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What is the New PageRank?

Google’s PageRank has long been the single metric people looked at to see how authoritative any webpage was.

An entire link building industry revolved around this single number.

Based on a scale from N/A to 10, the higher the number, the more valuable a link on the webpage was.

The reason being, the higher the number, the higher it would move your website up in Google’s results.

Google must not have liked the way things were going because they recently decided to stop showing this figure to the public.

Even when it was shown to the public, it was updated so rarely that PageRank was not an accurate figure to rely upon.

The new metric is updated monthly and accurately gauges the authority of any webpage.

We now have a single number from 1 to 100 that will tell us, accurately and reliably, how powerful any link is.  It simplifies SEO.

After analyzing hundreds of law firm websites, I have come to love this metric.  Everything in SEO revolves around it.

So if you would like more people to find your law firm online, watch our latest 3 Minute #LawyerSEOTips Video.  Learn to focus on this metric whenever making SEO decisions for your firm.

To download your own copy of the Lawyer SEO Cheat Sheet mentioned at the end of the video click here.

What did you think?  Your feedback is greatly appreciated.  Leave a comment below.

Are Links Bad for My Law Firm’s Website?

Here is the latest 3 Minute #LawyerSEOTips Video titled Are Links Bad for My Law Firm’s Website?

ApricotLaw’s Co-Founder, Nick Kringas, explains why links are not only good for your law firm’s website, but necessary to it ever being found in Google’s results.

It’s all right there on Google’s Company Page, Ten Things We Know to Be True.

Watch this quick video and let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

To download the cheat sheet mentioned at the end of the video, click here.

The Most Common Reason Law Firm Websites Don’t Rank and How to Recover

In this post you will learn the single most common reason law firm websites don’t appear in search results.

You will also learn what to do if your website is being filtered out for this reason.

What is the one sure-fire way to get your website filtered out of the search engine results for the phrase you’d like to rank for?

Over-using the same anchor text (the clickable text in a link).

For example, if too many of the links pointing to your website all have the anchor text “car accident lawyer Memphis,” your website will not appear on the first page when people search for that particular phrase.

Using the phrase you’d like to rank for in the anchor text of your links used to work great.  In the past, the more you used a particular phrase, the higher you would rank for it and there was no limit to the number of links you could build with the same anchor text.

Like all shortcuts, people abused this tactic and Google quickly changed their ranking formula to close the loophole.  The instant the algorithm changed, these over-optimized websites disappeared from the search listings.

Now, years later, there are still many law firm websites that are over-optimized for certain phrases.  And perhaps some people never got the memo that this tactic no longer works so they continue to use it, getting no where.

If your site is, in fact, being filtered out because of anchor text over-optimization, the way to clear that filter is by diluting the anchor text.
If 25% of the links pointing to your website use the phrase “car accident lawyer Memphis,” the only way to lower that percentage would be to create or attract new links with different anchor text.

Each subsequent link created with different anchor text will lower the percentage.

If you’re unsure of which anchor text to use, you can’t go wrong with the name of your law firm.

Where to get these links will be the topic of another blog post.  Without getting into great detail here about link sources, a press release would be one example.

The number of new links needed to bring that percentage down to a reasonable percentage, say 5%, will depend on the current number of total links.

25% of 20 links means only 5 links have the target anchor text.  To get that number down to 5%, we would only need 80 new links with different anchors.

Our total number of links would increase to 100 and the number of target anchor links would remain at 5, dropping the percentage to 5%.

If, on the other hand, there are 4000 links pointing to your website and 25%, or 1000, of those links use the same anchor text, we would need a much larger number of new links to dilute that anchor text and get your website back in the game.

The same 80 new links as the previous example will only lower that percentage to 24.5%, a half a point improvement.

To get it down to 5%, we would need a total of 20,000 links. That’s 16,000 new links with none using our target phrase as anchor text.

Knowing how many new links we need gives us an idea about how long this might take, approximately how much it will cost and, therefore, if its even worth it.

Sometimes we can rank a brand new website quicker than we can recover from an anchor text over-optimization filter.  In this case you may opt to work on a new website while simultaneously and gradually recovering the original site.

In the end, you may just have two websites taking up space on the first page of Google.

What Happens When You Delete Links?

For those of you that don’t believe links are what make your website rank higher in Google, backlinks.com recently published these case study results that prove just that.

Before you go off to buy links from backlinks.com, I must say I am not endorsing their services.  I have never used their services and don’t know if they are any good.

I will suggest you don’t buy links from a marketplace like that (especially to point directly at your law firm’s website) because any place that has blatantly sold links in the past has eventually been clobbered by Google.

What Their Case Study Tells Us

The case study shows that the links improved the ranking of three separate websites, taking them all to the first page of Google for their main keyword.

After that they wanted to see what would happen if they removed the links.

Two of the websites fell off the first page right away and the third held on for two weeks before falling back.

The links were providing the nutrients that powered the websites and kept them on the first page.  Removing the links was like taking out the I.V.  Soon after the websites were too weak to stay at the top.

What This Means for Your Law Firm’s Website

SEO is not a one time deal.  If you are considering spending your hard earned dollars for a month long SEO campaign, don’t bother.

In order to get the maximum benefit from any SEO campaign, it must be long term.

