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SEO Linking Domains Defined How to Track New & Lost Links

Websites that link back to yours are known as linking domains, or referring domains. They are essential to SEO because they increase the authority and rankings of your website. This blog discusses linking domains, their significance beyond backlinks, and effective tracking techniques. For long-term SEO success, you can use tools like SeoBix to monitor new and lost referring domains, evaluate the quality of links, and enhance your backlink profile.

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SEO Linking Domains Defined How to Track New & Lost Links

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  1. What Are Linking Domains in SEO Let's get this straight-SEO is full of weird terms. One of them is "linking domains." Sounds fancy, right? But really, it's simple stuff. And if you're trying to rank your site, knowing about linking domains can actually help a lot. So what are they? Why do they matter? And how do you even track them without turning it into a headache? Let's break it down, no fluff. What the heck is a linking domain? A linking domain (also called a referring domain) is just a website that links to yours. That's it. Doesn't matter if it links once or ten times-it still counts as one domain. For example, say Forbes links to your site in one article. That's one linking domain. Now imagine they link to you again in a different article-still just one linking domain, even though you've got two backlinks. That's the key difference. Backlinks are the number of links. Linking domains are the number of websites sending those links. So, why do linking domains even matter? Good question. And the answer's pretty straightforward: 1. Google trusts variety When Google sees a bunch of different websites linking to yours, it sees that as a sign of trust. It's like getting a thumbs-up from lots of different people instead of one person clapping loudly.

  2. 2. One site can only do so much Sure, you could get 50 backlinks from one blog, but Google's smart. It knows that's just one source. Getting 50 links from 50 different domains? That hits harder. 3. It spreads the risk If you've got all your links coming from a handful of sites and one of them shuts down or removes you, boom-your SEO takes a hit. Having a wide mix of linking domains protects you. Alright, how do you track linking domains? Let's say you want to see who's linking to you. You don't need to be some tech genius. Use tools that do the hard part There are tools like Ahrefs, Moz, SEMrush... but if you want something simple and clean, SeoBix makes life easy. Pop your domain in, hit search, and you'll get a breakdown. You can see: - How many websites are linking to you - Which ones are new or lost - The authority score of each domain - What kind of pages are linking to you Pretty handy, especially if you hate spreadsheets. Check regularly Things change. One month you gain 20 new domains, the next you lose five. Keep checking. Weekly, monthly-whatever works for you. Just don't ignore it for six months and wonder why your

  3. rankings dropped. See what your competitors are up to SeoBix (and some other tools) let you spy a little-check where your rivals are getting their links from. If there's a site linking to three of your competitors but not you, that's a hint you're missing out. How do you get more linking domains? Tracking is cool, but building them? That's the real move. Here's what actually works: - Make content worth linking to - Not just blog posts. Think guides, tools, checklists, stuff people want to share. - Talk to people - No, seriously. Reach out. If you find a site in your niche that's missing a helpful link (ahem, yours), shoot them a short email. - Fix broken stuff - There are tons of dead links out there. Find one, and offer your page as a replacement. Win-win. - Do guest posts - Reach out to blogs in your space and offer to write something good. They get content, you get a link. Easy trade. No need to game the system. Just be useful, and the links will come. Wrapping this up Linking domains might sound like another SEO buzzword, but they're actually a big deal. One backlink from 100 websites? That's gold. A hundred backlinks from one website? Not so much. Track your domains. Watch for growth. See where the gaps are. And when in doubt, just keep building content people want to link to.

  4. If you're not already doing this, start now. A tool like SeoBix can show you who's linking to you, what you're missing, and how you stack up. No fluff, just straight-up insights. Read the full blog here: https://seobix.com/blog/what-are-linking-domains-in-seo-how-to-track-them

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