What Is The Role Of Links And Linking?
Back during the early days of the Internet, before it began to interest the general public, there were two ways to get around in it. You either had to have the URL of the page that you wanted to reach, or some- one had to send you a link to it. There were no search engines to help you find what you wanted.
Even though we have powerful search engines today to help us find informa- tion on the Web, linking from one page to another is still a powerful tool for helping your site get found. And links can group together sites that are rele- vant, giving you more leverage with search engines than a site without links might have.
There is a fine science to creating a linking strategy, however. It’s not enough just to sprinkle a few links here and there within the pages of your site. There are different types of links that register differently with search engines and it’s even possible to get your web site completely delisted from search results if you handle your links improperly.
When you really begin to consider links and how they affect web sites, you see that links are interconnected in such a way as to be the main route by which traffic moves around the Internet. If you search for a specific term, when you click through the search engine results, you’re taken to another web page. As you navigate through that web page, you may find a link that leads you to another site, and that process continues until you’re tired of surfing the Internet and close your browser. And even if the process starts differently with you typing a URL directly into your web browser-it still ends the same way.
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