londonmoon
New Member
I have been creating websites around my niche. I have uploaded this new free theme. What do you think of it? Thanks everyone!
Here it is ---> Motor Club of America <---
Here it is ---> Motor Club of America <---
You have NO PA/DA.
And we should about something so UTTERLY USELESS because????
I didnt know that PA/DA was a moz.com page authority / domain authority. I have never used it before and probably would not use it.And we should about something so UTTERLY USELESS because????
Just saying important w.r.t SEO.
How? It's not a metric that they can even measure.If I were google I would use the percentage of returning visitors to a site to help determine a site ranking.
There always has been.I think there are more factors at play nowadays.
That's a good point, unless you use google analytics they possibly can't measure it. I guess they may be able to get some information when you search in google and click on that site as a return visitor. They may possibly be able to get some information from the google adsense code. In any case they should know the exit rate as in how fast you click the back button and go back to the google search page, so if a site has a massive amount of back links through seo but people are exiting out of the site fast, that could flag a potential Web spam problem.how? It's not a metric that they can even measure.
Well yes they do 'sort of' and Google have stated categorically that they do NOT use that kind data for 'rankings' because it IS far too easily manipulated by anyone hoping to artificially boost their own URLs OR to sabotage a 'rival' URL. Using 'click-through' information as a measure of "quality" or 'importance' is what has made 'Alexa rankings' UTTERLY useless for twenty years.In any case they should know the exit rate as in how fast you click the back button and go back to the google search page,
That's not necessarily the case any more, and it's not the 'links' that boost 'rankings', and never really has been. It is the anchor text of the links and/or the text adjacent to the anchor element in the source code that can boost rankings. The "adjacent text" being the reason that 'hidden' or 'empty' links (anchor elements with no text) worked so well in the "bad old days", and the anchor text being why "Google bombing" was effective for getting unexpected search results for certain phrases (http://mashable.com/2012/04/19/google-bombs/).If you had a tonne of inbound links and we're to rank high