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Can Guest Books Get You Links?

By Eric Ward
Posted Monday, October 4, 2004

You have probably been to a site that had a section called a "Guest Book". Many sites ask you to "sign their guest book" and many of these guest books also permit HTML code in the guestbook comments, meaning you or I or anyone can visit guest books on web sites all day long and systematically create links back to our sites from hundreds of other site's guest books.

Naturally, some web marketers (probably the ones that think exit pop-ups are useful) think that by signing guest books and adding links by the hundreds they will improve their link popularity scores at search engines. Before you get excited and do a Google search on the phrase "sign our guestbook" (1.9 million BTW) and head off like a link monkey, here's my take on the whether guestbook links are valid, ignored, or penalized, and if they have any impact on the success of a web site's link popularity.

Guestbook links are really no different than FFA links, if you think about it. FFA (Free For All) pages are pages where a link can be obtained by anyone (even a script) without human intervention, meaning no person even looks to see if the requesting site has any decent content. Such link lists are obviously useless. Ask yourself when was the last time you went to a FFA link list to find a useful web site. How about never?

And since ANY site owner could do the same thing--sign a thousand guest books--how much credibility can such links truly have? None. If I run a site that sells snake oil I can spend my days signing the guest books of the best sites on the web and leech some link popularity from them? Nope.

The real question here is do search engines know about this scam yet, or do they count guestbook links as additional links for popularity rankings? My hunch is that since guestbook links are not in any way an indication of content quality, then they do not matter at all.

If ANY search engine currently gives any credit or rankings impact for guestbook links, this impact is only because the engine hasn't yet figured out the guestbook trick, and soon will. In fact, since the majority of guest books pages have the word guest book in the URL string, it would be absurdly easy for the search engines to simply ignore any link that appears at any URL with the letters guestbook in it.

And I'll bet you if they don't already ignore them they will soon.

My last point is more philosophical. If the reason you are seeking a link is because

a) The link can be obtained automatically or in bulk numbers and b). You are trying to inflate links for SEO purposes, then the bottom line is it's all bullsh*t, and no matter if the engines figure it out today or next month, the tactic is based on a lie and shouldn't be done.

About the Author
Eric Ward founded the Web's first service for announcing and linking Web sites back in 1994, and continues to offer related services today. His client list is a who's who of online brands, including Amazon.com, The Link Exchange, Microsoft.com, Warner Bros, and Discovery Channel. His services won the 1995 Tenagra Award For Internet Marketing Excellence, and he was selected as one of the Web's 100 most influential people by Websight magazine in 1997.

(www.ericward.com)

 






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