Search Engine Ranking

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 5 February 2007

Discover your links

Posted on 14:37 by Unknown
Update on October 15, 2008: For more recent news on links, visit Links Week on our Webmaster Central Blog. We're discussing internal links, outbound links, and inbound links.

You asked, and we listened: We've extended our support for querying links to your site to much beyond the link: operator you might have used in the past. Now you can use webmaster tools to view a much larger sample of links to pages on your site that we found on the web. Unlike the link: operator, this data is much more comprehensive and can be classified, filtered, and downloaded. All you need to do is verify site ownership to see this information.


To make this data even more useful, we have divided the world of links into two types: external and internal. Let's understand what kind of links fall into which bucket.


What are external links?
External links to your site are the links that reside on pages that do not belong to your domain. For example, if you are viewing links for http://www.google.com/, all the links that do not originate from pages on any subdomain of google.com would appear as external links to your site.

What are internal links?

Internal links to your site are the links that reside on pages that belong to your domain. For example, if you are viewing links for http://www.google.com/, all the links that originate from pages on any subdomain of google.com, such as http://www.google.com/ or mobile.google.com, would appear as internal links to your site.

Viewing links to a page on your site

You can view the links to your site by selecting a verified site in your webmaster tools account and clicking on the new Links tab at the top. Once there, you will see the two options on the left: external links and internal links, with the external links view selected. You will also see a table that lists pages on your site, as shown below. The first column of the table lists pages of your site with links to them, and the second column shows the number of the external links to that page that we have available to show you. (Note that this may not be 100% of the external links to this page.)


This table also provides the total number of external links to your site that we have available to show you.
When in this summary view, click the linked number and go to the detailed list of links to that page.
When in the detailed view, you'll see the list of all the pages that link to specific page on your site, and the time we last crawled that link. Since you are on the External Links tab on the left, this list is the external pages that point to the page.


Finding links to a specific page on your site
To find links to a specific page on your site, you first need to find that specific page in the summary view. You can do this by navigating through the table, or if you want to find that page quickly, you can use the handy Find a page link at the top of the table. Just fill in the URL and click See details. For example, if the page you are looking for has the URL http://www.google.com/?main, you can enter “?main” in the Find a page form. This will take you directly to the detailed view of the links to http://www.google.com/?main.


Viewing internal links

To view internal links to pages on your site, click on the Internal Links tab on the left side bar in the view. This takes you to a summary table that, just like external links view, displays information about pages on your site with internal links to them.

However, this view also provides you with a way to filter the data further: to see links from any of the subdomain on the domain, or links from just the specific subdomain you are currently viewing. For example, if you are currently viewing the internal links to http://www.google.com/, you can either see links from all the subdomains, such as links from http://mobile.google.com/ and http://www.google.com, or you can see links only from other pages on http://www.google.com.


Downloading links data
There are three different ways to download links data about your site. The first: download the current view of the table you see, which lets you navigate to any summary or details table, and download the data in the current view. Second, and probably the most useful data, is the list all external links to your site. This allows you to download a list of all the links that point to your site, along with the information about the page they point to and the last time we crawled that link. Thirdly, we provide a similar download for all internal links to your site.


We do limit the amount of data you can download for each type of link (for instance, you can currently download up to one million external links). Google knows about more links than the total we show, but the overall fraction of links we show is much, much larger than the link: command currently offers. Why not visit us at Webmaster Central and explore the links for your site?
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in crawling and indexing, webmaster tools | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Our Valentine's day gift: out of beta and adding comments
    Here at webmaster central , we love the webmaster community -- and today, Valentine's Day, we want to show you that our commitment to ...
  • Traveling Down Under: GWC at Search Engine Room and Search Summit Australia
    G'day Webmasters! Google Webmaster Central is excited to be heading to Sydney for Search Summit and Search Engine Room on March 1-2 ...
  • Come see us at SES London and hear tips on successful site architecture
    If you're planning to be at Search Engine Strategies London February 13-15, stop by and say hi to one of the many Googlers who will be ...
  • How to verify Googlebot
    Lately I've heard a couple smart people ask that search engines provide a way know that a bot is authentic. After all, any spammer cou...
  • Introducing Sitemaps for Google News
    Good news for webmasters of English-language news sites: If your site is currently included in Google News , you can now create News Sitemap...
  • Better details about when Googlebot last visited a page
    Most people know that Googlebot downloads pages from web servers to crawl the web. Not as many people know that if Googlebot accesses a page...
  • Update on Public Service Search
    Public Service Search is a service that enables non-profit, university, and government web sites to provide search functionality to their vi...
  • Discover your links
    Update on October 15, 2008 : For more recent news on links, visit Links Week on our Webmaster Central Blog. We're discussing internal l...
  • Setting the preferred domain
    Based on your input, we've recently made a few changes to the preferred domain feature of webmaster tools. And since you've had some...
  • Joint support for the Sitemap Protocol
    We're thrilled to tell you that Yahoo! and Microsoft are joining us in supporting the Sitemap protocol. As part of this development, we...

Categories

  • crawling and indexing
  • events
  • feedback and communication
  • general tips
  • localization
  • products and services
  • search results
  • sitemaps
  • webmaster guidelines
  • webmaster tools

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2007 (13)
    • ►  March (3)
    • ▼  February (7)
      • Traveling Down Under: GWC at Search Engine Room an...
      • Better badware notifications for webmasters
      • Tips on using feeds and information on subscriber ...
      • Our Valentine's day gift: out of beta and adding c...
      • Update on Public Service Search
      • Come see us at SES London and hear tips on success...
      • Discover your links
    • ►  January (3)
  • ►  2006 (34)
    • ►  December (5)
    • ►  November (7)
    • ►  October (7)
    • ►  September (8)
    • ►  August (7)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile