Google Eliminates the use of NoFollow by Changing Search Algorithms
Google eliminates the use of NoFollow by changing search-algorithms!

Google Eliminates the use of NoFollow by Changing Search Algorithms

by Janith · 22 comments

Ear­lier this week, Matt Cutts announced that the search algo­rithms have been changed and that the use of Rel=nofollow will have a neg­a­tive impact on your web­sites that ever before.

The announce­ment comes as a shire shock to make SEO-savvy web­mas­ters; mainly because the change places every web­mas­ter in an awk­ward sit­u­a­tion. Sim­ply because; we shouldn’t use NoFol­low but we can’t not use it either…

NoFol­low was intro­duced in 2005 and was accepted by many major Search Engines includ­ing Google. This was a wel­comed addi­tion to Search Engine Opti­miza­tion by many because it gave web­mas­ters an oppor­tu­nity to have more con­trol in their link­ing structures.

How­ever, this is no longer to  be. Google recently annouced that PageR­ank sculpt­ing needs to be approached in an entirely dif­fer­ent way.

So what hap­pens when you have a page with “ten PageR­ank points” and ten out­go­ing links, and five of those links are nofol­lowed? Let’s leave aside the decay fac­tor to focus on the core part of the question.

Orig­i­nally, the five links with­out nofol­low would have flowed two points of PageR­ank each (in essence, the nofol­lowed links didn’t count toward the denom­i­na­tor when divid­ing PageR­ank by the out­de­gree of the page). More than a year ago, Google changed how the PageR­ank flows so that the five links with­out nofol­low would flow one point of PageR­ank each.

The use of the NoFol­low tag will def­i­nitely have a neg­a­tive impact on your web­site as seen through this image below:

new-pagerank-and-nofollow Image from SEO­moz

As of now, many ideas have been put for­ward on how to tackle this prob­lem. We can’t really remove NoFol­low because we don’t want to send out link-juice to spe­cific inter­nal pages or out­bound links, but then again; adding the rela­tion tag will also decrease the amount of link-juice given to the remain­ing links on your page.

SEO Experts” have denounced the use of iFrames, Silo­ing and even per­haps use of Javascript (how­ever, this has also been rejected by the Google team as a form of valid PR sculpt­ing.) There isn’t a def­i­nite answer to this dilemma and every­thing put for­ward; are noth­ing but pos­si­ble ideas. All we can do is read every­thing we can, and decide for our­selves what the best pos­si­ble solu­tion is for us.

I’m still learn­ing about the sit­u­a­tion myself, so expect a few more arti­cles on this issue in the com­ing weeks. If I find any­thing worht­while shar­ing; it’ll def­i­nitely be posted here at Blo­gus­sion. Till then I strongly encour­age you to read SEOmoz’s arti­cle on PageR­ank Sculpt­ing.

I also urge you to watch the video below, made by the SEO­moz team to address this issue in a video-format. It cov­ers a lot of the basics and even­tu­ally steps into more deeper waters. They even throw up a few pos­si­ble alter­na­tive solutions;

SEO­moz White­board Fri­day — How Do We Plug the Nofol­low Leak? from Scott Willoughby.

What’s your input?

If your a SEO-savvy web­mas­ters; what are your thoughts about Google’s changes? Do you have any rec­om­men­da­tions to work your­self around it? There’s a lot I need to learn myself on the topic, so don’t take any­thing this post for granted; Per­haps you might have a dif­fer­ent per­spec­tive to this change in Google’s algo?

PS: At least my ear­lier debate on NoFol­low V DoFol­low will finally have its final say! :)

Image by Keso S.

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Article by Janith

Hey, I'm Janith. 16 years old, and livin' in Aussie.I'm with Twitter because it's the simplified version of Facebook + Myspace - crap. Along with Alex, we run Blogussion and plan to bring the blogging house down!

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Richael | Domain Marvelous June 21, 2009 at 2:46 pm

I really do not see how it is going to impact a lot on a webmaster; essentially he/she maintains the PR and prevents the precious link juice to follow to so called “unimportant” pages. Maybe, a wee bit change is you interlink (that is link your pages within the blog or website). But then again, why will you want to make your internal links no-follow? Maybe, I’ll go over the video once again and catch somethings I could not the first time around.
Richael | Domain Marvelous´s last blog ..Some tips on choosing killer domain names!

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Corey Freeman June 21, 2009 at 3:06 pm

If you had something like a comment policy, or the wordpress administration login link, or a link from a form to a processing page, you probably don’t want your PR juice being distributed over these. That is why you would include NoFollow. Now Google is indexing everything, even unimportant pages.

