Feb 19
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Do Nofollow Links Count - Redux

I like blog commenting as a link building strategy. If you can add to the conversation, it’s an easy way to get both human visitors and backlinks.

But what about “nofollow?”

Nofollow is often ignored. Last year, Ben Fisher did a case study to see if nofollow links counted - they certainly seemed to, based on his results. Neil Patel “broke” the story with screenshots, and that post is now recognized as the “nofollow is BS” authority.

Because I recommend tools like CommentHut and Comment Sniper (which server 2 very different purposes when trying to get traffic from blog commenting), I often get emails from folks asking about the “nofollow” issue - why comment on blogs if it’s nofollow, blah blah blah. So it’s clear there’s still some confusion within the population on the value, if any, of nofollow links.

I thought I’d run the same study as Ben did last year and see if I could get my site to rank for a keyword that (1) is not on my site and (2) only use blog comments to get anchor text links for my keyword. I, like Ben, chose a misspelling simply because I’d be able to see results very quickly that way.

The term: ultilevel marketing

The results as of 5:44pm PST on 2/18/2008 after leaving about 15 blog comments with the help of Comment Hut to find relevant blogs are that I am ranked #1 for the keyphrase in Google, Yahoo and MSN:

Google - ultilevel marketing search results Yahoo - ultilevel marketing search results MSN - ultilevel marketing search results

What does this mean?

  1. Nofollow links with well chosen anchor text can pass link juice
  2. Blog commenting on nofollow blogs is still an effective way to increase search engine rank for a term
  3. Thoughtful and interesting blog comments will always bring human visitors

Some 30 Minute Backlinks users have noted that occasionally, software directories nofollow their links. Clearly, based on the results above, nofollow links *do* still contribute value to a site’s rank in all three major search engines. Any links that happen to be nofollow received by way of 30 Minute Backlinks continue to add to a site’s overall link profile and ability to rank for it’s keyphrase.

Edit 2/22/08 to correct my misspelling of the misspelling


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Author: Michelle MacPhearson
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Related posts:

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  4. What You Missed in 2008
  5. Already Got Rank


83 Comments

Sus
February 19, 2008

The more I read about the nofollow principles, the more confused I become due to the conflicting stories. I do a fair amount of writing for third parties where the nofollow attribute is an absolute no-no.

It’s not surprising new net folks get confused. Who are they to believe if they’re not techie minded and don’t understand the workings of nofollow or dofollow attributes.

I know this is a bit off topic but, for some reason my name seems to get hits in Google searches than my site. I recently started putting my website link in name fields as I did here. Is this an effective way to comment?

also, I’m still a little fuzzy on exactly what a no follow link is? Is it link that is now inactive? I’m not certain.

Thanks!

John Thomas
February 19, 2008

Michelle,

You seem to be writing quite a bit about MLM these days. Is there something we should know? …are you planning on “coming out of the closet” about your real opinion about multilevel marketing? :0)

Wes
February 19, 2008

ahhhhhhh tooo much to doo :-(,
I just getting overwhelmed with this internet markeing, just cant seem to get out of the newbie tag :-(

Eric
February 19, 2008

Hey Michelle,
This is totally out of left field but when is the music mastermind coming out? Do you have any dates? I’m really looking forward to it.
Thanks.

Jason Counts
February 20, 2008

Michelle,

I just wanted to tell ya a couple of things. Your pdf “Social Media Daily” was a really good read and full of great info.Also, great blog… good info and down to earth…

I’m getting ready to launch a site that you might really like, so maybe when I’m ready for a few beta-testers, you might be interested.

I know you’ll give me your real opinion as a beta-tester and not bullshit me, etc. Anyways, let me know if your interested. Thanks again for the great info. TTYL

Jason Counts
JasonCounts.Com

John Matenkosky
February 21, 2008

Michelle, I’m probably being dense here, but what the hell are you talking about in this post? Did you post comments on 15 no-follow blogs? Did you use the misspelling in your signature links on those comments? So you rank #1 for the misspelling, right? And the conclusion is: that wouldn’t happen if no-follow wasn’t followed?

