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What are good backlinks vs. bad backlinks?

What's the difference between good backlinks vs bad backlinks? Learn about the differences of these links to keep your site safe and authoritative.

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by Kristan Bauer in Link Building

Good backlinks vs bad backlinks – what’s the difference?

We all know that backlinks are an important signal for organic search ranking. Links from external domains (aka backlinks) send strong signals of link equity and can improve Domain Authority. Therefore, making a domain or webpage more competitive in search ranking. However, did you know that there are good backlinks and bad backlinks?

Some types of backlinks can be more detrimental and hurtful to your site than helpful. On the flipside, some types of backlinks can be very powerful and positively impactful to your site.

Let’s discuss the history of backlinks and examples of good backlinks versus bad backlinks.

History of backlinks & spammy practices

Since backlinks are such a powerful ranking signal, historically, backlink practices were abused by many websites and SEO teams. This included massive link farms and including hidden backlinks on websites to game the ranking system. While this proved fruitful for websites abusing the link guidelines, they weren’t sustainable long-term tactics and ultimately, search engines have caught up to link manipulation practices.

These days, Google has cracked down on these spammy backlink tactics with algorithmic updates and manual penalties. Algorithmic updates, such as Penguin target sites with low-quality (or spammy) backlinks.

penguin google algorithmSource: Moz.com

Google encourages very natural, “white hat” link building tactics and has updated their guidelines to enforce this practice.

Google’s backlink guidelines

Google has very clear link quality guidelines that websites should adhere to. In these guidelines, they outline what constitutes an unnatural link or what they consider a “link scheme.”

Source: support.google.com

Overall, Google’s stance is that any links intended to manipulate a website’s ranking in search is in violation of their quality guidelines. Google’s algorithms are meant to catch many instances of link schemes, but if they don’t, Google has manual reviewers that can assign “manual penalties” for sites to clean up their backlink profile.

Receiving a manual action can be extremely detrimental to search traffic and oftentimes hard to recover from; therefore, backlink practices should be executed in careful consideration to avoid adverse backlink actions.

While Google encourages natural links throughout the web ecosystem, there’s still a place for proper promotion and proactive “white hat” backlinking strategies.

Examples of bad backlinks (black hat)

Spammy backlink practices are often called “black hat” link building tactics. These represent types of links that blatantly abuse Google’s link guidelines and have a high potential of being caught in an algorithmic or manual link penalty.

Some examples of black hat link building tactics include:

  • Link farms where hundreds of sites are linked from one page
  • Hidden links where users can’t visibly see on the page but exist in the code
  • Automated link building programs such as the use of widgets or footer links where webmaster’s don’t have control over links
  • Excessive guest posting with exact match anchor text and low-quality links
  • Advertisement links or blatant paid link placement

white hat vs black hat linksSource: Niftyslash.com

Examples of good backlinks (white hat)

On the flip side of black hat link building, there are proper and helpful link building initiatives, commonly called “white hat” link building tactics. White hat link building tactics are ones that websites should focus on when engaging in any link building program.

Some examples of white hat link building tactics include:

  • High-quality content creation (whether this be written, video, visual or interactive content) and natural linking back from other sites
  • High-quality guest posting content or editorial mentions with relevant, natural links
  • Media mentions or public relations campaigns
  • Content marketing campaigns to relevant sources, using high-quality content
  • Promotional campaigns for contests, sponsorships and brand promotions
  • Local directory linking, such as the Better Business Bureau or local visitor sites

Conclusion

Knowing what constitutes a good backlink vs bad backlink can help plan and drive any backlink development strategy for your website. Understanding your website’s market, natural influencers in your industry and relevant partnerships for your brand can encourage quality, white hat backlinks.

Gaining backlinks is still a natural part of the web ecosystem and should be considered within any SEO strategy. However, the use of unnatural, spammy or excessive link schemes should be avoided when engaging in backlink development.

Do you have any other examples of good versus bad backlinks? Or have you seen any success with specific white hat link building programs? If so, please share in the comments below!

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