How highly do you value a link from the BBB?
-
What I would like to know is how valued a link from the BBB is. I've searched various forums and websites to try and put a value on it, but I can't find a whole lot of useful discussion on it and how it can affect rankings.
My ecommerce company has been approached by the BBB for Accreditation, which is something I've always been somewhat interested in. I realize many business owners either love/hate the BBB, but so far I have had several claims with them and they've always sided with my company, despite not being accredited.
The BBB rep immediately started spouting off the benefits of having the BBB link to you, and I could see that as being true. They have a DA of 96, and obviously not everyone can get a link on that website (money and good reputation required).
However, he probably exaggerated when he said often times businesses skyrocket in the rankings because of this backlink; he also seemed to think having the BBB code and badge that link to the BBB website seemed to affect rankings, which I don't think is correct.
I also think that having their badge on our website could increase sales conversion (and maybe even increase the number of people that complain to the BBB). I'm not too worried about the complaints since we don't have ethics problems. The accreditation is $750 (seems high) and I'm not sure if it's really worth that amount, but I could be wrong.
Would love some professional insight on if the BBB is worthwhile link or if it's overhyped and the money would be better spent elsewhere. At face value, it certainly seems like a good investment and I'd love to hear some insight as to how much value their backlink truly has to a company or if that money is better spent elsewhere.
-
Not to bring this topic back up, but is this still valued?
I understand the perception point of view, in that a lot of people still trust the BBB as a company that highlights good businesses to work with.
BUT, as the links are now no followed, and the price for the accredited profile is very high, is it worth it? I can see it being so for a contractor, but for an agency?
-
I actually had to track that one down Deacyde ... if it were true that BBB was about to implement nofollow, then the value of the actual accreditation, from an SEO perspective, is just about nil.
And ... you're right, according to this article from Barry Schwartz. buzzkill
-
I actually just talked with BBB.org ( Greater Baltimore Area ) about this backlink issues, since we found a few competitors who had " FOLLOW " backlinks while we did not, all this while we paid their yearly subscription. After asking why this was, the BBB.org ( Greater Baltimore Area ) Informed us that this practice of follow links for backlinks was going bye bye.
**They told us that all follow backlinks will be changed to NOFOLLOW links shortly. **
As for the when the listings would be changed, that was answered " Whenever the webadmins of that area get to it ". So seems they were giving one group of customers one treatment while giving another the run around.
I don't think BBB.org will be around much longer after this major tidbit is implemented, since the overall site doesn't do much more than act as a verified source and google and plenty of others do this for free.
Spend your money on something with a better ROI, in my opinion.
-
In my humble opinion, the main benefits of a BBB accreditation are not SEO authority, but:
- Using the accreditation seal in print and banners to generate trust,
- Add the company's BBB-page as a review extension in Google AdWords - one of the few extensions that is generally accepted by Google as a valid reference.
This will not help with SEO ranking, but will improve the conversion rate, clickrate in AdWords, and therefore AdWords Quality Score and PPC ranking.
-
This would have to be a "value added" benefit...the link value has the advantage of the 96 Domain Authority, and the sample page I looked at had a 51 page authority.
The BBB rep I just spoke to about an address change and my own listing told me that you can be in many categories as long as they are relevant. This opens up additional link leverage from category/keyword listings with one membership. Examples are web design, search engine optimization (I did not see SEO), internet marketing, advertising-internet, marketing consultants, etc. so there may be more than one that fits for added link value.
There seems to also be space for a brief description, which could contain keywords
The Facebook and Twitter links are no-follow, and the web site link is a follow link, with no redirect, or anchor text.
The added value of having the BBB accreditation, and hopefully an A+ rating is the fact that not many web marketers have it and the search options on the BBB home page have a BBB accredited filter for category searches. Since our market is becoming more saturated by the minute, a BBB accredited logo on your home page may be a distinctive brand that encourages more confidence with site visitors. They also have a monthly pmt plan of $65. I'm considering membership for the above reasons. If I get one client as a result in a year it would pay for itself or more. Current clients may be impressed with the membership and more likely to give referrals. As far as authority and reputation, it would seem like it would help, maybe not in Google rankings directly, but in the social response to being A+ accredited. The listing that I viewed had a Share This widget, Google+1 button and Facebook like button on the profile page.
