I have a couple of webstores. They mainly feature products that I promote. I've heard that anymore than 10 links on a given page is bad for SEO. If you own a webstore it is
Thank you very much for the links. As far as I understand it now, outbound links should be supported by a relevant and useful text for the reader, not just stand on their own. The other thing is that there is probably a limit to the number of links you can have in a post (basically for the same reason), but not for the page which gathers these posts. At least this is my interpretation. What do you think?
Yes to your first comment. I do not think there is a Google limit to the number of links, just a common sense one. Share but keep your customers as close to home as possible. I find it important to make sure the link opens in a new page, so my customers can come right back to me if they so desire, without hitting the back button.
Sending people away from your website 10 times on one page does not sound like a great idea.
You might check here: http://www.seositecheckup.com/articles/76 or here https://pingler.com/blog/how-do-outbound-links-affect-seo/
Web Stores and SEO answers
You might check here: http://www.seositecheckup.com/articles/76 or here https://pingler.com/blog/how-do-outbound-links-affect-seo/
If you don't get a positive answer I suggest you contact Jay who does the webinars each Friday- They are well worth taking the time to watch .
Ray Bowley ( Merryman88)
2 things come to mind.
1) Are those pre-built web stores?
2) I know of one a WA member has and some of here posts still ranked on p1 or 2 in google
You can open a request ticket withing google webmaster. They will let you know what to do.
John
You might need to add the "no-follow" tag to most of those links on your page. If you have a page with tons of product descriptions and each one links out, it's probably best.
I think the numbers that get thrown around in regards to SEO are just guidelines. I'm not saying they're bad guidelines, but SEO is not a science. And the smarter Google gets, the more true this is.
If it's a good user experience, then chances are you will be fine. If visitors are coming to the site and they like what they see, Google will know. You should still no-follow them though.
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I have a couple of webstores. They mainly feature products that I promote. I've heard that anymore than 10 links on a given page is bad for SEO. If you own a webstore it is
Thank you very much for the links. As far as I understand it now, outbound links should be supported by a relevant and useful text for the reader, not just stand on their own. The other thing is that there is probably a limit to the number of links you can have in a post (basically for the same reason), but not for the page which gathers these posts. At least this is my interpretation. What do you think?
Yes to your first comment. I do not think there is a Google limit to the number of links, just a common sense one. Share but keep your customers as close to home as possible. I find it important to make sure the link opens in a new page, so my customers can come right back to me if they so desire, without hitting the back button.
Sending people away from your website 10 times on one page does not sound like a great idea.
You might check here: http://www.seositecheckup.com/articles/76 or here https://pingler.com/blog/how-do-outbound-links-affect-seo/
Web Stores and SEO answers
You might check here: http://www.seositecheckup.com/articles/76 or here https://pingler.com/blog/how-do-outbound-links-affect-seo/
If you don't get a positive answer I suggest you contact Jay who does the webinars each Friday- They are well worth taking the time to watch .
Ray Bowley ( Merryman88)
2 things come to mind.
1) Are those pre-built web stores?
2) I know of one a WA member has and some of here posts still ranked on p1 or 2 in google
You can open a request ticket withing google webmaster. They will let you know what to do.
John
You might need to add the "no-follow" tag to most of those links on your page. If you have a page with tons of product descriptions and each one links out, it's probably best.
I think the numbers that get thrown around in regards to SEO are just guidelines. I'm not saying they're bad guidelines, but SEO is not a science. And the smarter Google gets, the more true this is.
If it's a good user experience, then chances are you will be fine. If visitors are coming to the site and they like what they see, Google will know. You should still no-follow them though.
See more comments
So long you are able to sell. Do not bother about links and their numbers.