28 Sep How Google Handles Naked Links via @martinibuster
In a Google Office Hours SEO hangout Google Webmaster Trends Analyst John Mueller answered how Google handles links that don’t have anchor text. In a follow up question he answered if text surrounding those kinds of links have an effect.
What are Naked Links?
There are many kinds of links, including branded links, keyword optimized links, nofollowed links, etc. This question was about a type of link that is referred to as a naked link.
A naked link is a link that is in the form of the URL.
Here’s an example of how a “naked” link would look on a web page:
https://www.example.com
Here’s how the HTML would look for the above link:
<a href="https://www.example.com">https://www.example.com</a>
How Does Google Handle Links Without Anchor Text?
The question asked was within the context of auditing the inbound links of client sites and noticing that certain links are coded as naked links.
The SEO asking the question wanted to know how Google processed those links.
This is the question:
“When auditing links for my clients websites I see some naked URLs that are pointing to valuable resources on the site.
How does Google treat such links when there’s no anchor text?”
John Mueller Answers How Google Handles a Bare URL
John Mueller began his answer by defining what a naked URL is.
“I think by naked URL it’s basically just someone is linking with the URL as the anchor text.”
Next, Mueller states how Google handles a bare link that does not have an anchor text.
“…in that situation we treat that URL as the anchor text.
From what I understand, our systems do try to recognize this and say well, this is just a URL that is linked, it’s not that there’s a valuable anchor here.
So we can take this into account as a link but we can’t really use that anchor text for anything in particular.
So from that point of view it’s a normal link but we don’t have any context there.”
Related:Advanced Approach to Selecting Anchor Text
Keywords in URL for Anchor Text
That’s interesting that Mueller said there is no context in a naked link. What makes it interesting is that there is a school of thought that in the absence of an anchor text that the keywords in the URL might provide Google some information and function like an anchor text.
Mueller’s answer seemed to contradict that idea or at least to not affirm it. Might make a good follow up question.
Can Surrounding Text and Topic Influence Links?
At this point someone else asked a follow up question about the text that surrounds the naked link and if that might play a role.
“Can Google kind of get context for like the text around that link, maybe if it doesn’t have any?”
John Mueller nodded his head in affirmation and said,
“Sure. But that’s more kind of secondary. Like that really strong piece of context from the anchor text that’s missing in that case.
And then like small things around the side, that does help us a little bit… but really the kind of the primary aspect of that link is kind of gone.
And I mean usually that doesn’t matter. It’s not that it counts against your website in any way.
It’s just… well for this particular link we don’t really know what the context is.”
The person asking the follow up question repeated his question, this time asking if the content around the link or topic of the article might play a role.
Mueller answered:
“Yeah, yeah… I mean that’s something we do definitely take into account but it’s very secondary.
…I mean there’s no kind of like value of strength for the context there but I’d say it’s like that anchor text is really obvious and we can collect that and we can look at that overall and… kind of the context of the linking pages is something well… it’s like we also need to think about at some point.
But the anchor text is really kind of the primary thing.”
Annotation Text and Links by Bill Slawski
Bill Slawski wrote a fascinating article in 2019 about a patent that was updated to include a scenario that was about using text that surrounds a link (Add to Your Style Guide Annotation Text: Anchor Text Indexing).
Bill Slawski’s article noted:
“One of the noticeable things that is new in the claims in this continuation patent is the mention of Annotation text, within a certain distance from anchor text for a link, which could influence what a page that is being linked to maybe about. “
The article about the patent describes a process where the words immediately surrounding a link could give more meaning to that link, particularly links with anchor text like the word “here” that are frequently used to link to other sites.
The article didn’t suggest that Google was using these signals and neither did Mueller.
However it was interesting to watch Mueller referring to the context around a link as being “secondary” although he did not elaborate on what he meant by secondary.
I messaged Bill Slawski via Facebook Messenger about what Mueller said.
This is what Bill said about it:
“One of the claims from the new version of the patent does state clearly that:
“wherein the annotation includes text outside of an anchor tag in the source document.”
So that patent is referring to text that is not included as anchor text in between HTML anchor tags, but is a reference to text within a window around anchor text.
There are two kinds of links:
- Links that use anchor elements
- Links that use link elements.
That claim 7 from the new version of the patent is an addition and it specifically states that the annotation text is outside of the anchor text:
“7. The system of claim 1, wherein the annotation includes text outside of an anchor tag in the source document.” “
What We Learned About Google and Naked Links
Mueller affirmed that there is no disadvantage to links coded without anchor text. He affirmed that anchor text is a strong signal.
But he also somewhat downplayed the use of surrounding text or page topic as a way to give more meaning to a naked link, saying that yes Google used it but that it was “very secondary.”
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