Just some thoughts. -
Good information, thanks!
Unfortunately, it looks like they want to charge us $775 per year. Seems awfully high.
-
Cool. All great points!
We're a pretty established site and have several very high quality links that were hard to get. From a pure SEO standpoint, I realize one link will not make a difference. But if we're able to keep accumulating high quality links such as this and (hopefully) not pay nearly as much, it would really increase our rankings and thus our business.
-
**This gets into the realm of opinion pretty fast **
I like your side attack based upon logic rather than opinion.
-
This gets into the realm of opinion pretty fast - it can be shockingly difficult to measure the value of one link. Here are a few of my opinions:
(1) One link is one link. It's rarely the magic pill people want it to be, even from a very authoritative site. I've seen people get a link like this and then wait on their hands for a sudden change in rankings, and it almost never comes. If you're just starting out and you have little or no link profile, a strong link can kick-start you, but I wouldn't pay $750 just to get a link if your site is established (I'm not sure I'd pay it even if your site is new).
(2) DA and PA both matter, and how much each matters can really vary with the situation. Your profile on a deep page of BBB is not an authority=96 link. It will carry weight, but the weight of any given profile could vary a lot.
(3) BBB has gotten a bit more aggressive, IMO, and I suspect Google will devalue these links over time. People tell me that they haven't yet, in this case, but it is, in essence, a paid link. Any day, Google could say "These BBB links are counting too much" and just lower the volume. So, don't put all your eggs in one basket, no matter what you do.
Now, to be fair, your BBB listing does have other value, like using it as a trust signal. The business case for spending the money goes beyond SEO, and that's a decision you have to make for yourself. If 100% of your interest in the listing is for a followed link, though, I personally would spend the money elsewhere.
-
I stand corrected. Thanks "Agents of Value"
-
BBB is one of those things that most business people have a strong opinion about (either for or against). From a pure SEO point of view, I consider it a very strong link. Here's why:
-
From a pure SEO link perspective, the directory has a very high DA and MozRank (by far the highest MozRank of any of the directories recommended by SEOmoz)
-
the directory is exclusive. You have to be a business owner to get listed. This prevents someone from listing 5 or 10 near-spammy sites, which crowd some other directories.
-
they are very exclusive about linking out. It's kind of annoying, but if you don't pay them again next year, you're link will be gone fast! It ultimately ensures that they are not linking to businesses that are no longer operating. This increases the overall trust of the directory.
-
the average consumer feels warm and fuzzy seeing a BBB banner, and viewing the businesses profile on the BBB website.
I think I paid something like $300 or $400 for it, so maybe the price varies depending on your region and business type? In any case, I'll continue to renew with the BBB every year.
-
-
I would assume their links are nofollow, but if the rep tells you otherwise.
Honeslty, i'd spent the $750 elsewhere.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Using Anchor Link in the Main Navigation
Has anyone ever used anchor links as a drop-down in a sub-collection from the main navigation and does it have any negative impact on link equity? My client has large product collections and sub-collections, these are then separated into further subsections which are open within the same page (see attached). What I want to do ideally is in the main navigation feature 'Mad Hatter Costumes and Accessories'. This will obviously have a # in the URL though and I am was wondering if this might hurt the chance of the page ranking? If anyone has any experience in this it would be really helpful!! Thanks in advance 🙂 m5Qd5VO
Conversion Rate Optimization | | BAO.Agency0 -
Can Very High Impressions and 0% Organic CTR Impact our SEO Rankings?
