Anchor text

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The anchor text or link label is the visible, clickable text in a hyperlink. The words contained in the Anchor text can determine the ranking that page will receive by search engines.[1]

Contents

[edit] Overview

Anchor text usually gives the user relevant descriptive or contextual information about the content of the link's destination. The anchor text may or may not be related to the actual text of the URL of the link. For example, a hyperlink to the main Wikipedia page might take this form:

<a href="http://www.wikipedia.org">Wikipedia</a>

The anchor text in this example is Wikipedia; the complex URL http://www.wikipedia.org displays on the web page as Wikipedia, contributing to a clean, easy to read text or document.

[edit] Common misunderstanding of the concept

Main article: Click here

Webmasters sometimes tend to misunderstand anchor text. Instead of turning appropriate words inside of a sentence into a clickable link, webmasters frequently insert extra text such as this:

Today our president has signed another treaty. To know more, click here.

The best and more concise way of coding that would be:

Today our president has signed another treaty.

This proper method of linking is beneficial not only to users, but also to the webmaster as anchor text holds significant weight in search engine rankings. Most search engine optimization experts recommend against using "click here" to designate a link.

[edit] Search engine algorithms

Anchor text is weighted (ranked) highly in search engine algorithms, because the linked text is usually relevant to the landing page[2]. The objective of search engines is to provide highly relevant search results; this is where anchor text helps, as the tendency is, more often than not, to hyperlink words relevant to the landing page.

Webmasters may use anchor text to procure high results in search engine results pages. Google's Webmaster Tools facilitate this optimization by letting website owners view the most common words in anchor text linking to their site.[3]

In the past, Google bombing has been possible through anchor text manipulation; however, in January, 2007, Google announced it had updated its algorithm to minimize the impact of Google bombs.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ anchor text
  2. ^ Brown, Terrence The Importance of Anchor Text February 5, 2003.
  3. ^ Fox, Vanessa (2007-03-15). Get a more complete picture about how other sites link to you. Official Google Webmaster Central Blog. Retrieved on 2007-03-27.
  4. ^ Cutts, Matt (2007-01-25). A quick word about Googlebombs. Official Google Webmaster Central Blog. Retrieved on 2007-03-27.
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