John Matenkosky
February 21, 2008

One more thought on this, Michelle… If Goog interprets nofollow as _don’t score this link_ as opposed to _don’t follow this link_, then it would seem that your test resulted in a #1 position because of the number of links for the misspelling, rather than for pagerank, i.e. no juice flowed…

SEO Consultant
February 21, 2008

Do you think “no-follow” links count less than a regular link?

So basically you would need 5 “no-follow” links to equal the value of one regular link.

That would be an interesting test too.

Sandra
February 21, 2008

So are you saying then it’s a waste of time, time that could be better spent elsewhere, to play with the dofollow plugin?

Shopping Schnaeppchen
February 21, 2008

Hello Michelle,
Great Posting again.
I also think that even nofollow links would help achieving better rankings.
But i also think that your little case study doesn´t tell much because of this seldom searched keyword.

Michelle MacPhearson
February 21, 2008

@ “easy wealth fire” - you’d be better off using keywords instead of your URL.

@ John Thomas - I’m never opposed to an additional income stream, but no, no big MLM secrets to reveal. :-)

@Eric - I’m having a hard time with Musician’s Mastermind because I’ve found that most musician’s don’t care to learn the nitty gritty details of online promotion. They hate marketing and balk at anything technical. So I’m not certain where that’s going. Perhaps I’ll email the list and get some feedback.

@John M - Nofollow is followed, that’s established. The test was to see if nofollow links could still cause a site to rank for a keyword - they’re not supposed to. But it seems they do.

A word on Page Rank - stop chasing the little green bar!

@ SEO - I would think they count “less” then a regular link. But I think that’d be near impossible to test, sine you’d have to link from different domains, each would have different “strenghts” in Googe, you wouldn’t know which link actually caused the rank. Too many variables.

@ Sandra - Getting links from places that “nofollow” is not a waste of time.

@Shopping - the point wasn’t to rank for a massive keyword. The point was to see if it was at all possible to rank for a term with only nofollow links. If I’d chosen “weight loss” or some other such competitive term, I’d never see the results, because it’s difficult to rank for with even hundreds of legit dofollow links. I wasn’t trying to put a year of my life into this, LOL, just a quick experiment.

[...] Michelle MacPhearson recreates an interesting experiment testing whether or not no-follow links provide any link juice. She also provides some excellent links on the topic, a must read for anyone interested in getting better rankings in the SERPs. Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. [...]

Small Business News
February 21, 2008

Great bit of detective work, Michelle. From what I understand, “nofollow” means just that, so either one or more sites in your test didn’t use the nofollow rule correctly or Google is ignoring it for some reason. Some of the comments on here hint that it’s the misspelling that is causing this; however, that would just mean that one of the blogs you commented on should be number one and not your site.

Social Marketing
February 21, 2008

Running this test on a non competitive phrase is not going to be an accurate snapshot of the overall picture here.

Google ranks sites differently based on how popular the search term is. To make a complex story short, Google makes it harder to rank for keywords (or phrases) that carry a PPC cost of $.50 or higher. The higher the cost, the harder to rank.

The higher you have to bid on a term on the PPC side the harder it is to rank for that keyword organically. The algorithm shifts based on the real dollar value of the keyword. Google’s PPC system does talk to the organic ranking algorithm.

This has been verified by myself, Jerry West and Russell Wright.

On keywords with no activity Google will rank you at the top just because you are fresh and new. It probably had nothing to do with no-follow links passing link love.

It would be interesting to see this study conducted on a competitive phrase to be able to better assess the theory.

- Charles Heflin
SEO20/20

Frank Bruno
February 21, 2008

I would be interested to hear experiments using nofollow tags on yuor internal pages to preserve juice and increase page rank and rankings

There were a few videos from Stompernet about a month or so ago that showed how to use nofollow tags on your internal pages.

Frank Bruno
http://videomarketingtactics.com/

Michelle MacPhearson
February 21, 2008

@Charles - Keywords with little activity are, of course easier to rank for.

