How To Check Your HubPage or Web Page Backlinks
My Blog Used In Examples
So You're Online - Now What?
You've got a website, you've got a blog, maybe you've written a HubPage or a Squidoo Page.
Or maybe you're doing all of the above. Bottom line is you're online and you're monitoring your visitors daily noticing every rise and fall in your statistics.
New To The Web?
If you are new to the web, you may not know there are a couple of free tools that you could also be using to check on how your web pages are doing. This hub describes one, and this hub talks about another.
An Example
I am using a blog that I started 4 or 5 months ago as an example.
Using Yahoo! Site Explorer
It's good to know how many of your site's web pages are indexed (known to) the search engnes, and who is linking to your webpage.
Your popularity and traffic will be directly proportional to the number of quality incoming links that you have. And that in turn is influenced by the numberof pages the search engines have indexed on your site.
This is why it is better to a large site with hundreds of pages, over a small site with only 7 or 8 pages.
Step By Step Instructions for Using Yahoo! Site Explorer
- To check this go to Yahoo! Site Explorer
- Type in the URL of your HubPage, or web page
- Click on the Explore URL button
- See the image below for an illustration
How To Use Yahoo! Site Explorer
See How Many Pages Are Indexed
Yahoo! gives a better idea than Google does (unless you sign up for a Google Webmaster Account), of how many pages on your site are known to the search engines (indexed).
Yahoo! is pretty thorough and this pink bubble below shows you that 144 pages of my web site are known to the Yahoo! Index. Now if your site only has 10 pages in total, the search engines can never index more than 10 pages. Make sense? That's why you need a large web site.
Number of Pages in Index
Now Count Your Backlinks
Next,click on the link called Inlinks. This gives you all the sites that link to your site. But select values from the drop-down boxes to allow you to
- not count backlinks from within your own site (i.e. internal site links)
- count all backlinks into any part of your site (not just to the home page)
How to do this is shown in the image below. Select Except this domain and Entire site from the drop-down boxes.
My site only has 341 backlinks - I'd better start working on improving that particular statistic!
Find your backlinks
11,300 Indexed Pages
Conclusions
For a successful web site, you need
- stunning original content
- loads of pages
the rest will follow, but you can't get big success without a large site.
Take a look at a successful example here (a random web site that I found by typing pet beds into Google) : http://www.petstreetmall.com/
They have
- 11,300 pages indexed
- 22,100 links coming in from other web sites.
Comments
I am already using yahoo site explorer and many other backlinks checker tool to check backlinks but all of them only show max 1000 backlinks but Inlinks or over 5000.I want to know about all my backlinks .is their any tool avilable for that.
Thanks so much for the great hub! This is very useful information.
Thanks a lot...this is what I just need :-)
Backlinks is a big thing now
wll thanks i like your website alot that is special website with full information
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Well it seems that Yahoo are to remove this useful tool! Stormy
Yahoo explorer gives a result that is different than Google but the results are steady and do not fluctuate. I think for tracking one should follow with Yahoo and Google , they collectively give a relatively correct status.
Thanks for an informative hub Stormy.
Great points you've posted here, thanks. Is completely true that yahoo is a great engine for checking your backlinks / InLinks (and a little more) as it seems more accurate than others when it comes to Inlinks...anyway I used to do the queries manualy untill i found this free tool: http://ministatus.com which also alows one to download the results in pdf file and also generates the free badge price for each and every queried websites.
Thanks a lot for such an excellent step by step guide to check inlinks. Keep on posting such great articles.
Thanks for this wonderful help ......
stormyweather .....
I will keep visiting your hubs ......
So good hub page! Its very good to know how to find back links for our website. You finely explained the procedure. Through this hub you successfully brought the importance of back links to the reader of the web page. Thanks for the explanation.
Hi Andy. I don't mind a bit of spammy behaviour if it helps people. Post your links here by all means.
Some good info in there. There is also software avaliable (both free, paid, online and offline) that can do the heavy lifting for you here. I won't mention any as that seems a bit too spammy but a quick Google search should prove helpful.
You have helped me greatly. Thanks.
Great hub with lots of information. Thanks for sharing.
No problem! Check this one too (unless you already know about it.) Unbelievably useful.
Thank's I needed that!
Thanks for commenting Shelia - I hope you found it useful but do please check my other hubs. I will do another one for Rik's question when I have finished the one I am working on the moment.
Best Stormy
Thanks for this, Stormy.
And I hope you DO do another hub, to comment on Rik's question.
Best,
Sheila
Thank you Holly. It is short and sweet - the opposite of my hub about web design skills http://hubpages.com/hub/How-To-Get-Started-With-HT which is really quite long. Please check it out - I *think* it is quite readable.
Simple, clear and informative. Everyone can use the info. Thanks
Thanks for the introduction to Yahoo site explorer. I found out that my best inlinks were from the BBC news web site. Leaving comments on news stories is an excellent ways of getting quality links
Liz - This makes sense - if you have a small blog or site then you can compensate to some extent by using larger sites like HubPages and linking both ways. I'm new to Hubs and blogs but I'm finding it much easier to draw traffic to my Hubs than to my own blog.
I appreciate your experience but also your ability to communicate clearly without too much geek-speak - well done!
No - thank you for visiting!
Thanks for the information.
Hi Rik
Thanks - I hope it was useful. But you bring up a very interesting question, and to address it in full, I'd have to do another hubpage or blog post or something.
But briefly: a large web presence is needed for most web sites to draw visitors. And having subsidiary pages like hubs and squidoo pages are part of that funnelling process.
Unless you have a truly amazing gimmick, I can't think of many successful small (as in just a handful of pages), web sites. It stands to reason that backlinks are very important, and unless you can present a unique, ground-breaking idea in 5 pages that remains so over time, or you sell something like an e-book or online course (with a big pre-launch marketing drive), and you spend lots on pay per click or joint venture marketing, you won't have anything online for your visitors to re-visit unless there is changing, new and quality content.
One such site does spring to mind - www.milliondollarhomepage.com. It has (today) adverts (links out) to 3066 companies on a single page.
In total it consists of only 13 pages but has generated 51,000+ backlinks as of today.
Now that's just not comparable with a typical small business web site of the standard home, about us, contact us, services, faq and portfolio pages.
Yes - I found this very useful and well presented.
But you say "can't get big success without a large site." - if you write a Hub isn't this a small part of a large site? Or are you saying a successful site needs to be big if it is 'stand alone' - ie has its own domain name?
Good hub anyway!
Hi Jonathan - Thanks for your comment. Your hub is really quite something. Well done.
Stormy,
Nice hub. This is really valuable information.
I posted one that can also help you do this kind of research on other sites easier. The hub is here:
http://hubpages.com/hub/SEO-Optimization-and-Keywo
The hub introduces a tool called seoquake which actually uses data from Yahoo site explorer.
Jonathan
viryabo 11 months ago
Just what i've been searching for. Thanks.