Search Engines & SEO Blog
Revisited: Google assesses only the first linktextJohannes Beus
A few weeks ago I wrote about how Google only assesses the first linktext if there are more than one link to a second site within a page. Back then I received a series of special cases by comments and email. Now I have taken these cases and tried them out, the result of which I do not want to keep to myself. All of the tests are still online so everyone who wishes to run their own tests are welcome to use them.Test 1: standard procedure, just like the test a few weeks ago (1. Link / 2. Link) The outcome is still the same: if more than one link directs to a second site, Google will onle assess the first linktext. The advice here would be to accommodate the most important keywords for the internal link within the first linktext. Test 2: first link as a nofollow-link (1. Link / 2. Link) Test 3: first link as a picture without title- or alt-attribute (2. Link) The first link received a picture as linktext where the picture neither has a title- nor an alt- attribute. Google uses the second linktext with this combination. Test 4: first link as a picture without a title- but with an alt-attribute (1. Link / 2. Link) Just as test 3 with the only difference that the alt-attribute of the picture has been set. Google again uses the second linktext and simply ignores the alt-attribute. Test 5: first link as a picture with a title- but without an alt-attribute (1. Link / 2. Link) Same as test 4, except that this time the title- and not the alt-attribute was set. The result is the same as in tests 3 and 4: Google chooses the second linktext. To sum this exercise up we can say that Google's handling of the nofollow-links will lead to some hectic activity for some website-operators/searchengine-optimizers. While many made the assumption that Google will take the second link and build their internal linking-structure around it, this test proves that exactly the opposite is the case.
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