In my last post, Your Google Search Ranking and The Importance of Links, I talked about how the Google search engine works and why it’s important to pay attention to your link profile. Now, let’s discuss how you can make positive changes to your ranking. The first step is to perform a link audit to understand what domains are linking to your site and which may be sending negative signals to Google that your site is spammy. 

This is no small task, and will take a couple of days of research and at least another two weeks after sending out emails for removal requests. However, I recommend investing the time now to make sure you avert risk from the upcoming Penguin update (no date except 2015 defined).

How to Find Your Links

Use a free tool (paid if you don’t own the domain or want to track competitors) called Majestic SEO. There are also several other tools you can use, such as Ahrefs.com and SEMrush.com, but we’ll focus on Majestic.

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What To Do With The Data

First, filter by number of backlinks (TotalBackLinks) from highest to lowest. This will tell you which domains you should review first, as the ones with the largest volume linking to you are likely to have the largest impact on your quality rating.

Also, consider filtering by CountryGeoCode (usually anything outside of the United States for local rentals will be spam!)

Now comes the manual part—going through the links. This is going to take you a few hours, so be ready for it. Hopefully your list is less than a couple hundred inbound domains—if you’re in the thousands, you may consider a paid short cut (I use linkdetox.com) or employ someone on a contractor basis to work through your list. 

These are the following types of links you should be aware of:

Big No-No’s

These links are definitely out. This is very clear in the Google guidelines.

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The Maybe’s

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Good Links

Be aware that removing good links from reputable websites can harm your SEO value, and therefore quality as well as traffic.

As you go through the list of domains, mark down those you would prefer did not link to your website, and a short note as to why (one word is fine—e.g. malware, poor quality or did not resolve). When you finish with the list, it is time to move to the next stage: outreach, which I’ll go over in my next post.