Debate: DoFollow vs. NoFollow Links
Debate: DoFollow vs. NoFollow Links

Debate: DoFollow vs. NoFollow Links

by Janith · 69 comments

In a recent post, Jeet’s guest post enti­tled “Get some Com­ment Love for your sta­tic web­site” sparked quite a bit of dis­cus­sion, and raised the issue between NoFol­low and DoFol­low blogs.

As many of you might have real­ized (not­ing the mas­sive image we have on the side­bar) that Blo­gus­sion was made a DoFol­low blog sev­eral weeks ago. This deci­sion, undoubt­edly came with its own ben­e­fits and down­falls, but it was a result of crit­i­cal think­ing and past experiences.

Rel­a­tively speak­ing, it’s almost 50 – 50 when it comes to blog­gers going DoFol­low or NoFol­low. Even though almost every blog­ger seems to have their biased opin­ion on the issue, there is a hand­ful of minor­ity that aren’t aware of the great dif­fer­ences.

I want to re-raise the debat­able issue between NoFol­low and DoFol­low blogs, and just share with you my opin­ion; grounded by sev­eral key facts..

What is NoFollow?

Wikipedia: Nofol­low is an HTML attribute value used to instruct some search engines that a hyper­link should not influ­ence the link target’s rank­ing in the search engine’s index. It is intended to reduce the effec­tive­ness of cer­tain types of search engine spam, thereby improv­ing the qual­ity of search engine results and pre­vent­ing spamdex­ing from occurring.

To put it in sim­ple terms; NoFol­low is an HTML attribute that is assigned to a hyper­link that instructs the search engine crawler that the tar­geted page should not be awarded with a SERP boost.

Most search engines, includ­ing Google, rank web-pages using sev­eral algo­rithms and one of them being; how many in-links a cer­tain page has from exter­nal sources.

There is a pretty sim­ple rea­son behind this algo­rithm. The more in-links you have to your web-page, it’s a clear indi­ca­tion that you have use­ful con­tent. Search Engines use the num­ber and qual­ity of your in-links to assign you a rank within search results.

NOTE: The tag “DoFol­low” is not a real tag or ALT attribute, because it is non-existent. If a link doesn’t con­tain the ‘Nofol­low’ attribute then it is auto­mat­i­cally deemed to be a ‘Dofol­low’ link.

Why Should You Care?

If you run a self-hosted Word­Press blog, you might know this but all your links are made nofol­low by default. You might not want to play around with the default set­tings, but after read­ing the fol­low­ing points — you might be change your mind.

Not only for Word­Press users, but every web­mas­ter should decided whether to leave a blog NoFol­low or make it DoFol­low. They are obvi­ous traf­fic, SEO and even social ben­e­fits and down­falls of both attrib­utes — but to make your choice a bit more clearer, I will run through the Pros/Cons of both.

Mak­ing Your Blog NoFollow

Pro: Untrusted Con­tent

If you need to link to a cer­tain site that doesn’t seem very trust­wor­thy and gen­uine, you can attach the NoFol­low tag to pre­vent spam­mers from pick­ing up on your web­site. Think of it this way — every page you link to means you are rec­om­mend­ing that site to some­one else. Assign it a NoFol­low tag and you are effec­tively telling the crawler “This site and mine have noth­ing to do with each other”

Pro: Paid Links

As you all know, Google penal­izes paid links unless they are NoFol­low. If you want to sell ad-space on your blog; make sure it has the NoFol­low tag or else you will be penal­ized for breach­ing Google TOS. Not only Google, but this applies to sev­eral other key search engines.

Pro: Pre­serve Link Juice

By assign­ing NoFol­low tags to all your exter­nal links, you are effec­tively pre­serv­ing link juice within your web­site. By keep the “link juice” in cir­cu­la­tion of your site, you can help your­self to attain a higher PageRank.

Pro: Pri­or­i­tize Your Links

Do you really want the search engine crawler vis­it­ing your login/reg­is­tra­tion pages? What about your Dis­claimer and Terms of Use? There really isn’t any point for the crawler to visit these pages, so by assign­ing NoFol­low tags to these in-links you can save both time and bandwidth.