The point wasn’t “Look, I got a #1 rank with 15 blog comments” (because that’s silly, it’s a useless keyphrase with no competition and even less searches) but rather “Look, a site can get into Google results for a keyphrase with nothing but nofollow links.”

It’s not an issue of competitive phrases, that’s entirely not the point here. I didn’t rank for the phrase, then I linked to my site with the phrase on nofollow blogs and then I ranked. This isn’t meant to say you can rank for whatever competitive term by using blog comments, it’s meant to say that nofollow links still do contribute to one’s site rank and are a worthwhile strategy (in addition to one’s overall link building strategy).

Michelle MacPhearson
February 21, 2008

@Frank - I use nofollow on my salespages - i.e. SocialMediaDaily.com has links to “TOS” etc. that are nofollow. According to this test, those pages will still pass some value, but I do believe nofollow links are “credited” as less valuable in the SE’s eyes. They certainly aren’t ignored, based on my and Ben Fishers testing.

Eric
February 21, 2008

Hey Michelle,
I want to learn the nitty gritty of online promotion. I’m a musician with a business mindset. Is there anyway if those retarted musician who don’t like marketing(seeing that when your an indie artist marketing is what will make you successful duh) don’t want your information that you will sell it on a individual basis? I would LOVE to have the information that you provide, actually your information is one of my marketing plans to promote my music. Pretty please I trust you, I brought tubeinator and it was wonderful. I know you know your stuff when it comes to online promotion.

James Harrison
February 21, 2008

I’ve read something that slightly agrees with you.

Spiders CAN read nofollow links but they wont pass PR through them.

What do you think about that?

Earning a Living Online
February 21, 2008

Hi Michelle, Great post and a very interesting test. Can the results be skewed because the search term is 1.)very unique and 2.) mentioned in your blog post. We know that Google index’s and spider’s Blogs on a more regular basis than regular sites that are not updated on a regular basis. For Example I ranked #1 for the phrase “meanwhile in the bat cave” which was the title of my last post. There was no commenting from me using that phrase at all. Just curious, what are your thoughts on this. By the way, I don’t comment just on blogs or posts that have the dofollow as I truly think that is not what the spirit of community and socializing is all about.

Beth
February 21, 2008

Michelle,
You said you used Comment Hut to find the 15 blogs to comment on. I thought Comment Hut only offers up blogs that DON’T have the “no-follow” tags.

Michelle MacPhearson
February 21, 2008

@Eric - thanks, will keep that in mind!

@James, yes, they can read nofollow, they follow nofollow, and they still “count” nofollow links towards your sites overall link profile. Whether they pass PR or not is impossible to know, it would require a site get nothing but nofollow links for 3-6 months. Regardless, PR is not important.

@Earning - (1) No (2) no, the terms wasn’t on the blog before I made the post, and it ranked before the post. There doesn’t NEED to be links to a site with a keyphrase as anchor text for that site to rank for the keyphrase, it helps though.

@Beth - No, CommentHut finds blogs about a keyword and doesn’t look into follow/nofollow. They’ve tested as well and found it irrelevant. Read more about their findings at http://www.commenthut/michelle/

SEO Expert
February 21, 2008

Hi Michelle,

Us SEO’s have never been happy with the idea of the “nofollow”, since the number of crawl-throughs has historically been thought of as Popularity-influencer. The algorithm as we know it, is Relevancy + Popularity = High Ranking.

That being said, nofollow has never been associated with “noindex”. Link text and the URL associated with that link text have never had anything to do with whether a bot should or should not crawl through the link (and both are absolutely recorded by the crawlers, even if not followed).

Point 2: Toolbars
Google claims that it doesn’t use the toolbar to track where you’re surfing: http://www.google.com/support/toolbar/bin/answer.py?answer=32820&topic=11750. However, we know better than that. Several us have created isolated, non-linked pages and have visited those pages with an active toolbar, only to find the page indexed in a matter of weeks.

