SlideShare a Scribd company logo
v @james_perrott
15 TOOLS IN 15 MINUTES
TO HELP YOU WITH LINK
PROFILE ANALYSIS & PENALTIES
v @james_perrott
v @james_perrott
TOOLS YOU
MUST HAVE!
v @james_perrott
MAJESTIC
CITATION FLOW = THE SCORE OUT OF
100 ASSOCIATED WITH THE
RELEVANCY OF THE LINK.
TRUST FLOW = THE SCORE OUT OF
100 ASSOCIATED WITH THE TRUST OF
THE LINK. TRUST IS BUILT UP BY SITES
THAT LINK TO THE LINKING SITE.
• Its metrics are a significant factor when
we deem a website ‘good’ or ‘bad’ when
running link removal/analysis.
• Its API allows us to quickly export mass
data into link lists that hit 1,000,000+
• Topical trust/citation flow allows us to
see whether or not a websites backlink
profile is relevant!
v @james_perrott
v @james_perrott
AHREFS
• AHREF’s data on multiple occasions appears to index data faster than its competitors and for
this reason, it’s a must in our toolset.
• The anchor text snippet preview is brilliant to see where your links are positioned. This also
proves very useful for competitor analysis.
• Having THE freshest data when conducting link analysis/removal work is a MUST!
v @james_perrott
v @james_perrott
GOOGLE WEBMASTER TOOLS
• The most linked too pages area of WMT is incredibly useful as it highlights where the most
links are pointing to.
• If you have a partial penalty and the majority of links point at the pages, which should be
ranking for your head terms, this is NOT a coincidence.
• Zazzle have seen evidence of links being picked up in WMT and NOT in any other link data
source – such as, Majestic, AHREFs etc.
v @james_perrott
‘GOOD TO HAVE’
TOOLS
v @james_perrott
COGNITIVE
• Cognitive displays data efficiently and is very nice to the eye.
• Breaks websites classification down into website type: blogs, directories etc.
• Cognitive has certain limitations, for example the freshness of data. However, it has recently
overcome this with the plugin of Majestic.
• Cognitive is pricey for larger link profile crawls and this is why we no longer use it as much
when Majestic/AHREFs are available, just with less visual prowess.
• The data and charts it produces are great for agencies and in-house teams looking to pitch at
potential clients/internal members of staff as it gives a great representation to the non-digital
marketeer.
• Manual link review options available, like with LinkRisk.
v @james_perrott
v @james_perrott
LINKRISK
• As a general link analysis piece of software, it’s the best we have used at Zazzle.
• You are able to attach Majestic and AHREF’s data exports to Link Risk.
• Able to quickly see whether or not the link is still live and the response code of the page.
• The Live Chat service is highly valuable as when reconsideration requests return and are
unsuccessful, you are able to ask the LinkRisk team why they have been seen as unnatural.
• In general, the team at LinkRisk are happy to answer any question you have in regards to links
included in your link analysis.
• The manual link checker allows you to see a snapshot of where the link is placed and proves
useful when we are manually reviewing links in a vast profile as it speeds the process up
considerably.
v @james_perrott
v @james_perrott
LINK DTOX
• This is probably the largest competitor to LinkRisk and we have previously used
DTOX at Zazzle.
• It follows the same concept of LinkRisk by classifying your link profile into
segments, then you target the ‘deadly risk’ and ‘risk’ links first.
• However, with time constraints put onto agencies by clients, sometimes too much
trust was put into the software and huge domains like YouTube, TalkTalk and The
Daily Mail were being included in disavow files.
v @james_perrott
BARRACUDAPANGUINTOOL
v @james_perrott
MOZALGORITHMHISTORY
v @james_perrott
SEARCHMETRICS• With any proposals we’re undertaking or research into websites, their Search Visibility is the
first port of call.
• This shows us how a website has performed over the last two years and any notable drops we
can try to align with a Google related algorithm update.
• It also highlights the GREAT work that us as agencies do on a week to week basis.
• If we know a piece of content marketing has gone viral, technical audit recommendations have
been implemented or a blog on the site has taken off, we expect to see improvements in
search visibility, which can be then directly reported to the client.
v @james_perrott
THEGOOD
v @james_perrott
THEBAD
v @james_perrott
THEUGLY
v @james_perrott
SCREAMINGFROG
• Probably the most widely used tool in the digital marketing sphere.