Con: You Lose Blog Activ­ity

By adding the NoFol­low attribute, you will almost cer­tainly dis­cour­age com­ments, espe­cially from the link-savvy. This is one of the biggest let-downs of NoFol­low blogs, but if you can imple­ment the tag sub­tly and as spar­ingly as pos­si­ble; you might just get away with this!

Con: Destroys the fun­da­men­tals of Hyper­link­ing

When you link to an exter­nal source using a hyper­link, you are inevitably shar­ing that site’s con­tent with your read­ers and guests. The basic fun­da­men­tal behind hyper­links is to “spread the word” but by stick­ing in a NoFol­low tag you are indi­rectly break­ing this ten­der bond. A lovely quote from Left­Blank was;

“…with these ‘nofol­low’ tags a search engine will sim­ply ignore those links, poten­tially ren­der­ing them unfind­able on the web.“

Mak­ing Your Blog DoFollow

Pro: Encour­ages Com­ments

Many web­mas­ters scout around for DoFol­low blogs to leave com­ments because it is the eas­i­est way to get back-links. This can encour­age many bloggers/website own­ers to leave com­ments on your blog in an effort to earn some extra back-links

Pro: Make use of Top Com­men­ta­tors & CommentLuv

These plu­g­ins are two of my favorites because it really gets the com­mu­nity going. When some­one takes the time to reply to your posts, why shouldn’t you reward them with some spot­light credit? In my hum­ble, and non-factual opin­ion — I think with­out DoFol­low tags, these two plu­g­ins are pretty use­less.

Pro: Awe­some Mar­ket­ing Point

If you can afford to make your blog DoFol­low — you can really use it as a mar­ket­ing point. By telling peo­ple and by show­ing off your site is DoFol­low; you can attract some vis­i­tors that might turn out to be some nice con­ver­sions.

Con: Encour­ages Spam

DoFol­low blogs are loved by life­less spam bots. This can be a very irri­tat­ing aspect of mak­ing your blog DoFol­low because even though you are try­ing to reward your com­men­ta­tors, I can almost guar­an­tee that your comment-moderation will mul­ti­ply by sev­eral folds!

Con: Sac­ri­fice Your Authority

If you start hand­ing out DoFol­low links to every person/bot and gust of wind that comes by your blog — your author­ity as a blog­ger might soon evap­o­rate. Main­tain a sense of dig­nity and be selec­tive in who you reward ;)

Con: Leak Link Juice

In the­ory, you are pretty much hand­ing out PageR­ank and link juice to every link that hasn’t got a NoFol­low tag. This is really gen­er­ous of you, but you might feel a bit used and actu­ally suf­fer from a SEO perspective.

Final Say.

Here are Blo­gus­sion, Alex and I have agreed to keep our blog DoFol­low. It was almost an instan­ta­neous deci­sion with­out much though because we value our com­mu­nity over SEO and organic traf­fic. For us, our guests and com­men­ta­tors that take part in our dis­cus­sions means a lot more than a stream of traffic.

So, most exter­nal links on our blog is DoFol­low and we have both the above men­tioned plu­g­ins. We have already expe­ri­ence a bit of a SEO hit, where we were assigned only a PageR­ank 2 even though we have in excess of 7.000 in-links, even a few from PR4-5 websites.

Quite frankly, we aren’t wor­ried about it one bit. It has really helped grow our com­mu­nity and we are thank­ful for that! This does not mean it will work for you and your blog. Take into con­sid­er­a­tion every point I’ve stated above and come to an informed decision.

A bal­ance of DoFol­low and NoFol­low links usu­ally work the best, but it takes a lot more man­age­ment. If you have the time — I would rec­om­mend you care­fully exam­ine the major­ity of your links on your web­site and assign them appropi­ate ALT attrib­utes.

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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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Jeet March 12, 2009 at 9:53 pm

@Janith: A well written post. A quick point about Pros of making the blog dofollow. A lot of people publish dofollow blog lists and there are dofollow blog directories as well. A dofollow blog can get many more links this way.