I’m not just saying that because we like when you give us money for longer.

I’d rather a client give us less money but spread it out over twelve or twenty-four months than offer us a bigger amount for a one month campaign.

It just doesn’t work that way.

Even if the links aren’t taken down, they can eventually become stale and less effective over time.

Furthermore, your competitors are feeding their websites a continuous supply of nutrients.  If you stop, they will eventually blow past you.  It’s only a matter of time.

Spread Your Budget Out Over a Longer Period of Time

Whatever budget you are thinking of spending on SEO, spread it out over a one or two year period.

It looks more natural to Google and therefore gives you better results.

What if You Suddenly Halt Your SEO Efforts?

Again, I am not saying this to scare you.  It is simply what I and other reputable sources have noticed over the years.

How natural does it look if people are linking to you every week for a few months, or a few years, and one day that abruptly stops?

Best case scenario, it looks to Google as though you are not popular anymore or that you have gone out of business.

Worst case scenario, it looks so unnatural that it triggers a manual review from Google.

Do you really want them snooping around to see if the links pointing to your site were earned only because people read and love your content enough to share it?

Please understand, Google wants you to focus on your content and leave the rankings up to them.  Anything done with the intent of improving your ranking should be considered against Google Terms of Service.

Here it is straight from the horse’s mouth:

“Any links intended to manipulate PageRank or a site’s ranking in Google search results may be considered part of a link scheme and a violation of Google’s Webmaster Guidelines.”

source: https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/66356

You should at least know what game you are playing in.  If you’re not OK with it, buy Pay-Per-Click ads.  Your competitors don’t care about Google’s Terms of Service.

How to Correctly Stop SEO

If you decide for whatever reason that you’d rather invest your money in some other form of traffic, I suggest slowly scaling down to nothing.  Decrease your SEO budget for three or four months until you are at zero.

You’ve come this far.  Why would you risk throwing everything you’ve invested in the garbage?  I’m not telling you not to stop.  I’m telling you to do it responsibly and what the consequences of stopping abruptly are.

Changing Your Anchor Text Could Set Your Site Free

Right now Anchor Text is critical to ranking your law firm’s website.

I can’t emphasize it enough.

The text in backlinks pointing to your law firm’s website are the difference between ranking better, getting more traffic or being stuck somewhere on the fifth page.

I’ve been running some experiments on test sites, as usual.  This one involved changing the Anchor Text in links that I control.

Ranking Graphs Clearly Showed Hidden Obstacle

Many pages of this website simply would not break through an invisible ceiling.  I could see it in the charts.

The rankings would go up to the ceiling, bounce off – approach again, bounce off – over and over again.

I had a hunch it was because of the anchor text.

At first, the links were all using keyword-rich anchors.  Let’s say the target phrase was New York Personal Injury Lawyer.  Most of the links used variations of that phrase in the Anchor Text.

One by one, I logged into the dashboards of pages I had control over, including other pages on the same site (yes, internal link Anchor Texts also count).  I then changed every link’s Anchor Text to one of three types:

  • Brand name (XYZ Law Firm),
  • Generic (click here),
  • or URL (xyzlawfirm.com).

At the end of an hour or two, I had removed all the keyword-rich Anchor Text and replaced it with what Google seems to reward right now.

Look what happened to the rankings of multiple lawyer key phrases within one or two days of making these changes.

A Few Notes About Our Lawyer Anchor Text Experiment

These are not high volume search keywords but they are local attorney key phrases which makes them super valuable and extremely competitive.

Normal links continued to come in before, during and after this experiment.  No out-of-the-ordinary links were built so I am confident these spikes were all due to the Anchor Text changes made.

If you don’t have control over any of your links I don’t want you to go asking people to change their Anchor Text.

The other way around this problem is to build new links to dilute your current Anchor Text profile.  Depending on how many links your site currently has, this could be anywhere from easy to extremely difficult.

If you have one thousand links all saying “New York Personal Injury Lawyer,” it may take quite a while to get that down to a small percentage of your total links.

I’d like to see that percentage in the low single digits for any keyword-rich anchor.  If you have a thousand of ’em, you will need one hundred thousand anchors to get that percentage way down.  That’s a lot of links.  If you want to badly rank for that keyword, it may be easier to build a new site and start from scratch.

In Closing

I will continue to watch these keywords to see if they come back down.  I was just happy to see them finally break through to new highs.

Links continue to be a major ranking factor.  Anchor Text ratios are simply a filter.  Not done right and your site will not pass through that filter and onto the first page.

If you look at the Anchor Text profiles of many authority sites you will see them heavily weighted towards brand then generic and URL.  Yours should look similar.

Learn more about link building for your legal website here.

What is a Backlink?

A backlink is a (hyper)link on a web page referring to any page on your website.  When that link is clicked the visitor will be redirected to your website.

Take a look at the following screenshots to gain a better understanding.

The web pages being referred to by any of the external links above will consider the link a backlink.

Look what happens when we hover over any link.

In the bottom left corner of any web browser, the page being referred to will appear.

In this case, the page www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstract/109594194/ABSTRACT will consider this link a backlink.

Do you have any questions about backlinks and how they relate to your law firm website?  Leave them below and I will respond as quickly as I can.

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