Even though a link might not be crawled, it’s still indexed, and recorded in the search engine’s database. When Googlebot or Slurp do evaluate the website, it matches the URL with the link text previously recorded and if the keyword-optimized content correlates with the link text recorded - BAAM! You have ranking.

Great post - I’m in total agreement.

Nice analysis. I wrote recently about the effect of “No follow” and how people have overblown its impact. Do read about it at my blog.

Stewart Alexander
February 22, 2008

“Busting the common rel=”nofollow” Myth! - and a Few Other Tips.”

There’s a lot of confusion about the topic of “no follow.”

Here’s the short version of what rel=”nofollow” is (according to Wikipedia) and why this has zero effect on your use of any of the tools that Michelle has

mentioned in her post…

“nofollow is an HTML attribute value used to instruct search engines that a hyperlink should not influence the link target’s ranking in the search engine’s

index.”

The main point in that sentence is…

“used to instruct search engines that a hyperlink should not influence the link target’s ranking in the search engine’s”

When assessing any of these types of tools, be aware of any sites that promise you any of the following results:

A. Influence your link target’s ranking in the search engines.

B. Influence your link target’s page ranking in the search engines.

The reason why I say this is simply because nobody knows what the search engines use to produce such results. Irrespective of any tests that any individuals

may have ran, nobody can guarantee you better search engine placement, or better page rank, by simply placing comments on blogs.

However, having said that, here’s the contradiction…

Just by commenting on relevant blogs, I too have had great results in terms of better rankings and better page rank, but can I guarantee that it will happen

over and over, no. Can I guarantee that it will happen to you, again the answer is a resounding no!

It’s the main reason why we’ve never promoted this fact and stood by and watched while others have made the topic look sexy on the outside, but on the inside

the story kind of stinks. Quoting what the search engines will do, is a very thin line to walk indeed.

So in short…

Yes it has happened to many people that they too have received better seacrh engine placement and better page rank, but because we, as mere mortals have no

clue what the big three search engines have in mind, it’s questionable to use that as selling point…

Having said all of that, what these tools can do for you, guaranteed is the following:

1. Save you time by automating your searches for related blogs to post your comments on.

2. Sorts the results you find in order of page rank. A typical search could return results ranging from page rank 1 -7… (depending on your chosen niche).

3. When you read and leave value adding comments plus your backlink on blogs, search engine spiders will pick them up, follow them and index your site(s).

In other words, these types of tools are great for getting your sites indexed quickly and easily.

4. In addition, real human beings read your posts and if you’ve written something of value, they will click on your link. Which means they are also F.R.E.E

targeted traffic generating tools.

5. Puts you in a great position of being able to contact and form relationships with the owners of blogs that you find IN YOUR NICHE… Which means, if used

correctly, you have a powerful networking tool in your hands also.

So now that you’re all clued up on the topic of no follow and you have an idea of what the tools Michelle has shown you can do, go give ‘em a try out.

Stewart Alexander

snel geld lenen
February 22, 2008

Another conclusion could be: when ranking for small competition keywords use nofollow links and when ranking for heavy competition keywords this is not enough, you will need the algorithm as we know it, links with relevancy + popularity for high ranking.

Biodiesel Expansion
February 22, 2008

How about the links on this blog Michelle? Are they nofollow?

gr,
Remco

Michelle MacPhearson
February 22, 2008

@Remco - I use the Wordpress “dofollow” plugin, so comments are not “nofollowed.”

Links Directories
February 22, 2008

This is good stuff! It is always helpful to have theories such as those mentioned here backed up by the evidence of hard testing as opposed to hearsay.

In answer to the question what is nofollow, it is an instruction for spiders not to follow any links mentioned within the tag. The purpose could be either to try and stop spiders wasting their time crawling stuff you are not interested in having indexed, or more likely an attempt to control the flow of link juice. It has been widely believed that Yahoo ignored them anyway, but if Google still indexes them, then they are not as worrisome as previously thought.

