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Lesson 8, Topic 6
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Backlink Audit

11.02.2022
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In simple terms, a backlink audit is the evaluation of all links pointing to your website. It means you need to find them, identify the bad and good ones, and develop the right strategy to deal with them. 

However, having a lot of backlinks is not enough to have a significant positive impact on your SEO. The quality of these links also matters. The Google Penguin analysis algorithm works specifically to catch and penalize sites with low quality backlinks.

Several characteristics. You’d better not have any links pointing to the site from “questionable” sources. These include sites with potential activities, sites with low rankings and sites with poor design, as well as link directories that check, manipulate search rankings in a dishonest way.

This step is not a must. Though it can give you a fair amount of insight into your competitors’ link building strategies and help give your own profile the most reasonable evaluation. 

Go to Backlink Analytics and type in your own and 1-4 competitors’ domains. In the ‘Overview’ tab, you will find all you need to understand whether you are trending in the right direction with your link building strategy.

What You Should Look at

  • Number of Backlinks/Referring domains/Referring IPs to estimate how big your backlink footprint is compared to the competition.
  • Authority Score to understand how attractive your domain should be for link building prospects.
SEMrush Backlink data
  • Backlink Types to see which of your competitors’ content is most linked to.
  • Link Attributes to spot the potential weaknesses in your rivals’ profile.
SEMrush Backlink Analytics Backlink Types and Link Attributes data
  • Referring Domains to find out whether you should be reaching out to more domains than you currently do. 
SEMrush Backlink Analytics Referring Domains data

Now that you know whether your backlink portfolio is relevant to the competition, it is time to find the main issues preventing you from beating them. You should first look into finding the spammy links that harm your rankings, but that is just step one. 

There are several other things to keep an eye on, e.g., valuable links you might be losing or the gaps in your link building strategy you are missing.

Utilize Semrush to find and analyze your backlinks. Go to the Backlink Audit tool, set up a Project, and configure the tool (enter your target keywords, categories, and competitors associated with your domain). This will let the tool understand how relevant each link is.

What You Should Look at 

In the ‘Overview’ Tab:

  • High Overall Toxic Score. There are too many harmful links pointing to your website.
  • Too high or too low total number of Analyzed Backlinks. If it is high and you are not building links or publishing much content at the moment, there can be a spam attack. If it is too low, your site might be perceived as toxic by the others on the web.
  • Small number of Referring Domains. Having too many links coming from one domain can cause suspicion from Google.
  • High Toxic Score of the referring domains. This can be a result of either poor link building or negative SEO.
SEMrush Backlink Audit Overview data
  • High percentage of dofollow or USG links. A natural profile can’t consist of one type of links only, especially if their anchors are irrelevant.
  • Prevalence of Money and Compound anchors. These are considered potentially toxic by Google.
SEMrush Backlink Audit: Anchor types and Link Attributes
  • A spike in gained or lost backlinks in a certain period. It should be interpreted the same way as the total number of the Analyzed Backlinks.

The next step is obviously getting rid of the toxic backlinks. This can be done in 2 ways: 

  1. Reaching out to the referring website owner asking them to delete the link (Removal)
  2. Sending it to the disavow list and then exporting it to the Google Disavow tool (Disavow)

Not to waste time on contacting spammers and scammers, divide your toxic links into the ones you can get removed, and the ones you can’t.

Go to the ‘Audit’ tab of the Backlink Audit tool and whitelist all the links with a Toxic Score below 45. 

Advanced Filters example

Then, filter the list to view your toxic links and try to group them based on the main issues you detected in Step 2. 

For example, if you have a high Toxic Score, you need to know which links cause it. As the most toxic links are displayed first, you can check their markers and filter your list to find similar ones. Unfortunately, the links you find this way will most likely be from domains whose owners aren’t interested in fulfilling your request to remove the link.

image.png
Toxicity markers in the tool data

In the same manner, you can filter the list by Link Attribute or Anchors, which will give you some links you potentially can have removed. 

Another way of sorting links is to sort toxic backlinks by the source of the problem: URL, Page Title, Target URL, or Anchor text. It’s especially helpful when dealing with negative SEO.

Add the links you can have removed to the ‘To Remove’ list and the ones you can’t to the ‘To Disavow’ list*. Remember that you will have to substantiate your decision to disavow to Google.

Link removal options in tool

[Alt text] Semrush Backlink Audit: link removal

* Consider if you want Google to skip the links coming from just one URL or the whole domain. The latter may hinder your website from potentially beneficial links in the future.

Removal

Switch to the ‘Remove’ tab where you sent some of your toxic links in Step 2, and connect your email. Customize the template to request link removal. The recipient email address will either be detected automatically or can be added manually if you find it on the net. 

Email template example from the SEMrush Backlink Audit tool

When you request that a link be removed, it is important to take the right approach. Contacting webmasters, you will have to prove that you are not a spambot. The message should sound natural and polite. 

You will be able to track the responses in Semrush and your own mailbox. Use these as proof of your efforts if you need a disavow in the future.

Step 5. Review Your Anchor Text for Spam 

Anchor text remains a significant ranking factor in the eyes of Google, and it’s nearly impossible to manipulate.

There are several free online tools available online for searching your anchor text for spammy or irrelevant links.

Ahref’s offers a free backlink checker and a more comprehensive, paid-for version that allows you to run a full anchors report quickly and easily if you’ve got a bit of a budget.