• At Zazzle we have used it A LOT for technical audits in the past.
• We are now beginning to use it for in-depth link analysis for our biggest penalised clients and
this is how…
• Export link data > configuration > custom (add a contains or does not contain filter for the
domain) > crawl
• This will then show you all of the links that are live or not live from your data export.
v @james_perrott
SPYONWEB.COM
v @james_perrott
‘NICE TO HAVE’
TOOLS
v @james_perrott
RMOOV/RMOOV’EM
• Having to actively try to remove links now that the disavow tool is in existence is a debate that
will always be had.
• At Zazzle, we DO try and remove links when the penalty is a partial/manual action to provide
the removal data to Google when submitting a reconsideration request.
• Rmoov and Rmoov’em do the same job, mass contacting of sites with templates to ask for the
link to our site to be removed.
• It uses emails from whois domain searches.
• This can be gamed by the webmasters as to reply to the email with successfully removed is at
the click of a button, so it’s hard to be 100% with the results provided by each campaign.
v @james_perrott
LINK AUDIT
• This piece of software is much like Rmoov/Rmoov’em with a slight twist…
• It doesn’t solely use emails to contact the webmaster, it CAN also use contact forms!
• It cracks captcha codes that can stop other software from contacting the site.
• Scrapes the website for emails or contact information.
• Has a FREE link management CMS, which shows you an overview of how the campaign is
progressing.
• If website is VERY spammy, it will automatically contact the host.
• Vulnerable to crashing, but when it works correctly, it’s highly successful. PC has to be turned
on whilst campaign is running, which is a pain.
v @james_perrott
RANK TRACKING SOFTWARE
• Throughout any penalty your website experiences, ensure you’re tracking all your main
keywords for any flux throughout the link removal/reconsideration process.
• At Zazzle, we have experienced flux in rankings immediately after we have submitted
reconsideration requests and disavow files.
• We believe this is down to Google recrawling/indexing the links after processing the
request/disavow file.
• It’s imperative you benchmark your rankings before you being this process to monitor any
positive/negative movement.
v @james_perrott
TOOL OF 2014 - FRUTITION
v @james_perrott
THANKS
JAMES PERROTT
HEAD OF SEARCH & DATA
@zazzlemedia

More Related Content

15 Tools in 15 Minutes to help with Link Profile Analysis & Penalties - SMX London 2014

  • 1. v @james_perrott 15 TOOLS IN 15 MINUTES TO HELP YOU WITH LINK PROFILE ANALYSIS & PENALTIES
  • 4. v @james_perrott MAJESTIC CITATION FLOW = THE SCORE OUT OF 100 ASSOCIATED WITH THE RELEVANCY OF THE LINK. TRUST FLOW = THE SCORE OUT OF 100 ASSOCIATED WITH THE TRUST OF THE LINK. TRUST IS BUILT UP BY SITES THAT LINK TO THE LINKING SITE. • Its metrics are a significant factor when we deem a website ‘good’ or ‘bad’ when running link removal/analysis. • Its API allows us to quickly export mass data into link lists that hit 1,000,000+ • Topical trust/citation flow allows us to see whether or not a websites backlink profile is relevant!
  • 6. v @james_perrott AHREFS • AHREF’s data on multiple occasions appears to index data faster than its competitors and for this reason, it’s a must in our toolset. • The anchor text snippet preview is brilliant to see where your links are positioned. This also proves very useful for competitor analysis. • Having THE freshest data when conducting link analysis/removal work is a MUST!
  • 8. v @james_perrott GOOGLE WEBMASTER TOOLS • The most linked too pages area of WMT is incredibly useful as it highlights where the most links are pointing to. • If you have a partial penalty and the majority of links point at the pages, which should be ranking for your head terms, this is NOT a coincidence. • Zazzle have seen evidence of links being picked up in WMT and NOT in any other link data source – such as, Majestic, AHREFs etc.
