October 24, 2008
How To Get (or Give) 30,000,000 Links
Let’s play a game. What do all these sites have in common:
Philly.com
Compact Appliance
MSNBC
Hewlett-Packard
Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
AARP
MLB.com
Cornell University
Pontiac
Sports Illustrated
Ok – how many people came up with this: they all use Omniture as an analytics tool? If you did, you get partial credit because that’s only half the story.
Let’s examine part of the source code for sportsillustrated.cnn.com. And don’t forget – this is a page rank 8 site:
If you’ve looked at Omniture code before, you’ve probably seem something like this before. However, have you ever noticed the line about halfway through this code that starts with < noscript >? It contains a link to Omniture with the title “Web Analytics” (keeping in mind that “title” is different than anchor text). The rest of this tag loads a 1×1 tracking pixel (that’s what comes after img src). Now, I’m not a coding expert, but it looks to me like this is a link to Omniture.
That’s right. All the sites above link to Omniture.
Don’t believe me? Let’s examine further. I ran a link analysis on the homepage of the CDC site. There are 17 external links off www.cdc.gov:
Notice the last link points to Omniture, although it does not have any anchor text associated with it.
Ok, so we’ve established that there are external links pointing to Omniture from sites that have Omniture installed. Then I started thinking about how many sites actually use Omniture and how many links that must be. To give you a rough idea, Wikipedia has 48,400,000 links while Omniture has 39,300,000. To be fair, I repeated those searches multiple times and came up with different numbers but every time, Wikipedia and Omniture had tens of millions of links.
To put those numbers into even more context, WebTrends has 47,900 links. Unica and Coremetrics have fewer than 10,000 links. (For fun, look back at the image and check out the number of .edu links that both Omniture and Wikipedia have.)
I did notice, however, that not all sites that use Omniture have this link included. While sportsillustrated.cnn.com has the link, cnn.com appears not to have it. CNN’s code does call for the 1×1 pixel, but the noscript does not contain the link:
I have not been able to figure out the pattern by which Omniture-using sites have the link and which do not. I am not sure if it depends on the version of the code that is installed or if it is individual manipulation of the code, but I do know that it is not included on every install.
After I got this far in my analysis, I started wondering if other analytics tools are using the same sort of tactic. After all, many analytics packages will call a 1×1 pixel in a noscript tag. Here’s what a 1×1 pixel from WebTrends looks like:
The code simply calls the 1×1 pixel, no img alt, no link to WebTrends, no text like “Web Analytics.” Clean. Simple. Quantcast also calls a 1×1 pixel. Additionally, Quantcast does have a link back to the site, but the link points to a page that is not the homepage. Every install of this tag points to a different page.
Now I’m sure the engines discount some of the Omniture links, particularly because many of the sites with Omniture installed have these links on every page (since Omniture tracking code must be installed on every page). For example, a Yahoo search reveals 21,100 pages on CompactAppliance.com that link to Omniture:
To me, it just doesn’t seem right. Particularly because this link is buried under a line that says, “Do not alter anything below this line.” It’s also suspicious because there is a title that says “Web Analytics.” Why not just “Omniture”? As a web analyst for our clients, I often request that clients add tracking code to their pages. However, I only want to install what is absolutely necessary to get the job done. Moreover, if this is an attempt to gather links, where does it stop? It seems like a slippery slope of stuffing things into noscript tags.
In researching this post, I came across some others who have discussed uses of the noscript tag. In late 2006, Eric Enge wrote about uses of noscript and in his post, mentions a WebmasterWorld forum that suggests that noscript links do not pass PageRank. I tried to look for an official answer from Google, but this is as close as I got. From this, I gather that Google wants you to have the same content in javascript as in the noscript tag, which doesn’t seem to be the case with these Omniture links. In the comments to Eric’s post, “Marshall” mentions that a shopping cart company is dropping links in the noscript as well. As Eric responds, “The issue is that the company using the shopping cart does not even know that they are linking to the shopping cart company.” How many Omniture users know the code contains a link to Omniture? Additionally, Stephan Spencer uncovered a similar tactic being used by Bidvertiser in early 2007.
All of this makes me wonder how widespread this practice might actually be. And it would be interesting if Google (or Matt Cutts) could address this issue specifically. Is this an acceptable practice? If not, are these links discounted in any way? Do (or will) companies that engage in this type of practice face any repercussions? For now, I’m going to be paying much closer attention to code that is “required” to be installed on client sites.
10 COMMENTS
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Jes Carney says:
October 24, 2008 @ 1:45 pmEye-Opening post Laura, thank you!
I took a like at my clients who have Omniture to see if it would help shed some light on a pattern for you, and don’t see a link back to Omniture on any of them; two of these sites are retail sites with Page Ranks of 5 or less and the other two are sites with Page Ranks of 6 – 8. There doesn’t seem to a pattern there, however they are all on Omniture Suite/SiteCatalyst 14.
Looking forward to your next post.
-Jes
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afewtips.com says:
October 24, 2008 @ 3:29 pmI just checked my a site I knew used Omniture – register.com – and Yep – the link is in there.
I was hoping you were going to give a strategy for using this to our advantage.
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Matt Cutts says:
October 24, 2008 @ 4:46 pmThese noscript links won’t affect Google’s search results–thanks for checking though!
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laura says:
October 24, 2008 @ 5:24 pm@Jes – Thanks for checking. We were 1 for 3 on our clients on Omniture.
@afewtips – I could think of a few ways but I wasn’t sure there even was an advantage, which seems to be clarified by Matt.
@MattCutts – Thank you for reading & clarifying!
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Tom says:
October 25, 2008 @ 3:57 pmCool post, I enjoyed it.
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jacob morgan says:
October 27, 2008 @ 5:12 pmmatt you are right that it does not affect search results, but our tests reveal that it DOES affect relevancy, you guys should nail them for doing that.
J
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Link Love Time! SEO Forecasting, SEM Tools, Free Ivy League Business Courses And More | SEO ROI Services says:
November 8, 2008 @ 12:04 pm[...] How to Get or Give 30 million links – noscript links & Omniture [...]
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fGear says:
November 8, 2008 @ 12:47 pmWhy doesn’t it affect search results? Is all noscript ignored by goog in terms of link passing? Theres no need for them to even include a link in it but I suppose they thought they were being smart, e.g. google analytics doesnt.
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חידת ×§×™×“×•× ××ª×¨×™× #3 | AskPavel says:
November 14, 2008 @ 1:29 pm[...] http://www.thinkseer.com/blog/how-to-get-or-give-30000000-links/2008/10/24/ [...]
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Google Rankings, CTR, & Effect on Traffic says:
May 11, 2009 @ 11:40 am[...] At SIM we use Omniture (not giving them a link here because they sneakily added a link to their site within our code…see this article) for the majority of our sites but decided to test out G Analytics recently on one of our smaller properties. Just last week we followed Blogstorm’s instructions and got the keyword ranking tracking set up as well.  Extremely cool data. Below is a snapshot for a relatively small time period and even though it is a small sample set I think the data is telling.  (BTW, the sample set is small because Google hasn’t completely rolled out the new AJAX listings.) [...]
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