Charlie

seokos
February 22, 2008

The test is invalid, because you show the evidence screenshots of the search term ‘ultilevel markeTING’ instead ‘ultilevel markeITNG’.
This is a useless experiment, but it is an excellent link-bait article to get lots of links! :D

toksee
February 22, 2008

Based on my observations over many keyword sets, I would tend to agree with Snel. If the keyword has little or no competition, you can win with nofollow - after all, Google wants to serve something up every time there is a search. I also think it’s a good idea to include no follows in your linking anyways since it looks more natural - even if their worth is questionable on competitive keywords.

Michelle MacPhearson
February 22, 2008

Ah, my bad - I mispelled the miss-spelling in the post. The correct term is “ultilevel marketing.” Test was on that term, blame my typing!

snel geld lenen
February 22, 2008

Another conclusion would be; when ranking for small competition keywords you can use the nofollow links they will count also and when ranking for heavy competition keywords you will need links according to the algorithm as we know it; relevancy and popularity for high ranking.

Filme Noi
February 22, 2008

Hello Michelle,
Great Posting

I’m sure that you’re wright, but the links with nofollow counts less then links with dofollow.

Eric
February 22, 2008

Hey Michelle,
Can I use 30 min backlinks to promote my music?

Niche Annihilation Method
February 25, 2008

Nice experiment. Also thanks for the suggestion about using CommentHut!

Bulk REO Lover
February 25, 2008

Don’t you think the test you performed with “ultilevel marketing” is just a ‘low hanging fruit’ case?

There’s no competition for the word, and it never gets any searches online.

Just wondering.

Great blog too.

well far out…thats interesting that nofollow appears to be still counting…im going to check this out myself…i wonder if it counts but isnt seen as a link out by the blog…in turn being ok for both sites with pr etc…

Crikey Web Articles
March 10, 2008

if thats true about the nofollow then i wonder why they set it up like that…maybe nofollow used to work but now the search engines changed there mind…

I have noticed the inclusion of ‘no follow’ links within the list of back-links shown on Google webmaster tools & Yahoo site explorer. Could it be that the search engines are occasionally ‘ignoring’ the nofollow attribute or the bots dont always pick this attribute up when crawling/indexing?

Shai
March 26, 2008

It seems that some people are missing the point of this test. Yes, it is an obscure keyword phrase that would be easy to rank for. That is irrelevant. It was chosen for ease of testing and seeing the results.

-The key part to focus on was that the keyword phrase was not on the page that got ranked. It was only on the pages that were linking back to her page. Since it was her paged that ranked and not the ones that actually had the keyword phrase on them, the backlinks from those sites had to be the factor in her page getting ranked for that phrase. Also, keep in mind that since the keyword was not on her page it wasn’t that the links were followed by the spiders, but that the search engines gave her page credit based solely on the backlinks.

-This isn’t an article on how to rank #1 in Google using only nofollow links. Nor is it to prove how much value the nofollow backlinks have, just that they do have some value. The idea to take away from this is that nofollow backlinks aren’t the complete waste of time that many people believe them to be.

John Illnes
April 10, 2008

The official claim is that links with the rel=nofollow attribute do not influence the search engine rankings of the target page. In addition to Google, Yahoo and MSN also support the rel=nofollow attribute.

i think it helps indexing

Work At Home
April 11, 2008

I don’t think the issue is black and white. It’s not “Do nofollow links count”. Yes, every link counts. BUT, it’s a matter of how much they count (which someone said above). I think the experiment needs to get a little more precise. Perhaps run on 5 different sites with various numbers of backlinks. I would like to know if the ratio is like 10 nofollow = 1 dofollow or more like 100 nofollow = 1 dofollow..

That would make a big difference. Yes?

You know we have been using blog comments as one of the ways for backlink generation for our clients. I have often wondered the effectiveness of the nofollow link. Thanks for doing this test study, now I know that it is not all in vain. While I do still expect nofollow to not pass as much juice, its great to see its not a total loss!

It’s great to see some proof that nofollow links do count.. After spending a load of time link building in the early days just to be told that most blogs are no follow and most of my time was wasted!

John
April 26, 2008

I had been looking for some information on this. There is so much debate on this topic and whether it is helpful or not. To me, it seems like too much work for sites do not count these even if they are not followed. Good post.