I have a very strange feeling that someone bad is trying to hurt our company, but maybe I am wrong. Let me explain. In the last two month, we have seen a very significant drop in sales on our website, but we couldn't figure out why. We have looked at different metrics (Google Search Console, Moz, Google Analytics), but everything looked alright. We had 10% loss in traffic, but we didnt believe at the time that it could be the main issue. Just yesterday we've discovered the following (please see attached screenshot😞 On August 18, 2018 Google launched Search Update On the same date, we had a jump in Organic Search Impressions for one particular keyword, which we never tracked before: "free facebook login". Majority of all impressions (233,000 out of 258,000) were from Philippines. Very low total number of clicks (50 clicks) led to 0% Average CTR for this keyword. Which in return, also lowered our global CTR by 1%. One month later we had 1000's of spam emails sent to our Helpdesk from two IP addresses, also from Philippines. We blocked them of course. It could be all coincidence. I dont know. But do you think that someone can use this fraudulent tactic to lower our CTR and drop our ranking and traffic? Can this influence our SEO in any way? It's also possible that someone is attacking Facebook and we just happen to be there, on the first page, for the same keyword. Should we try to eliminate our page for this keyword and see what happens? I've checked this article from Rand Fishkin - https://moz.com/blog/impact-of-queries-and-clicks-on-googles-rankings-whiteboard-friday and it seems that CTR is an important factor. However the article is from 2015 and maybe it's no longer relevant. What should we do? Thanks! G86Nge4
Conversion Rate Optimization | | plumrocket11 -
Adwords landing pages with no site links
Adwords best practices say to focus landing pages on conversions, with no navigational links to the rest of your website so they don't get distracted. However, now that Google Ads in the SERPs look so similar to organic results, visitors may click the ads instead of the organic result because that's what they see first. What is the risk of turning off these visitors who come to a landing page with a form, instead of a way to navigate through the rest of your site? Discussion question: Trade-offs between a form-focused landing page and providing navigation to the rest of the site?
Conversion Rate Optimization | | JannetteP1 -
Should I link from an optimised product image to the product page from a blog post?
If I am writing a blog post about a product, or a number of products, and I'm including optimised images of the product, should I link from the images to the product page in the shop? Usually I remove links from images as they lead visitors to a simple image page but could it be worth linking from an optimised image to a product? Thanks in advance.
Conversion Rate Optimization | | the_wildman0 -
Is there a way to track who clicks on these links?
At the bottom of my single page posts, I have some related posts. I'd like to set up some sort of GA tracking that lets me know how many people are actually clicking on those links. Anyone know if there is a way to do this? Thanks!
Conversion Rate Optimization | | NoahsDad0 -
14,000+ links a to one site - is this a problem?
First, thanks to those who have helped me before. Second, according to Google Webmaster there are about 14,765 external links to my site. According to Open Site Explorer I have 22. So a couple of questions: 1. Why such a discrepancy? 2. Of the 14,765 links shown in Google Webmaster 14,665 are all from one place and all link to my home page. The site is interiordesignproductfinder.com. In August of this year I bought a sponsorship there. There are several of these sponsors so which show up on a rotating basis. Will having 14,765 links all of a sudden showing up be grounds for some type of a Google downgrade? Why are there 14, 765 links instead of just one. Is a new link created every time our sponsorship rotates to the page? Another thing, in the past couple of months our conversions have dropped significantly. we average about 180 visits a day with a 50% bounce rate. Is there anything obvious thatt might have caused this drop? Thanks for any insights. Don www.uniquegiftsanddecor.com
Conversion Rate Optimization | | uniquegifts-2778790 -
Low conversion rate, high ticket item... but not THAT high
Oh great mozzers, I fall at your feet... I feel like I'm going insane... My client, 35 Degrees (http://35DegreesSteaks.com) is quite the mystery. I handle SEO and paid search for them, and we're doing great in those areas... however, we're just not seeing the conversions once I deliver these folks to the site. The people are targeted, the keywords are sound, and from what I can see, the checkout process isn't a mess... but they are just not getting the sales. We're currently starting to test some price points with some newer, lower cost "intro packages", so we'll see if that's one of the pain points. I'm also in the process of convincing them to include a Verisign or some other logo in the checkout process. However, I was hoping the great minds here could take a quick look and see if I'm missing anything else. Thanks in advance! Jeff
Conversion Rate Optimization | | fangdigital0 -
Good content but high bounce rate
Hi all, We run a website offering specialist turkey tours and gulet cruises. Our website holds a few information and recipes pages which are doing well in the engines and bring in alot of traffic. However these pages are crippling our bounce rate with bounces of about 80-90%. The time on site for these pages are above the websites average, but it seems that once the reader has finished with the information/ recipe, they bounce back to the Search engines. An example of one of our recipe pages can be found here: http://www.petersommer.com/turkey/turkish-food/pilav-rice/ We have thought about moving and redirecting these pages from our main site to a new website, but we are worried that it may effect our position in the SERP's. Can anybody offer any advice on this? Thanks
Conversion Rate Optimization | | petersommertravels0