  • 10. v @james_perrott COGNITIVE • Cognitive displays data efficiently and is very nice to the eye. • Breaks websites classification down into website type: blogs, directories etc. • Cognitive has certain limitations, for example the freshness of data. However, it has recently overcome this with the plugin of Majestic. • Cognitive is pricey for larger link profile crawls and this is why we no longer use it as much when Majestic/AHREFs are available, just with less visual prowess. • The data and charts it produces are great for agencies and in-house teams looking to pitch at potential clients/internal members of staff as it gives a great representation to the non-digital marketeer. • Manual link review options available, like with LinkRisk.
  • 12. v @james_perrott LINKRISK • As a general link analysis piece of software, it’s the best we have used at Zazzle. • You are able to attach Majestic and AHREF’s data exports to Link Risk. • Able to quickly see whether or not the link is still live and the response code of the page. • The Live Chat service is highly valuable as when reconsideration requests return and are unsuccessful, you are able to ask the LinkRisk team why they have been seen as unnatural. • In general, the team at LinkRisk are happy to answer any question you have in regards to links included in your link analysis. • The manual link checker allows you to see a snapshot of where the link is placed and proves useful when we are manually reviewing links in a vast profile as it speeds the process up considerably.
  • 14. v @james_perrott LINK DTOX • This is probably the largest competitor to LinkRisk and we have previously used DTOX at Zazzle. • It follows the same concept of LinkRisk by classifying your link profile into segments, then you target the ‘deadly risk’ and ‘risk’ links first. • However, with time constraints put onto agencies by clients, sometimes too much trust was put into the software and huge domains like YouTube, TalkTalk and The Daily Mail were being included in disavow files.
  • 17. v @james_perrott SEARCHMETRICS• With any proposals we’re undertaking or research into websites, their Search Visibility is the first port of call. • This shows us how a website has performed over the last two years and any notable drops we can try to align with a Google related algorithm update. • It also highlights the GREAT work that us as agencies do on a week to week basis. • If we know a piece of content marketing has gone viral, technical audit recommendations have been implemented or a blog on the site has taken off, we expect to see improvements in search visibility, which can be then directly reported to the client.
  • 21. v @james_perrott SCREAMINGFROG • Probably the most widely used tool in the digital marketing sphere. • At Zazzle we have used it A LOT for technical audits in the past. • We are now beginning to use it for in-depth link analysis for our biggest penalised clients and this is how… • Export link data > configuration > custom (add a contains or does not contain filter for the domain) > crawl • This will then show you all of the links that are live or not live from your data export.
  • 24. v @james_perrott RMOOV/RMOOV’EM • Having to actively try to remove links now that the disavow tool is in existence is a debate that will always be had. • At Zazzle, we DO try and remove links when the penalty is a partial/manual action to provide the removal data to Google when submitting a reconsideration request. • Rmoov and Rmoov’em do the same job, mass contacting of sites with templates to ask for the link to our site to be removed. • It uses emails from whois domain searches. • This can be gamed by the webmasters as to reply to the email with successfully removed is at the click of a button, so it’s hard to be 100% with the results provided by each campaign.
  • 25. v @james_perrott LINK AUDIT • This piece of software is much like Rmoov/Rmoov’em with a slight twist… • It doesn’t solely use emails to contact the webmaster, it CAN also use contact forms! • It cracks captcha codes that can stop other software from contacting the site. • Scrapes the website for emails or contact information. • Has a FREE link management CMS, which shows you an overview of how the campaign is progressing. • If website is VERY spammy, it will automatically contact the host. • Vulnerable to crashing, but when it works correctly, it’s highly successful. PC has to be turned on whilst campaign is running, which is a pain.
  • 26. v @james_perrott RANK TRACKING SOFTWARE • Throughout any penalty your website experiences, ensure you’re tracking all your main keywords for any flux throughout the link removal/reconsideration process. • At Zazzle, we have experienced flux in rankings immediately after we have submitted reconsideration requests and disavow files. • We believe this is down to Google recrawling/indexing the links after processing the request/disavow file. • It’s imperative you benchmark your rankings before you being this process to monitor any positive/negative movement.
  • 27. v @james_perrott TOOL OF 2014 - FRUTITION
  • 28. v @james_perrott THANKS JAMES PERROTT HEAD OF SEARCH & DATA @zazzlemedia