Can using Google’s link disavow tool
help remove penalties? Yes, the company says. But when it comes to
manual penalties, disavowing links alone isn’t enough. With algorithmic
penalties, there may be a time delay involved. Below, more about how
both methods work.
Over the past few days, I’ve encountered a couple of cases where people
are confused about how the link disavow tool works to remove penalties.
So, I figured a clarification post was in order. Here’s the situation,
all of which I reverified with Google yesterday.
Disavowing Links: “Don’t Count These Votes!”
If you submit a disavow request, Google will automatically process that
request and tag those links pointing at your site in the same manner as
if they had the nofollow tag on them, in other words, as if they aren’t
actually pointing at your site for link counting and analysis purposes.
This is something that came up again in a Google Webmaster Central hangout video yesterday:
In short, if links are votes,
using the link disavow tool effectively tells Google that you don’t
want any of those votes counted, for better or worse, toward your
rankings.
This all happens automatically, and Google says it still takes several weeks until the disavow request is processed.
Removing Algorithmic Penalties
Now let’s take a situation where you’re hit by an algorithmic penalty related to links, such as the Penguin Update.
“Algorithmic” means an automatic penalty, one that involves no human
review at all. Rather, Google’s computers have ruled that your site has
done something wrong.
To remove that penalty, you need to clean up your links. That’s where
link disavow can help. Let’s assume you use it to correctly disavow bad
links that were hurting you.
That’s step one, cleaning up the links. Step two is waiting for the
disavow request to get processed. That, as I’ve said, may take several
weeks.
Step three is that you have to wait until the next time Google runs your
site against whatever part of its algorithm hit you. For many, that
means Penguin. Even if you’ve cleaned up your links with disavow, you
have to wait until the Penguin Update is run again before you’ll see an
impact.
For example, let’s assume you were hit by Penguin 3 last
October. You used the link disavow tool to clean up your links soon
after that. You still have to wait until Penguin 4 happens before you
should see a change (and Google has said that more Penguin updates haven’t yet happened).
Now take the same situation, where you file the disavow request just a
few days before a Penguin Update. Even though the request went ahead of
the update, you still might not get cleared because by the time it’s
processed (several weeks), the latest update will have happened. You’ll
have to wait for the one after that.
Eventually, if you’ve used the tool, you should see a change. It’ll just
take time. But if it was an algorithmic penalty, then it should
automatically clear if you file disavow alone (or clean up your link
profile in other ways).
Removing Manual Penalties
The situation is different — and potentially much faster — if you were
hit by a manual penalty. That’s when some human being at Google has
reviewed your site and decided that it deserves a penalty. In virtually
all of these cases, it also means you would have received a notice from
Google that this has happened.
If the penalty involves bad links, the link disavow tool can help you
disown those. However, the penalty won’t automatically be removed
because it was placed manually. You have to also file a reconsideration
request. This will prompt a human being at Google to check on your site.
They can see that the link disavow request has been filed, and if
that’s enough, then the manual penalty may get lifted.
You have to do both: disavow links and file a reconsideration request,
which Google has said before. And really, you have to do a third thing,
which is make a good faith effort to remove links beyond just using link
disavow, which Google has also said before (see our Q&A With Google’s Matt Cutts On How To Use The Link Disavow Tool for more about this).
There is one caveat to the above. Manual penalties have expirations
dates, Google reminds. This means after a period of time, perhaps a few
weeks or a few months, the penalty against your site should expire
naturally. That’s why you might see an improvement even if you do
nothing. (But note from the comments below, some penalties can go on for
two or three years before they expire).
Doing nothing, however, may leave you subject to an algorithmic penalty
in the future. In short, if you get a manual penalty, take that as a
solid warning you need to fix something, lest you face a longer-term
algorithmic penalty in the future.
For More Info about How Google’s Disavow Links Tool Can Remove Penalties
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Tags : disavow links tool remove penalties, nilesh patel, seo services provider, best information of the world, nilesh patel forum, fans of photography, nilesh patel seo
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