Understanding Link Juice Flow From A SEO Perspective to Improve Your Rankings
Your ability to design a SEO friendly site comes from your understanding of Link juice flow and how you can leverage its power and compensate its weaknesses. This blog entry will help you to have a better understanding of what is link juice flow and how does it works.
What is Link Juice?
The term link juice is directly concerned in SEO, since this is the juice that will drive up your rankings and bring visitors to your websites. The term link juice has become “viral” on the Internet and fallen into common usage, especially in the SEO world. Essentially link juice becomes the everything that you are looking for, in the number of people that provide links to your pages. The more links you have, especially from well-linked places, the greater your visibility and web page rankings become.

Why Link Juice Flow?
In order for your pages to be indexed (yes, remember pages get indexed, not sites), they first need to be crawled. Using a proper site structure highly helps and increases your chances to meet this first requirement.
After a page has been crawled, if this one meets the minimum requirements of the search engines, it will be indexed. In Google a page can be indexed either in the primary index (that is where you want to be) or the supplementary index (for the pages that are relevant enough to be indexed, but don’t have sufficient authority yet to figure in the primary index).
When it comes to link juice, only pages from the primary index in Google can transmit some; that is strictly from a SEO point of view, backlinks from pages in the supplementary index are worthless. You can easily identify those pages as they don’t have PR (not PR0 but really no PR).
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Link juice is transmitted by links between different pages from the primary index only. Those links can both be internal or external. You can identify pages from the primary index as they all carry a PageRank score ranging from 0 to 10. The higher the PageRank, the more link juice each link from that page can transmit.
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How to Get a Page in the Primary Index?
For a page to get into the primary index of Google, it needs to receive a sufficient amount of link juice from other pages. For the sake of explanation, let’s assume that what you need to get a page in the primary index is 10 points, and that each inbound link is worth 1 point; this would mean that this page would require at least 10 inbound links of 1 point value to be listed in the primary index.

How much link juice can a page give?
A page gives out about 80-90% of the link juice it receives.
This means that if a page receives 10 points, it can only give out 8-9 points.

In addition, that point value is divided by the number of links on the page.

Also, there’s a restriction of 1 link value maximum from one page to another one. Any additional link towards a page already linked from the current page will not double the amount of link juice passed on towards that page, but instead half the amount of link juice passed on from each of those links.

Special Cases:
Under special circumstances, it is possible to prevent a link from giving away or sharing some of the link juice of a page.
The most popular methods being:
- Rel=”nofollow” attribute on the link
- Unreadable links like JavaScript link or Flash link. Recent news would indicate that Google may now be able to read those.
- Meta Robots nofollow
The link attribute rel=”nofollow” introduced by Google will prevent a page to give away link juice to the target page of the link, however it will not redistribute the excess of link juice and will absorb it just like a normal link.
Unreadable links however will bounce the link juice as they are completely ignored, just as if they didn’t exist on page.

The Meta Robot NoFollow is an extremely powerful command and will have effect page wide. None of the links on that page will be followed by the search engine crawlers or passed any link juice.

Now the question will be:
- To “DoFollow” or to “NoFollow”?
- Can we survive the “NoFollow” Black hole?
- Did The “NoFollow” Attribute Really Change?
Thanks for reading!
Comments + Pingbacks + Trackbacks
John S.
January 7, 2010 at 6:21 am | PermalinkNow i got the real meaning of link juice.
Thanks buddy !
san francisco web design
July 7, 2010 at 5:52 am | PermalinkI study link juice at many places but can not understand it. Now link juice concept is clear to me. Thanks
vipul chauhan
July 9, 2010 at 7:09 pm | PermalinkThanks for this useful information .
Vipul Chauahan
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