wordyard.com

Backlink analytics and domain authority

Anchors
All Dofollow Nofollow UGC DR ▾ Ref. domains ▾ Ref. pages ▾ Links to target ▾
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50 anchors All New Lost
Anchor text Ref. domains ▾ Top DR Ref. pages Links to target Dofollow links
Scott Rosenberg 10 0 11 11 100%
Scott Rosenberg's Wordyard 4 0 346 346 100%
an article on comment/community management 2 0 2 2 100%
Scott Rosenberg’s Wordyard 2 0 2 2 100%
2 0 10 10 100%
Business Week on Digg: Smells like bubble spirit 1 0 1 1 100%
Business Week followup: Valuing assets 1 0 1 1 100%
AP sends takedown letters to Drudge Retort: Do excerpts and links infringe? 1 0 1 1 100%
has been identified 1 0 2 2 100%
In the context of web context: How to check out any Web page 1 0 1 1 100%
here 1 0 1 1 100%
Why the Daily, Murdoch's “tablet newspaper,” will be DOA 1 0 1 1 100%
this gritty 2010 article on wordyard.com 1 0 1 1 100%
"Nick Carr's new knock on the Web: does it change how we read?" 1 0 1 0 0%
Quote, unquote: Is the iPad today's CD-Rom? 1 0 1 1 100%
a larger scheme for tracking and presenting all post-publication changes 1 0 1 1 100%
the Chandler project is in decline 1 0 1 1 100%
Don't save your links for the end — it's more distracting! 1 0 1 1 100%
Another misleading story reports that blogs ‘r’ dead — Scott Rosenberg's Wordyard 1 0 2 2 100%
Блогът на Скот Розенберг 1 0 1 1 100%
Mark Penn's fuzzy pro-blogging stats 1 0 4 4 100%
Google Blog Search loses its bearings 1 0 8 8 100%
“Lies Our Bubbles Taught Us,” 1 0 1 1 100%
writing about 1 0 1 1 100%
Newsies beat Bloggers?, 1 0 1 1 100%
more flaws 1 0 1 1 100%
1 0 1 1 100%
Steve Ballmer: Microsoft's incompetent youth 1 0 1 1 100%
AP responds on blog excerpting 1 0 2 2 100%
Saying everything in Albany — Scott Rosenberg's Wordyardsays: 1 0 1 0 0%
Scotta Rosenberga 1 0 1 1 100%
Missed stories: About that Horace Mann School article in the Times 1 0 1 1 100%
secret meetings 1 0 1 1 100%
Interview: David Weinberger 1 0 2 2 100%
wordyard.com 1 0 1 1 100%
Scott Rosenberg en su post ‘Corrije, no borres ese tweet erróneo’ 1 0 1 1 100%
Scott Rosenberg’s Wordyard » Blog Archive » A.P. goes nuclear on fair use 1 0 1 1 100%
Another misleading story reports that blogs ‘r’ dead 1 0 1 1 100%
content-management systems don’t yet offer corrections 1 0 1 1 100%
Slate: Don't close that corrections window — open it all the way! 1 0 1 1 100%
"Ecco Pro — back from the dead, again" 1 0 1 0 0%
Scott Rosenberg's thoughts about the 'web parenthesis' 1 0 1 1 100%
Google Blog Search Loses Its Bearings 1 0 1 1 100%
Wordyard 1 0 1 1 100%
Fifteen years of epochal pronouncements 1 0 1 1 100%
Scott Rosenberg’s Wordyard » Blog Archive » A year of Code 1 0 1 0 0%
experience 1 0 1 1 100%
http://www.wordyard.com/category/code-reads/ 1 0 1 1 100%
Scott Rosenberg remarque 1 0 1 1 100%
Why can’t journalists handle public criticism? 1 0 2 0 0%
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Frequently Asked Questions
What anchor texts are used to link to wordyard.com?
This page shows all anchor texts found in backlinks pointing to wordyard.com, sorted by the number of referring domains using each anchor. Anchor texts range from branded terms (like the domain name itself) to keyword-rich phrases that describe the linked content. The distribution of anchor texts reveals how other websites perceive and describe wordyard.com.
What is anchor text?
Anchor text is the visible, clickable text in a hyperlink. Search engines use anchor text as a signal to understand what the linked page is about. For example, if many sites link to a page using the anchor text "best running shoes," search engines infer that the page is relevant to that topic. Anchor text appears in several forms: exact-match (contains target keywords), branded (uses the company or domain name), generic (like "click here"), and naked URLs.
Why is anchor text analysis important for SEO?
Anchor text analysis helps identify potential SEO risks and opportunities. A natural backlink profile has diverse anchor texts including branded terms, generic phrases, and topic-relevant keywords. Over-optimization, where too many backlinks use the same exact-match keyword anchor, can trigger search engine penalties. Conversely, understanding which anchors drive the most authority (measured by referring domain count and DR) helps prioritize link building efforts.
How many unique anchor texts does wordyard.com have?
The anchor text report for wordyard.com displays all distinct anchor texts grouped by their hash. Each row shows how many unique referring domains use that anchor, the total number of links, and the dofollow percentage. A high number of unique anchors generally indicates a healthy, natural backlink profile with diverse link sources.