In order to better understand what link juice is, picture a bucket of water. The bucket represents your web page and hoses filling them represent the inbound links. Consider the following scenarios for ranking based on inbound links:
Scenario 1: The more inbound links a site has the more link juice it receives. If you increase the amount of hoses filling a bucket, the fuller the bucket is. The same goes for link juice. A site with more strong inbound links will rank higher than another site with fewer equally strong inbound links.
Scenario 2: The page with stronger inbound links will rank higher if the pages have the same amount of links. Both buckets have a hose filling them. The difference is that one hose is turned up higher and filling the bucket more. In this scenario, the page with the stronger source of link juice will end up with a higher rank in the search engine.
Scenario 3: The page with stronger inbound links can rank higher than those with more links.
Link juice is known in the SEO world as the authority passed to a site via internal and external links.
the most link juice we can get from dofollow links.
That is the ranking power passed in by an incoming link from another site.
One could gauge the power with a formula like:
Page Rank/number of total outgoing links sharing the page's power.
To combat spam link makers assaulting sites, Google devised the NoFollow tag, which instructs search spiders to ignore NoFollow links, effectively giving those links zero link juice.
A key consideration of the link juice theory, is the number of outgoing links on a page being promoted vs the number of incoming links, suggesting that he link juice from incoming links can "leak" out through outgoing links. Common SEO advice suggests limiting the number of outgoing links but not attracting suspicion by having no outgoing links, making a couple of links to authority sites might be best.
Some sites have demonstrated getting good search ranking while breaking these link juice guidelines, suggesting there are other ranking factors, like site authority that limits the detrimental effect of leaking juice.
Link Juice is the amount of positive ranking factors that a link passes from one page to the next or the quality of inbound links a website has. This influences a website’s ranking in the search engines.
Each web page should have a good number of links pointing its way. Many web publishers make the mistake of concentrating all of their link juice on their home page, with very small amounts trickling deep into the site.
Link Juice is an important factor for ranking your website within Google SERP. It should be spread as evenly as possible throughout a website.Link Juice is the amount of positive ranking factors that a link passes from one page to the next. It is the authority passed to a site via internal and external links.
"Link Juice" is a slang term referring to how powerful a certain link (within a site or from one website to another) is or could be.
The idea is that a link from a well known website that is trusted by the search engines will pass more "juice" than one on a pointless directory
mm... Despite the fact all links on the Internet have the same format...
< a href="">link< /a>
Not all links are worth the same when you compare them to one another. Those links which come from a reputable source are usually weighted as more important, that is, they carry more "link juice".
I hope that's enough to clarify the question.
Despite the fact all links on the Internet have the same format...