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What's a back link? A back link is a URL link that is pointed towards your website and are very important to your Search Engine Optimization (SEO) efforts. The back links from external sites can link to your home page or may link to internal pages within your website. Linking to internal pages is often referred to as "deep linking" and can help raise the importance of those internal pages in the eyes of the search engines. The more back links you have referring to your website, the more the search engines trust your content. In the original Google algorithm, back links were a very important part of the equation used to determine where your site was placed on the search engine result pages (SERP's). In today's world, the algorithm is much more complicated and the value of the back link has been diminished slightly from the original. Google uses the back links that it finds on the Internet pointing to your site to calculate a value called the Page Rank (PR). Every page in your site has a page rank, even if it is 0. Page rank is one of the many factors that are used in the Google search algorithm and its importance has seemed to diminish over the last couple of years. We do know that even if you page rank has become less important, back links themselves are still very important. You may also hear back links referred to as inbound links, inward links, incoming links, or in links. All of these terms are synonymous with each other. Back links can be used to find related websites that have linked to you, gauge your website popularity (or someone else's), and view what others may have written about the page being linked. When looking for the quantity of back links to your site, Yahoo is much better at reporting the real back links. Google's reasoning for only showing a subset of the back links that it knows about for your site is to protect their search algorithm. Also remember that many times, the page that has your back link will not show its true PR because the page hasn't been through a Google Page Rank update yet. The long term premise behind using back links was that the site pointing to yours is voting for you. At one time that vote had a very significant impact. However, over time, all the search engines are becoming more sophisticated and put less weight on this back link vote. More recently they are putting significant emphasis on the content and context of the page being linked to and linked from. Pages with little to know relevance to each other end up counting very little. There are numerous methods for obtaining back links to your site. Some of those are: 1. Article distribution with resource boxes 2. Article Sites like ezinearticles.com 3. Adding meaning full comments to related forums and blogs 4. Buying home page or site wide links - not recommended unless it is in context 5. Link Exchanges where you trade reciprocal links or multi-way links Hint: You want your back linking strategy to appear natural to the search engines so you need to make sure that you are acquiring back links on more than just high PR web pages. There are significantly more low PR pages on the web then there are high PR pages. The wanted result of getting all these back links to your site is to increase the natural search engine traffic that is directed to your site by being on the first page of the SERP's. But you should also see some traffic that comes to your sites through the back links themselves. So, when getting back links, you want to keep the reader in mind and try to make it enticing for the reader to click your link because there is something on the other end that they need
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