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Google Helps Find Missing Links


Like finding change in your couch

It’s been said links are the currency of the Web, and an honest-gotten inbound link is like a tip for good work. Locating broken inbound links, then—links attempted but because of an error don’t connect with a page on your site—is like an opportunity to locate missing money.

Google recently introduced a feature to its webmaster portal that can be like a metal detector on the beach. The tool allows webmasters to view a list of 404 errors generated from broken inbound links.

Obviously, fixing these links can help improve your ranking in the search results. The Googlebot tries to crawl those links from other sites, but when it arrives it has no where to go, and you don’t get credit for that link. Plus, visitors get a bad experience with your site, also something you don’t want.

Matt Cutts gives a nice tutorial about how to reclaim those lost links, beginning with how to download a list of 404 pages and links to them through the webmaster portal:

“It would be trivial to mail some of these people and say ‘Hey, I noticed you linked to my site (thank you!) but the link is broken, so users will get a 404 page. Would you mind changing your link on page A to point to the right page, which is url B?’ When the other site fixes their link, their visitors find your site directly, plus all search engines can follow those links and give you credit for them. Converting 404 links to links to the right pages converts sucky links to free direct text links for all."

In the comments, someone asks about 301 redirects, which Cutts doesn’t seem confident in recommending. He replied, “I purposefully left out the ‘301-to-the-home-page’ issue from my post, because there are pros and cons. The pro is that you don’t have to ask other people to fix their links (and as long as you’re doing this in a normal way, you shouldn’t run into problems with Google), but the downside is that it’s a really weird user experience for your visitors.”

If you know the intent of the link, though, perhaps you could 301 to the intended page, or even, though it’s more work, create new content for that erring link.

However you deal with the problem, it’s definitely like finding a $20 bill in a coat you haven’t worn since last winter.
 

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About the author:
Jason Lee Miller is a WebProNews editor and writer covering business and technology.

Comments

Thanks for analyze it

As far as concerned to broken link , google help to find out how many you have link that are broken through its webmaster tool. you can check it "content analysis" . It is very good offer from google by which we keep on close eye on any kind of error happen in my website

Google webmaster tools

Thanks for your well written and referenced article - I rely on blogs like this to keep me up to date.

 

Thanks

Information is usefull. I must try it right away THX

Good Tip!

Thanks for the tip. After spending a lot of time garnering the links, it would be a pity to let them slip away unnoticed.

 

Google keeps adding more

It is so good to see Google adding more and more tools to help us find and resolve issues.

Thanks for publishing this information.

Google Master

Da Google solo strumenti performanti..! A great tool!

Nice little tool

Nice little tool, its good to know that they finally put something like this.

thank you

hello thank you

i think you can make 404 or 301 to your home page

http://gamezat.net

 

 

 

Alright!

Im glad you posted this, I've been looking for some good software for link checking for awhile now, I'm about to check out Matt Cutt's tutorial.

I confuse how to used this

The tool find 2 broken links on my site, but I can't find that links on my site

How can I find that broken link?

 

Thanks a lot

Thanks Jason.

Like other posts, I never thought about it before and don't even know google provides this service. Will look into it.

I usually use 301 to rediect some broken links. Not really sure it's good or bad.

Thanks for that

Thanks for that checked mine out ,never really thought about it before.

But will in the future

Cheers Mick uk

Simply Amazing!

I read Matt Cutts post about the new 404 error page reporting and have to say that when I ran though my hefty client list I found atleast one instance of a link pointing to a 404 page. Free links is right. Now if only Yahoo can catch up with this type of reporting.

Clarification on 301 redirect issue

I wasn't really suggesting that you do 301 redirects to your home page. There are times when 404 pages are appropriate.

I was suggesting that you identify the 404 errors in the new "Not Found" Google report and then redirect those bad URLs to the correct ones. You're right: a 404 would be appropriate if you weren't sure of the intent of the link.

In the report, I've seen a lot of instances of garbage like 'http://www.domain.com/<span class="' because the webmaster didn't close the <a> tag correctly or whatever. Sure, if we had infinite time to coordinate these changes with other webmasters, we'd fix it. But I'm working on a site with 100,000 inlinks. That idea doesn't scale too well with my team.

Link Checking

It is interesting that google has this service.  For over 5 years I have used Link Alarm to check the links on my pages.

Rewrite

Set up the headers in your 404 page to alert your by e-mail when somebody cannot find your page.

Then, if the link is an important one, either re-create the page, or put a mod_rewrite to point to another. relevant page

a custom 404 is a quick fix,

a custom 404 is a quick fix, but wont reap the full benefits of a relevant deep inbound link. 

And i believe a custome 404 confuses the search engines when there is a page that needs a proper 404, is this still the case? any thoughts?

Thanks!

Thanks, Jason, for bringing this to my attention. I usually only check my webmaster tools for my safety and security web site once a month or so but I will be sure to check this out right away!

301 redirects, anyone?

I've solved the same problem by 301-redirecting the incorrect URL to a valid URL.

I don't understand why everyone's acting like 404 pages are the answer. Thanks for the misunderstanding, Google!

Jason

You are looking more and more unhealthy. I'm concerned about you. Get some help with your diet and exercise. You are way too young to be looking so unhealthy.

thanks for the heads up

Thanks for the concern. I think you'll have to take that up with my graphic designer, who chose a crappy picture of me for the newsletter today. I do look a little saggy under the eyes in that one. Feeling good (and tired since my daughter's birth two weeks ago). Cheers.

or just create a custom 404

or just create a custom 404 page and include a navigation to conect visitors with the other parts of ther website

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