Rejecting the links I could not remove

Once I removed most of the links and changed some of the anchor text, I submitted a disavowal report to the Google Disavow tool . In this report, I included all the links I couldn’t remove, as well as those I could delete Rejecting the links I could not remove.

This is because these sites were of very poor quality and I did not want Google to associate my site with them in any way, even if they had already been removed.

Removed, changed anchor texts, rejected, what else?

After removing most of the bad links, disavowing overseas chinese worldwide database  what I couldn’t, and also thinning the anchor text distribution, I had to wait for another Google Penguin update.

As silly as it may sound, unfortunately, there’s not much you can do if you’ve been penalized by a Google Penguin update. At least, that’s what John Mueller, Webmaster Trends Analyst at Google, says.

Here’s a screenshot from a conversation he had on the Google forum ,

where a user asks if there’s a way to recover from a Google Penguin update without another Penguin update.

Based on what happened in my case, I can director business operations kevin jonsson fairly confidently confirm what John said. My website regained its rankings immediately after the Penguin 3.0 announcement on October 17, 2014.

My rankings and traffic are now back to where they were before the update. Now I can focus on growth instead of recovery.

Conclusion

Recovering from a Google Penguin penalty is sault data possible. I managed to recover my website by thinning the anchor text and removing all low-quality backlinks.

Use the SEOptimer SEO tool to easily identify the links you need to remove and those you should keep.

What’s your story? Have you ever been penalized by Google? I’d love to hear from you.

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