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What is an Authority Site?

by Jack Humphrey on May 6

There are two distinct popular definitions of Authority Site on the web today.

One is used by search engine optimization people and search engines* themselves to give gravity to very large and popular sites.

It is rumored that Google gives more weight to links you get from sites like Wikipedia, Dmoz, and .edu and .gov sites.

I say rumor because this has not been claimed very publicly by Google, but our tests confirm it on our own sites.

Google calls the “establishment” websites “authority” sites.

That’s fine. Great definition within a context pertinent to search engines.

The second definition of authority is my own.

It is much like the first in that if I link to you there is pagerank authority behind it, but much more.

Authority in my definition is measured by respect from thousands of people linking to you and referencing your material, and being the obvious expert in your niche.

Authority sites are the sites you’ve bookmarked to visit again and again in any niche.

These sites have a high return visitor ratio and a high “pages per session” average. Meaning the site is not a throw away spam site but an authoritative and complete reference for the peope who visit it wanting to learn more about a topic.

You can see this is the kind of authority you want to achieve in your niche. Maybe someday you can even measure up to the narrow definition the engines use above as well.

But you won’t get there until you embrace the quality standards of sites you personally respect and admire and use with great frequency because of the good content, service, and tips provided.

Just like the term link popularity wasn’t coined by the engines, Authority is not the narrow definition search engines and SEOs use by itself.

It was a word used in the English language long before the internet came about and it can be used to help define myriad things, such as sites that are high-traffic, niche dominating authorities on a subject.

The Friday Traffic Report is an Authority site under this definition.

Hopefully this post will broaden the minds of those with questions like “just how do you think this is an authority site?” to include much more broad and meaningful marketing practices than simple search engine marketing by itself.

Yes Dorothy, there is much more traffic out there waiting to find your site than all the search engines put together could send you.

Get out of the single-minded pursuit of search engine marketing and you’ll actually get better rankings while driving far more traffic to your site.

*Oh let’s just say it, there’s just one search engine. Whenever I say “search engines” I mean Google, FYI. If Microsoft buys Yahoo they may, together, be able to be called a search engine.

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{ 1 trackback }

Anonymous
May 6 at 5:00 pm

{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

Alex Sysoef May 6 at 2:57 pm

I have to admit – I’m building my site using your blackbook (thnx ;) ) and revisiting your site once in a while … and wow – what a chance since my last vist. Love the new theme. Nicer, cleaner look

Matt Ellsworth May 6 at 5:36 pm

great definition – thanks for this. I have been reading more and more about authority sites – it seems that all the search engines will be moving to something along these lines.

Cindy English May 6 at 9:03 pm

Wow Jack!
Your Authority Site has a wonderful new look.
Very nice!

StevenR May 7 at 12:01 am

I have been studying the implications of Web 2.0 traffic and the “how-tos” of building an Authority Site for several months now, and Jack’s ABB is a great resource for anyone looking to build an “Authority Site”.

I just reported some results of a project I have been working on for the past couple of months (less than 70 days at the time of this writing) on my blog.

This project, which is a niche blog, was built on a modified Wordpress platform and promoted heavily using Web 2.0 strategies (following some advice I got from Jack at a seminar) along with some traditional SEO (off-page strategies such as article and link directory submissions).

The results so far have been great.

I look forward to learning more from Jack and this blog in the future.

Thanks for your time,
Steven

Laura Simmons May 3 at 7:05 am

I just have one question about this definition. Is there a minimum number for the terms large and popular? for example how many pages and how many visitors per day, week, month, etc.

JackHumphrey May 4 at 7:34 am

I'm sure someone has tried to lay out such specific rules, but I prefer to watch overall traffic numbers via compete.com and Alexa as well as the amount of discussion the site generates in comments and around the social web on Twitter, etc. That's enough for me to keep track of! :)

Tara Jan 7 at 11:54 am

This is exactly the definition /explanation of authority site I was looking for, thanks

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