Check Your Backlinks
If you already read my explanation about Google Page Rank, and understand that there are page-rank juices being distributed from-and-to a web page, then now I’m going to share a very useful tools that will help you track-down all the links that is coming to your site (either internal-linking or inbound-link).
Okay, hold your horses. If you are about to question someone next to you about
Hey, what does this guy mean about internal-linking?
or
Inbound-links? Aren’t links will always be links?
You can read my other post about the so-called inbound link.
Read some explanation, don’t be bored.
Backlinks for Your Blog
One thing I like in reading a webpage is, when one doesn’t really understand about something, there (always) a link that giving an explanation about the issue. And all I need to do, is click the “link” and voila, I’d be taken to the related webpage which holds the information.
Basically, when you put some hyperlink on a text in your post, you made yourself a link to another page (or another part of the document). The basic HTML code for a link is as follow
<a href="http://theurl.com/of-the-page.html">Go Here</a>
Pay some attention to the colored text, they have their own role
- http://theurl.com/of-the-page
that’s the permalink, the web-address for the page that you lead others to - Go Here
that’s the “anchor” text, the part that goes hyperlink-ed (the one that got your mouse pointer change into a hand-shaped cursor)
Okay, I assumed you got my point about the permalink and the anchor-text. Now, I’m going to explain about the backlinks (internal-linking and inbound-link).



