1) Google used to index only about 100 kilobytes of a page. When site have more than 100 link per page than bot might not index that page dut to lot of url existing in it.
2) Google will index more than 100K of a page, but there’s still a good reason to recommend
keeping to under a hundred links or so: the user experience. If you’re showing well over 100 links
per page, you could be overwhelming your users and giving them a bad experience. Be aware of that.
3) But in some cases, it might make sense to have more than a hundred links. Does Google automatically consider a page spam if your page has over 100 links? No, not at all. The “100 links” recommendation is in the “Design and content” guidelines section. But if we make hidden text or doorways pages in that page or in those url ,then Google might ignore your page and might consider you spammer.
4) So how might Google treat pages with well over a hundred links? If you end up with hundreds of
links on a page, Google might choose not to follow or to index all those links. At any rate,
you’re dividing the Page Rank of that page between hundreds of links, so each link is only going
to pass along a tiny amount of Page Rank. Users often dislike link-heavy pages, so before you go
putting a ton of links on a page, ask yourself what the purpose of the page is and whether it
works well for the user experience.
My Profile: Praveen Sharma
2) Google will index more than 100K of a page, but there’s still a good reason to recommend
keeping to under a hundred links or so: the user experience. If you’re showing well over 100 links
per page, you could be overwhelming your users and giving them a bad experience. Be aware of that.
3) But in some cases, it might make sense to have more than a hundred links. Does Google automatically consider a page spam if your page has over 100 links? No, not at all. The “100 links” recommendation is in the “Design and content” guidelines section. But if we make hidden text or doorways pages in that page or in those url ,then Google might ignore your page and might consider you spammer.
4) So how might Google treat pages with well over a hundred links? If you end up with hundreds of
links on a page, Google might choose not to follow or to index all those links. At any rate,
you’re dividing the Page Rank of that page between hundreds of links, so each link is only going
to pass along a tiny amount of Page Rank. Users often dislike link-heavy pages, so before you go
putting a ton of links on a page, ask yourself what the purpose of the page is and whether it
works well for the user experience.
My Profile: Praveen Sharma