You have written ‘and’ twice in succession in one of the sentences.

I keep my blogs dofollow and encourage others too.

Jeet’s last blog post..Free Directory List

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Janith March 13, 2009 at 3:42 am

Whoops! Thanks for pointing that about Jeet – amended appropriately :)

Also, that’s a point I forgot too! There’s almost nearly a million “DoFollow” lists out there, and you can get included in most of them quite easily; all the more promotion for free :)

Thanks for the input Jeet, appreciate it :)

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Abhishek March 13, 2009 at 3:06 am

There are lots of confusion regarding dofollow and nofollow rel in links !! thanks for nice guide !!
I personally suggest let the Top commentator widget be working on your blog and the commentators link be nofollow !!

Abhishek’s last blog post..Still Following Idle Twitter user?

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Janith March 13, 2009 at 3:43 am

That’s a great way of balancing out the dofollow/nofollow links on your blog. From what I’ve heard Google favors neither for any particular reason, but a balance between the two is “optimal”

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Farrhad A March 13, 2009 at 3:35 am

I use Do Follow for my blogs. I feel its the least I can do for a commenter.
But i use this plugin that enables do follow for only people with x no. of comments. So only a loyal commenter get the love :)

Farrhad A’s last blog post..farrhad: The only thing to do with good advice is to pass it on. It is never of any use to oneself. ~ Oscar Wilde #quote

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Janith March 13, 2009 at 3:44 am

That sounds like an awesome plugin Farrhad! Care to share with us the name of it? :)

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Dennis Edell March 13, 2009 at 9:37 am

Lucias Linky Love is the name of one of the plugins that does what Farrhad said; it’s the one I use.

There are a few points that should be clerer for beginners here:

If you run a self-hosted Wordpress blog, you might know this but all your links are made nofollow by default.

Note this is only with comments. Any other contextual links (links within posts) are the opposite; inherently do follow until the no follow attribute is included.

with these ‘nofollow’ tags a search engine will simply ignore those links, potentially rendering them unfindable on the web.

At best this is misleading. No follow links are STILL indexed, they just don’t pass link juice (PR).

There are still many good reasons, some of which you mentioned nicely, to use no follow links. And remember, at the current time, Google is the only SE that cares one way or the other…they may be dominant, but don’t close out the others altogether. ;)

A great post all in all. :)

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..798 Views & 5 Comments – Are You Doing All You Can To Engage Them?

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Janith March 17, 2009 at 8:08 am

First of all, thank you for your input + plugin’s name Dennis, much appreciated!

My bad on the statement on the self-hosted Wordpress blogs, that was completely my fault for not making it clear. Thank you for pointing it out, and I will amend the post to make it clearer.

About the no-follow links being indexed, are you sure? I have never come across a definite answer to this and have always puzzled me :S

I know Google doesn’t show most of the back links to your site using site:domain.com but I don’t think I’ve seen any no-follow- links on those searches; maybe I just haven’t been looking hard enough!

Thanks for pointing this out, you learn something new everyday :)

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Dennis Edell March 17, 2009 at 6:17 pm

I’m as sure as I can be. The only thing Do/No follow has to do with is whether or not Google allows PR to be passed from page to page; that’s it.

Google is horrible with showing links though, you’re right on the money there.

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..Do You Charge For Blog Reviews?

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Janith March 20, 2009 at 9:08 pm

Ahh sweet, thanks for giving the heads up Dennis!
Appreciate it :)

Google is slack on showing the links no doubt, for whatever the reason is. But I’ve seen a couple of threads emerging over at DigitalPoint saying that Google’s started to show all links; but not from what I’m seeing at the moment..

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Evan March 13, 2009 at 4:08 pm

Even though I’ve never really had to make this decision, I would most deffinitely go with DoFollow rather than NoFollow. It’s just better for the community overall. Sure you have to fight frequent spam and such, but you get more site acitivty. Personally, it just sounds better to me! ;)

Wonderful post Janith! :)

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Janith March 17, 2009 at 8:10 am

I’ve seen many people complain about the extra spam, but Akismet blocks most of them! Sure there was an increase in the number of spam comments since we made it DoFollow but we never allocated time to “fight spam”, this beautiful plugin does it for us.

