Should affiliate links be given follow or no-follow tag?
Should affiliate links be given follow or no-follow tag?
Google's John Mueller said that if you can, it is best to use the rel=sponsored link attribute on your affiliate links. You can still use nofollow or combine them if you want, but it would make things clearer for Google if you uses rel=sponsored. ... And to be more complete: affiliate links are not bad
Google's John Mueller said that if you can, it is best to use the rel=sponsored link attribute on your affiliate links. You can still use nofollow or combine them if you want, but it would make things clearer for Google if you uses rel=sponsored. ... And to be more complete: affiliate links are not bad.
Nofollow vs. dofollow. From the technical point of view, the only difference between a nofollow link and a standard “dofollow” link is the presence of the rel=”nofollow” tag. The practical difference is that nofollow links do not pass the link equity (also known as “link juice”).
The nofollow tag is a way publishers can tell search engines not to count some of their links to other pages as “votes” in favor of that content. ... The nofollow tag is a way publishers can tell search engines not to count some of their links to other pages as “votes” in favor of that content.
Google's John Mueller said that if you can, it is best to use the rel=sponsored link attribute on your affiliate links. You can still use nofollow or combine them if you want, but it would make things clearer for Google if you uses rel=sponsored. ... And to be more complete: affiliate links are not bad.
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