For some reason, you changed its subject
Posted: Mon Jan 20, 2025 4:53 am
7. Links from new sites and pages confirm the relevance of the acceptor pages Links from fresh sites and pages convey more relevance to the acceptor resources. Imagine pages A and B, which each have 100 incoming links. A is linked to by pages created between 2008 and 2010. And B is linked to by pages created in 2014 and 2015. You see that Google, all other things being equal, considers page B to be fresher.
8. Changing anchors devalues links Imagine that you bought a website dedicated to netherlands email list cars.matter and started writing about growing indoor flowers. After some time, Google will notice a change in the anchors of external links. If before users entered something like "cool cars" or "Mazda 6 test drive" into the anchors, now they write about flowers and baby food.
When Google notices these changes, it resets the weight of links. In other words, the site loses relevance for queries related to cars, even if the old content and link mass are preserved. On the contrary, the search engine considers the resource fresh for queries related to flowers. 9. User behavior is an indicator of content freshness When content becomes irrelevant, user behavior on the page changes.
8. Changing anchors devalues links Imagine that you bought a website dedicated to netherlands email list cars.matter and started writing about growing indoor flowers. After some time, Google will notice a change in the anchors of external links. If before users entered something like "cool cars" or "Mazda 6 test drive" into the anchors, now they write about flowers and baby food.
When Google notices these changes, it resets the weight of links. In other words, the site loses relevance for queries related to cars, even if the old content and link mass are preserved. On the contrary, the search engine considers the resource fresh for queries related to flowers. 9. User behavior is an indicator of content freshness When content becomes irrelevant, user behavior on the page changes.