However, it blocks out some legitimate comments because of the CommentLuv link, so we have to keep an eye out for it :P

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Online Marketing Blog March 13, 2009 at 11:24 pm

On my blog i olny give no-follow links to the top commentators i think i will have to change it to give everyone do follow links. I also give back with a link directory and a social bookmarking site where you can spread your link. The out going links are probably killing my serps. But my blog was made to give back to the community and that’s what i am doing with it.

Any way i think that at least you should reward the top commentators with a follow link

Online Marketing Blog’s last blog post..Free Advertising for your Web site?

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Janith March 17, 2009 at 8:22 am

Fair enough comment, but I wouldn’t go as far as saying “killing my SERPs” because unless you have 100+ out-bound links on every one of your pages; it won’t make any drastic SERP changes.

I see where your coming from, because no-matter what; you will suffer from even the slightest SERP drop because of the out-bound links but it can be much more rewarding in other ways :)

TopCommentators in my opinion should always get a DoFollow back-link as a token of “thank you” because they are contributing the most to your blog. Other links, such as post links and every comment’s link can be made no-follow without too much hesitation.

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Random March 14, 2009 at 7:43 pm

Interesting points to consider. I’ll have to give dofollow some more thought when I start up my next blog :)

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Janith March 17, 2009 at 8:11 am

Most definitely Random!
I think it’s one of the most underrated “questions” when running a blog but quite ironically it’s a question that tends to do some people’s head in.

The pros and cons are pretty evenly matched if you take a non-biased view on it, so some bloggers tend to “over-think” about it :O

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Jennifer Eden Cruz March 16, 2009 at 1:31 pm

Hi,

Thank you for pointing out the pros and cons of do follow blogs and no follow blogs. For me the quality of the content is very vital and it is very important that we give value to the readers and the commentators who’s taking time to comment on our blogs.

Jennifer Eden Cruz’s last blog post..Highly Effective Search Engine Optimization Strategies Part 1

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Janith March 17, 2009 at 8:17 am

Hey Jennifer,
Thank you your comment and also for dropping by a comment :)

From what is important to you, I’ll definitely recommend going with DoFollow because all-in-all it’s better for building your blog’s community!

Good luck with your blog! :)

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Online Income March 17, 2009 at 6:19 pm

I’ve always been a big fan of making a blog DoFollow but I am really starting to think that it may hurt your SEO in the long run. It will definitely attract more comments but I am wondering if they are really worth it? It depends on your goals I suppose but how important is getting lots of comments in the grand scheme of things??

Online Income’s last blog post..Link Building Checklist

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Dennis Edell March 18, 2009 at 2:22 pm

Lets break it down a litte…

1. An active blog will attract more activity (constant comments and regular commenters).

2. An active blog attracts potential advertisers.

Now for the biggie #3. Something that so many bloggers don’t realize or think about…

Comments = Content the same way the actual articles do. Look at my comment count (widget lower right); I’m as sure as I can be that all that content helped in the process of going from a PR2 to PR3 in the last Google dance. :)

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..Do You Accept Guest Posts? Get Your Name On The List ;)

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Janith March 20, 2009 at 9:07 pm

It really does depend on your personal goals, just as you’ve mentioned.

However the blow you get from a SEO perspective is very minimum unless your top commentators show the top 100! Also, if you break your comments per post into pages, so after “X Comments” you get to go to the next page of comments, you can pretty much eliminate the “SEO Downfall” as a whole of making your commentators a link.

Crawlers only flag your site if you have too many outbound links (DoFollow) on a single page, so if the top commentators say about 5, and comments are broken into pages every 20 comments = that’s only 25 out-bound per page, which is well below the Google’s unofficial guideline of 100.

