
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As Danny Sullivan reported, earlier today at SMX Advanced Matt Cutts dropped a couple of bombs
on the audience. I’ll focus on this one: selectively adding the “rel=nofollow” attribute to a page’s outgoing links (a technique known as PageRank sculpting) is not going to benefit that page’s remaining links as it used to, since Google will not let all the PageRank flow through them, contrary to what Matt himself had suggested in the past, and to what has been long claimed and recognized by some of the best-known SEO consultants –which are now understandably baffled and confused.
I’m pretty sure Matt Cutts will post soon to clarify what that has been causing quite a stir in the SEOsphere since it was first tweeted. I’m also looking forward to reading Michael Gray’s updates and thoughts on this specific subject. As Danny put it,
You can expect Matt will do a blog post to cover this topic more. You can expect lots of people to be analyzing the change, and what it might or might not mean.
Meanwhile, I’d like to share a couple of thoughts.
First of all, the smartest SEOs around have always been quite skeptical about the effectiveness of using the nofollow attribute to manipulate the internal distribution of PageRank, and the overall sustainability of PR sculpting as an optimization technique. Let me quote just two.
Back in March, 2008, Shari Thurow wrote an excellent article (as Danny Sullivan reminds) about nofollow, which sounds ironically premonitory now:
I predict that the nofollow attribute will be abused and the attribute will shortly be devalued. I’m not going to use it to sculpt PageRank. I have never had to because, unlike most SEOs, I try to build sites that have a good information architecture, site navigation, and cross-linking structure from the onset.
On this side of the Atlantic, SEO guru Enrico Altavilla (a.k.a. LowLevel) already knew it all: in fact, exactly three years ago he noted that, since according to its original stochastic definition as a probability distribution on web pages, a page’s PageRank represents the probability that a “random surfer” visits that page by link-following, it would make very little sense to think that Google would not let any amount of PageRank flow through completely ignore the existence of[1] a visibile, clickable link just because its author deliberately chose to devalue it through nofollow.
Finally, and most importantly, if you have been relying heavily on PageRank sculpting, my advice is to reconsider your strategy and focus your future on-site efforts on what you (hopefully) have full control over: content, site architecture, and link structure. Use nofollow sparingly
if you don’t want your PR to evaporate
(that’s Matt Cutts, as quoted by Richard Baxter), but also think carefully about what pages to link to from high-PR, high-traffic pages, and how to shape your site’s contents: good design and usability analysis are bulletproof “techniques” guaranteed not to fade away after the next SMX conference.
Edited in order to reflect more precisely (IMHO) what Enrico wrote in the post I quoted: he actually did not imply that a certain amount of PR could flow even through a nofollowed link (however plausible that assumption may be), but just that the remaining links might not have their random surfer probability score inflated because of the nofollowed link(s) –which is exactly the point in PR sculpting. Sorry for overinterpreting.
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Trying to decide whether Bing‘s results quality sucks more than Live Search’s did, or just about the same…
No, I’m not going to delete my Google Toolbar for now.
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Yay! After a couple of days nights hacking/tweaking/custom-tailoring WordPress to my likes and needs, I’ve finally come up with something I like.
It’s been quite a long time since my last post, so I thought I’d start over with a new site, including a sparkling new look and fresh contents. I also moved to a new host, 1&1 Internet.
In case you were looking for my old posts, they’re all gone. Sorry about that. As soon as I’ve collected a decent list of 404′s from logfile/backlink analysis and GWT/YSE, I’ll put in place a user-friendly redirection page, and maybe write a post about it.
I plan to further customize the site in the next few days; I’ll also add a section to host my own SEO tools, so grab the RSS feed (or have FeedBurner deliver daily e-mail updates to your inbox) and stay tuned.
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