Merhaba!
Sayfalarımızın daha üst sıralarda yer alması için Startups Web Siteleri Otoritemizi artırmaya çalışıyoruz. Birkaç aylık web sitesi bu yüzden metrikler biraz kaba ama gelişiyor. Borada kaliteli bloglar var, bu yüzden umarım metrikleri zamanla kendi başına artıracaktır, ancak şimdi bunu bizim için artırmaya yardımcı olmak için bazı Fiverr konserleri almaya çalışıyoruz.
Çok fazla backlink çalışması yaparsak anladığım kadarıyla Google bunu kırmızı bayrak olarak görüyor. Bu tam olarak ne anlama geliyor ve sınır nerede? Ne kadar çok fazla. Ve biz olsaydın ne iş yaparsın. Bazıları DR 20-50 ile sitelerde konuk mesajları sunuyor, bazıları örneğin 100-400 beyaz şapka bağlantıları sunuyor. İkisini de yapabilir miyiz? Kaç konuk gönderisini yapabiliriz, çok fazla şey nedir? Cezalandırılmadan kaç tane beyaz şapka bağlantısı (ne anlama geliyorsa) yapabiliriz.
Mümkün olduğunca az sürede mümkün olduğunca çok şey yapmak istiyoruz.
Moz’a göre şu anki istatistiklerimiz aşağıdadır:
- Moz Domain Otoritesi 5
- Moz sayfa otoritesi 19
- Semrush Otorite Skoru 9
- Toplam geri bağlantılar 31
- Kalite Backlinks 5
- % Kalite Backlinks% 16
- Dofollow Backlinks% 20
- Nofollow Backlinks% 80
- Spam skoru% 11
- Moz Trust 2
- SEO skoru% 30
- Etki alanı yaşı belki 6 ay gibi.
No, they don’t see it as a red flag. Google looks at the source, not frequency
I don’t even know where to start with all this, but to simplify, here’s my take.
Buying Fiverr links is usually not worth the time or money. Also, you shouldn’t evaluate links only by DR. DR is just an Ahrefs metric , it’s not used by Google and it’s very easy to manipulate.
It’s true that quality matters more than quantity, and that a strong website can be valuable, but what really counts is relevance. For example, you wouldn’t want a link from a casino site, even if it has high DR, pointing to a health site (or vice versa).
Packages of 100, 200, 300 links will almost always be very low quality, and in the worst case they can even trigger a penalty. There’s really no such thing as buying “white hat” links in bulk. Technically, buying links or creating guest posts only for the purpose of backlinks is considered Black Hat, and Google does penalize that.
Instead, the best approach is what you already mentioned: keep creating high-quality content and try to earn links organically. I know it’s difficult, but it’s the sustainable way. Most people publish AI generated content and expect links, but unless the content really adds value, that doesn’t happen.
These metrics were created to derail you by companies that guess how Google works.
The reality is that if you acquire networked, natural, and merited backlinks, you do not have to worry about Google penalties.
If you want to game the system, Google might find you; they might not. Roll the dice.
Personally, I think backlinks are like apples. A backlink a day will keep the Penguin and the Hummingbird away. I can assure you from personal experience that it takes many hours to acquire 1 networked backlink, and Google knows this.
Your focus should not be on backlink volume; your focus should be on backlink diversity and especially on the anchor text of the backlinks, plus traffic clicking on those links. I am not very smart, but even with my limited intelligence, I can tell if a link looks natural just by matching anchor text to link to clicks. My confidence is very high that Google can do this a lot better than any human alive, too.
In closing, this analogy is used often: “It’s like breaking the speed limit, everyone is doing it, and the trick is not to get caught. The more you do it, the higher your chances are of getting caught.” How far you are prepared to colour outside the lines should be guided by your conscience.
I deal with this question for clients almost daily!
What you want to do is a “link velocity analysis”. Basically, compare how many good links you have against your competitors each month, over a 12 month period to account for peaks and lows in your industry.
It may work out that competitors are building 5 good links per month and if you are building 2 then you want 3 to match their velocity and a minimum of 4 to eventually catch up.
As your site is new, you want to build links slowly, likely starting with some citations (this is where you can get 50-100 in) and gradually adding 1-3 quality links/month for the first few months then increase as if your site was naturally increasing in popularity. Bonus points if you can align these with the content you are producing.
Other advice:
1) Avoid these “300 white hat backlinks” services. That’s 100% bs.
2) Although a site may have thousands of backlinks, I’ve spent a few thousand hours now manually auditing backlinks and once you do this you see a pattern of lots of spam/irrelevant links and a much lower number of quality links. If a competitor has 300 referring domains 50 may only be good for example.
3) Avg links built per month for a SMB is between 2-10, some niches more but generally I don’t see many sites building more than 20 who aren’t getting a lot of traffic already (50k+).