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Florida webdesign March 19, 2009 at 6:27 am

Yeah , Dofollow have its own pros and cons . You can’t expect that you can get everything without doing hard work . If you want high traffic then you need to be ready to handle Spammers too . Most of the bloggers say that we need high traffic But can’t make blog do-follow as it would increase SPAM that won’t helps all .

One more point that only Google support No-follow . other search engines still count no-follow links .

Feel free to catch me at twitter .created new account there http://twitter.com/gagankalra

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Alex March 24, 2009 at 8:53 pm

I honestly feel that as a blogger, you should be more worried about your users than the search engines. Sure, search engines can bring in a lot of your human visitors, but I feel that you should make it a priority to reward your current users with a good DoFollow backlink. Just an opinion, but I’ve always said Humans > Spiders!

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Janith March 25, 2009 at 6:33 am

Well said man, couldn’t have put it better myself :)

I love the “humans > spider” I’m a strong believer in that too =D

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WPThemeKid - Daniel March 20, 2009 at 10:19 pm

I use dofollow on top commentator links, however I am pretty sure I have it set to nofollow for all around comments. I might change that though, on previous blogs I have owned dofollow links got me more comments.

WPThemeKid – Daniel’s last blog post..Eating Out WP Theme Release!

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Janith March 25, 2009 at 5:12 am

DoFollow on the top-commentator is almost “compulsory” or it defeats the whole purpose of having one. I think a good balance would be to make top-commentators – dofollow and all around comments; nofollow.

That’s the best for “balance” but here at Blogussion, we value our participants way more than a heartless crawler ;)

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Krishna March 25, 2009 at 9:16 am

Not much to worry i say about making the website/blog No-follow. I have seen many popular websites implementing such a strategy.

There may be some people who don’t work much on this link generation. However there are always alternatives. One can use the book marking’s on their blogs/websites for making their website popular. Just work on good and quality content and make it flow around the web. Thats it. You are right on the button.

Cheers guy for this post :)

Krishna’s last blog post..Google announces – Ad Manager Certified Consultants Program

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Dennis Edell March 25, 2009 at 2:10 pm

DoFollow on the top-commentator is almost “compulsory” or it defeats the whole purpose of having one.

Oh? I do believe the top commenter plugins existed long before the do follow plugins. I’d see the main purpose of TC to be link exposure…..to be do follow is a bonus/gravy/whipped cream (and a cherry if said blog is of exceptionally high PR).

Currently mine is no follow, but on every page. I find that far more conducive to the link then do follow only on the home page. Those that have it do follow and on every page really don’t mind massive leakage.

I think a good balance would be to make top-commentators – dofollow and all around comments; nofollow.

Now this is something I’ve been wondering myself.

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..3 Secrets to Writing for the Search Engines

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Marble Host March 28, 2009 at 1:59 am

Hey,
You’re absolutely right. One of my blogs got a huge boost in traffic, because he changed to a Dofollow blog. But none of the traffic converts to anythings, so it’s really just a big waste. Unless a blogger carefully selects which links he allows.

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Don Margolis April 1, 2009 at 12:46 am

Interesting as there doesn’t seem to be a “right” answer. Funny how this post is a vote for “do follow”, but is fair enough in its judgement that I’m almost inclined to make mine “no follow” after reading it.

Don Margolis’s last blog post..Stem Cell Research Helps Artist With His Arthritis-Video

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Simon | Teenius April 1, 2009 at 1:59 am

But why?! The way I see it is that dofollow *should* get you more comments, and that can only be a good thing. Yes, you’ll probably see an increase in spam, but surely it’s worth the 10 minutes per day you spend moderating for all the extra comments? ;)

Simon | Teenius’s last blog post..Staying Motivated To Earn Online

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Enk. April 1, 2009 at 2:21 am

The new design looks great Alex..
I’d love to read about Social Media and SEO more and more.. then its your Blog, whtsoeva you write.. I am always there to read :D

Enk.’s last blog post..Post more ?

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Enk. April 1, 2009 at 2:23 am

lol I’m sorry.. I was postnig the above Comment for the new design Post not here.. Sorry again ! :D

Enk.’s last blog post..Post more ?