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Corey Freeman June 21, 2009 at 3:05 pm

The video was a great resource for learning more about this problem. I couldn’t really understand it just from the images so the visual helped. Is there a reason for Google getting rid of nofollow? It doesn’t seem to benefit anyone from what I can see.

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Alex June 24, 2009 at 10:28 am

It’s probably just another thing Google is doing to make us hate them. :/ But I really don’t know, maybe Janith has some better insight here.
Alex´s last blog ..Design Trends in the Thesis Community

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Havoc Marketing June 22, 2009 at 3:40 am

Hi there,

It does seem like the new Google algorithm will have a negative impact on most websites and blogs. But it could also be a good thing in the long run. I guess we all will have to wait and see what exactly comes out of it.

Thanks for the great article.

Mani Raj
Havoc Marketing
Havoc Marketing´s last blog ..Learn Pay Per Click Advertising From Google Itself

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Harish | Blogging Kid June 22, 2009 at 8:42 am

Thanks for the video. Good is taking great care of these linking. I cant guess what will happen.:P
Harish | Blogging Kid´s last blog ..A Recap of Some My Best Posts On This Blog

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Jeet June 22, 2009 at 11:20 am

@Janith: A post after a long time ;-) Well, I think nofollow is not out, its just that people won’t put much effort in PR scuplting.

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Davey June 22, 2009 at 1:46 pm

Does this also affect the outbound nofollow links? (so I’m actually decreasing your link by adding this comment)

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Alex June 24, 2009 at 10:29 am

Well….we are DoFollow in the comments, so I don’t think so. But PR isn’t really a big factor nowadays, so it won’t really be too much of a burden on us if we drop a couple points in the next update.
Alex´s last blog ..Design Trends in the Thesis Community

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James Mann June 23, 2009 at 7:18 am

This is a very interesting and important topic and I would love to watch the video.

Not sure why but I can never seem to play video from Vimeo, they just drag too much. I have no problem with Youtube, so I am not sure what it is. I have tried to watch dozens of videos on Vimeo but no luck.

Is this particular video on Youtube?
James Mann´s last blog ..10 Common Mistakes People Do Running A Home-Based Business

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Alex June 24, 2009 at 10:31 am

That’s weird you can’t see the video…I searched for something about the algorithm on YouTube, maybe you will find something useful?

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_type=&search_query=google+algorithm&aq=0&oq=google+alg
Alex´s last blog ..Design Trends in the Thesis Community

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Joe June 23, 2009 at 7:46 am

I had neglected doing any kind of PR sculpting, so this news comes to some relief to me. I watched the SEOMOZ video and come to the conclusion there is much we should do, except remove pages that are of no value to a visitor.

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Tipsy June 24, 2009 at 8:51 am

This indeed is a huge change. So far (yeah, I know it’s a recent change) I haven’t noticed any changes, my PRs stayed the same. But with the next PR update, everything will go upside down and I’m simply terrified of the amount of work that I’ve done that will go to waste with this …
Tipsy´s last blog ..Pazurki od Eweliny

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Alex June 24, 2009 at 10:26 am

Yes, the next PR update is something to be more worried about. I fear this will hurt us more than help us.

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Nicolas Prudhon June 27, 2009 at 5:57 am

If it was really new, there would be a lot to be concerned of, but based on what Matt Cutts said too, this is in effect since last year already, so it’s quite old news.

If you have been doing well then, and still are doing now, you shouldn’t care about that.
Nicolas Prudhon´s last blog ..Did The “NoFollow” Attribute Really Change?

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Atul June 29, 2009 at 11:32 pm

great info man I was unaware of it

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Martin July 2, 2009 at 9:51 am

Interesting stuff. However I have read some articles claiming that these changes are already in effect, and have been for some time. I will try and find one of the articles.
Martin´s last blog ..Cool New Zombie T-Shirt at Threadless

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Freeway September 23, 2009 at 4:08 am

I am very confuse. This should be major breakthrough new, but it look like only few people know about this.
Freeway´s last blog ..210 Freeway Accident

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Jayce December 28, 2009 at 8:06 pm

Our own blog PR will be higher as we pass less PR juice to others, right?
Jayce´s last blog ..How to hack Facebook account profile

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Karen | Lice Treatment December 31, 2009 at 3:36 pm

Wow, well, i guess it was gonna happen someday, but I wish it weren’t true. I think its important to have the link value for DO follow, and if you want no follow, it should remain that way, and not give off the juice. oh well….Google always changes things.
Karen

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