Clickbank ads
May 13, 2008

All links have value! Even if only to a useful topic relevant resource elsewhere. I would think that search engines place importance on important links and less importance on less important links. No real mystery here!

If nofollow does not contribute to your PR it would still offer links to your site. The issue is, how much time are you willing to spend to gain site importance with little reward? Every link counts but some links make bigger steps forward than others.

foxcamel
May 14, 2008

hey hey hey! It means that nofollow link still can bring rank to the linked site? Then,why we use nofollow link?
I am so confused.

Thanks for the post on nofollow.
I figured they had some sort of validity.
I guess doing whatever you can sure helps!

Michelle,

I too thought commenthut is for no-follow tags but in any case do you put your kw where name is PLUS also an anchor text when you comment or is that overkill? I think it’s true for low competition phrases that the results would be good but not for high.

Deb

Matthew Bennett
May 21, 2008

Im doing the same experiment with an orphaned page on my sites at the moment. Ive added 5 nofollow links to wordpress blogs using a really obscure term with no results. I’m 3 days in and so far the page hasn’t been indexed… i hope it does!

This is a very interesting post and I myself have done this just internally within my own small site. I am still getting found for the phrases I wanted that are in the anchor text and also the title tags. One thing I do dissagree on though is that the link juice can be obtained. this is what the nofollow is used for; to stop pagerank from flowing away from a page. I would imagine that you ahve a link internally or externally that did not have a nofollow on it and thus the page did get some pagerank. Great article.

Great post and some good information. But I wonder how long it will be before the nofollow tag starts doing what it is suppose to do?

Google has really been pushing the use of the nofollow tag.

Internet Marketing
May 21, 2008

I think no matter what you do, Google changes its alogorithms so often we are all forever catching up and spending time hoping by writing comments like these we will all of a sudden gain better positions! well i just did it ;)

John Davies
June 26, 2008

Excellent article. Nofollow links do count, we knew this about year ago and so did most of our clients. Thanks for clarifying it in such a nice manner. I will try to frequent your blog more often.


John D.
http://www.widecircles.com
Social Media Marketing

Dennis John
July 4, 2008

Thanks for the nice topic. As there are many confuion regarding, google list no follow link.

The final result was :

All links which is shown up in Google Webmaster Tools and Google Webmaster Tools does not differentiate between incoming links that pass link popularity and links that don’t.

Inbound links are still inbound links irrespective of the nofollow attribute in it. Plus, they’re still valuable from a business perspective as they can funnel targeted traffic to your site.

atari 2600 games
July 6, 2008

Thanks Michelle for providing proof that no follow links do help and are counted with Google. I wonder what the situation is for Yahoo and MSN? I’ve heard MSN is notably bad at respecting “no follow” attributes.

Katina
July 10, 2008

The no follow information can be so confusing sometimes, but your article cleared a few things up for me. I did not realize you could rank for keywords this way. Thanks for the information.

SEO Forums
July 10, 2008

Well…however Google does not consider nofollow links as backlink for a site or no-follow links have no link juice but still they are very important as they have power of diverting traffic to your site and needless to say that traffic is always so important for a site….

Neeraj Srivastava
July 10, 2008

Indeed……no-follow links are valuable in terms of traffic…..

Keep in mind also that nofollow (as far as we know) is a Google-only concept. Google came up with it and there are still plenty of search engines out there (Yahoo, MSN) that don’t exactly put that much weight on nofollow….that’s at least 30-40% of total web searches.

Thanks for conducting the test and sharing your results. I think it still makes sense to make finding “do follow” blogs a higher priority if whatever tool or method you use has the capability. “Do follow” and “no follow” are not the same thing and IMO the difference is more likely to widen rather than shrink or stay the same.

Mike Smith
August 5, 2008

Thanks Michelle for this wonderful article. However could you tell me incase there is a nofollow website, how can i make a dofollow posting on that blog?
…………..
Mike Smith

Lyrics
August 12, 2008

so what’s the need for no-follow ?