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gudangmakalah April 5, 2009 at 11:54 am

Is it true that if we sell ad-space on our blog with ‘DoFollow’ tag, than Google will penalized us ?

gudangmakalah’s last blog post..Top Quality Link

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Alex April 5, 2009 at 1:21 pm

Do you mean text links? I know for a fact that selling text links will get you penalized by Google.

Let me know!

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Janith April 5, 2009 at 8:10 pm

Any outbound link on the page, which was sold with the DoFollow tag will get penalized if (I mean when) Google finds you out.

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Janith April 5, 2009 at 8:08 pm

Absolutely. Never sell ad-space or an outbound link with DoFollow attribute with it.
It’s only a matter of time before Google catches you out and penalize you – and no matter how big you are; you will get penalized.

A good example of this; is what happened to John Chow (who runs a blog with 70k+ followers), still he got penalized for selling DoFollow text links. He suffered greatly from SERPs and didn’t even rank for the search phrase “John Chow” which he consistently optimized for and is also the words of his domain URL.

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Dennis Edell April 6, 2009 at 7:42 am

Actually Chow was a whole ‘nother story and got what he deserved….

http://www.garryconn.com/the-day-after-john-chow-lost-to-google.php

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..How I Publish Guest Posts

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Increase Traffic April 17, 2009 at 7:29 am

Possibly part of the problem is the Dofollow plugin saying that it disables nofollow in comments, but actually it only disables the nofollow on the name field; any links left in the comment field are still nofollowed (or at least, such appears to be the case in our comments; I haven’t dissected the plugin to see what’s happening). I felt a bit annoyed by this when I first spotted it: I’d’ve liked a more accurate description of what the plugin did. So I’m sure any commenters who happened to spot it felt doubly annoyed.

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Dennis Edell April 18, 2009 at 11:58 am

That’s not a problem, that’s the purpose of the plugin. They never claimed to do more then follow the URL field itself. There aren’t too many legit reasons for links within comments anyway. ;)

Dennis Edell’s last blog post..Understanding The New Rules Of SEO

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Chaitanya Sagar, Excel Expert April 22, 2009 at 7:58 am

Hi Janith,
This is a very informative article. Once I was going through some blog and they made mention to “do-follow” and “no-follow” and I had no idea what they were talking about. Thanks for shedding light on this issue. I have finally know how to differential the ‘nofollow’ and ‘dofollow’ stuffs, which this matter has annoyed me for a very long time.
hurraye…ee

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Online Shopping May 1, 2009 at 12:52 pm

I totally agree with the pros and cons of nofollow tags, however I guess as time goes by, it keeps losing its value and most search engine would simply by-pass it.

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Amy Lynn May 2, 2009 at 7:49 pm

After reading your article, I’ve decided to stay with nofollow….at least for now. Having a new site, I think I will change over to dofollow after I have made a footprint a little more as far as visitor loyalty

You wrote: “…actually suffer from a SEO perspective.” Is that just page rank or actual search engine results? I ask because a large % of my traffic is from Google and I want to keep it that way. So in the future, if I did switch to dofollow, will that hurt my position in searches?

Thank you for your article, I have been going back and forth with the two for awhile now. :D

Amy Lynn’s last blog post..All You Magazine 1year subscription 10 bucks

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pest May 3, 2009 at 9:14 pm

Having dofollow is good in many cases, but of course forces the blog owner to watch comments more closely so that spam comments don’t come through.

pest’s last blog post..Rats out of control

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Oral Seymour May 5, 2009 at 12:26 pm

I tried the dofollow plugin once and even though I only get a few dozen visitors a day to my blog, the spam went through the roof, I had to get rid of it.

I think there is a search engine that finds blogs that are dofollow.

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Linn May 5, 2009 at 10:49 pm

I allow do-follow on my wordpress blogsites too.. i don’t care too much about PR because it will come up sooner or later as we all are building more natural links rather than artificial linking, and blogging is not as easy as many people think, like people say there are 180 million blogs, I dont’ think more than 70% is not making money or regularly updating..

do-follow all the way for me, PR will come up later, as long as we have good anti spam, anti bot scripts for commenting, I think i am doing alright.

cheers

Linn’s last blog post..Top 10 DoFollow Social Bookmarking Websites

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Internet Marketing Blogs May 20, 2009 at 2:45 am

Using “Do Follow” will spread the blog love but you need to set up an excellent comment and moderation policy because even spammers still spam nofollow blogs greatly!

Internet Marketing Blogs’s last blog post..Wolfram Alpha a new way of searching the net

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shekhar June 17, 2009 at 4:23 am

I use dofollow on top commentator links, however I am pretty sure I have it set to nofollow for all around comments. I might change that though, on previous blogs I have owned dofollow links got me more comments.
shekhar´s last blog ..Easy ways to Get Banned from Google Adsense

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Alex June 17, 2009 at 5:04 am

Usually people are more likely to comment on blogs that have dofollow comments.

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EMR August 21, 2009 at 11:47 am

Do follow links are better as compare to no follow links, because in no follow links we restrict the google boot to go to the other website and index them, so do follow links are better as compare to no follow.

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oral seymour August 22, 2009 at 6:50 pm

I think its a no brainer choice now to nofollow your links, especially when I read a matt cutts blog post a few months ago.

It basically said that if you have a number of links on your page that have the nofollow tag, the pagerank isn’t saved and flow to the follow links on the page.

http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/pagerank-sculpting/
oral seymour´s last blog ..Apple and Palm still at it over the Pre’s Itunes Syncing

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Tania August 23, 2009 at 5:46 am

Hello. Thanks for sharing information about this controversial topic DoFollow VS NoFollow. And thank you very much for allowing DoFollow comments here.

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oral seymour August 23, 2009 at 9:27 am

In my comment above I made an error. I meant to say its a no brainer to remove the nofollow from your links.
oral seymour´s last blog ..Apple and Palm still at it over the Pre’s Itunes Syncing

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Sales Professional August 25, 2009 at 3:33 am

There was a great confusion about do follow and no follow blogs. But thanks for the guidance.

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safdar September 10, 2009 at 3:13 am

rom the obvious to the “Hey-I-never-thought-of-that-great-idea-before”, here are 10 of the top 52 tips on how to optimize your website for its turbo-charge rocket ride up the search engine rankings.
safdar´s last blog ..seo optimization,seo,seo tips,seo marketing,

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scheng1 November 23, 2009 at 1:04 am

If I could make all the google adsense advertisers’ links as nofollow, that will be great!
scheng1´s last blog ..Alopecia: hair loss condition

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Paul February 15, 2010 at 2:32 pm

where do you get that plugin?
Paul´s last blog ..Electronic Insect Repellent

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elie palima February 22, 2010 at 11:35 am

hey thanks for the advice. I’ve been thinking about making my blog a dofollow for quite sometime and this post made me decide. anyway, I think I’ll stay with a no follow for awhile.
elie palima´s last blog ..How to change the nameservers | start a blog and make money – coaching videos step 3

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USED CARS KERALA February 25, 2010 at 3:54 am

if a blog is do follow.. all says like spamming occurs.. wen some one publish a blog.. they expect some comments for the article.. so accept the gud comments and reject low standard ones.. y bothering whr there guy doing seo or soemthing?? anybody agree???

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spy-pen June 6, 2010 at 12:41 pm

There are lots of confusion regarding dofollow and nofollow rel in links !! thanks for nice guide !!

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Vital Stem Cells June 25, 2010 at 8:29 am

Wow! Very Informative topic, I think that dofollow which follow by every body and nofollow which don’t follow by any body.Thanks for the nice debate and I must follow this.I like your writing style which is very clear and easy to understand.Thanks for making such a wonderful blog.Keep blogging.

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Sweaty August 16, 2010 at 12:53 am

Thanks for this great post. I was wondering if there was a large con to making your blog dofollow but reading this post I don’t see a huge negative and will definitely be making my blog dofollow.
Sweaty´s last blog ..More Sexy Torture Workout

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