Matt
September 22, 2008

This is some cool stuff on the nofollow debate. I definitely think that they have some weight, though limited, and are looked at by google for what term is linked.

Chris Hutcherson
October 1, 2008

Thanks for the live test results. Testing often disproves what you may read in forums.

John Lewis
October 21, 2008

Great post. I have been thinking about this for quite some time and have to agree with the evidence. If you do a linkdomain: search on google for my site Flood Prevention products you will see lots of links from nofollow links. This means thay have to be crawled and if so why wouldnt the engines use the data?

Nick
October 21, 2008

Great post Michelle. I have always thought that nofollow links must count for something maybe google is throwing us all a curve and the nofollow links actually do count and they are trying to avoid having people link unless it is really relevant to their site. I know I would accept nofollow links as long as they were relevant to my website.

http://www.antivirusremedies.com

James
October 28, 2008

You have to take everything that Matt Cutts says with a grain of salt. It’s not in Google’s best interest to help everyone with their SEO work. Google also claims that .edu and .gov links dont carry any more weight.

Instant Guru Status
October 30, 2008

Have you seen anything change on this topic within the past week. I’ve been getting into the area of getting backlinks to my site lately, and I thought something recently changed with follow and no follow links.

Greg Parsons | Naples SEO
November 25, 2008

It’s always been my opinion that a backlink is a backlink, no matter the juice, etc. Just keep building your backlinks and don’t worry about PR, link juice, nofollow/dofollow, or any of that nonsense. Step back and get back to basics on your marketing. If you’re commenting on blogs and you’re writing something useful, that will attract attention and visitors to your site. If you’re writing useless content, you don’t get any visitors. The link juice/PR/etc. should just be icing on the cake. Go for the long term strategy and everything will fall into place regardless of the link juice.

Michelle MacPhearson
December 1, 2008

@Greg Parsons Agreed - entirely too much attention is put into nofollow, PR, etc. Just build links, folks!

Charles Heflin
December 1, 2008

@Greg Parsons - I am glad to see your comment. So very VERY true.

Thank you

Craig
December 11, 2008

Michelle,

Great article. I to like the other 50 replies here was confused about nofollow blogs. I use commenthut as well and is a valuable tool to find wordpress blog that accept comments. i avoided the nofollow higher PR sites, but from now on I will comment on those sites as well.

Thanks,

Craig, Real Sports Fan Stuff

Alex Newell
December 17, 2008

Ranking first for “ultilevel marketing” is too funny.

Hows about going for “Coolest Hermit on the Planet?”

;-)

Alex

[...] Do Nofollow Links Count - Redux: A study of the “nofollow” tag and evidence that Google actually will rank a page that [...]

double glazing
January 1, 2009

Nofollow links ; we have noticed they do carry some weight and relevance in yahoo and msn, were not sure about google but worth some more research.

Alex Kei
January 2, 2009

Excellent Post.

I have a doubt: when commenting on blog posts, the Anchor Text is only used at the “website box” in the personal details of the person who is commenting, or it must be used in the body of the text?

I don’t know if all blog comments accept HTML code to make anchor texts (i.e.: Dinero y Negocios) Or another method should be used?

Looking forward to your response.

Kindest Regards,

Alex Kei

Michelle MacPhearson
January 2, 2009

@Alex Kei: For this test, I used my anchor text as the “Name” and the URL in the “Website” box. This way when the comment appeared, my anchor text was used when linking to the site.

Thanks, Michelle. I think this just goes to show that we should just get on with the job of getting links - no matter if they are dofollow or nofollow. You will get a spread of both over time. Both will be beneficial in some way.

Tucson Marketing Pro
January 5, 2009

Thanks Michelle… great post! I never tried testing “no follow” links, but I definitely will now!

Intercambio
January 6, 2009

Great post, Michelle!

I noticed that Yahoo! Answers (which also has a NoFollow attribute) recognize some of my comments there and this is a great in terms of Search Engine rankings!
I love reading your articles and posts. Please keep us uptaded.

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