20 Quick Ways to Increase Your Alexa Rank
Alexa.com is a subsidiary of Amazon.com and is a website which provides information on traffic levels for websites. The Alexa rank is measured according to the amount of users who’ve visited a website with the Alexa toolbar installed.
In this article, I’ll examine the importance of the Alexa Rank as it relates to site monetization while briefly discussing some of the weaknesses involved in using Alexa ranking as a reliable traffic measure for any website.
Lastly, I’ve also included an extensive list of twenty methods and strategies you can use to increase your Alexa Rank dramatically in the short and long run.
What is the Alexa Rank?
Put simply, the Alexa Rank is a ranking system which bases its ranking schema on the level of traffic each website receives from the number of people who visit a website with the Alexa toolbar installed.
See Alexa’s definition of the Alexa Traffic Rank:
The traffic rank is based on three months of aggregated historical traffic data from millions of Alexa Toolbar users and is a combined measure of page views and users (reach). As a first step, Alexa computes the reach and number of page views for all sites on the Web on a daily basis.
The main Alexa traffic rank is based on the geometric mean of these two quantities averaged over time (so that the rank of a site reflects both the number of users who visit that site as well as the number of pages on the site viewed by those users)
Why would you want to increase your Alexa rank?
Webmasters, advertisers and ad networks use your blog’s Alexa rank as a gauge to determine the worth of a link on your website. If you depend on link or site selling as a form of monetization you’ll definitely want to increase your Alexa rank, because it’ll increase your bargaining power when it comes to ad pricing.
ReviewMe, Text Link Ads and Sponsored Reviews are just three of the networks which base your ad selling strength on Alexa Ranks.
Problems with the Alexa Rank
Alexa ranking is heavily skewed towards websites which have a large webmaster/tech audience. This is because webmasters or web savvy audiences are much more likely to have the Alexa toolbar installed than websites whose visitors are unaware of Alexa.
As such, many have indicated that Alexa is a vastly inaccurate method of measuring a website’s reach, traffic and potential. I don’t disagree.
Alexa is a silly way to measure web traffic but unfortunately, in an imperfect world Alexa is still heavily used by webmasters and ad networks when measuring the value of advertising on your website.
I understand the defects of Alexa’s ranking system and I’m not going to go into more detail about it here. What’s primarily important to me is that the Alexa Rank has become a central element in site monetization strategies.
I’m not concerned with the utility and value of Alexa but it’s perceived importance in the eyes of potential advertisers.
Dosh Dosh’s Alexa Rank
Since moving to my own domain (from Blogspot) in the middle of January 2007, Dosh Dosh has moved from a rank of around 3 million to the current Alexa rank of 21, 709 within two months.
The growth has been consistent and I think most of it was due to the fact that the content on Dosh Dosh is orientated towards webmasters. Another plausible reason is because overall daily traffic for Dosh Dosh has been growing steadily day by day.
The increase in Alexa Rank was also partially due to the fact that I’m active in several webmaster forums, notably Digital Point which sends me some visitors every day. Getting stumbled and receiving thousands of visitors in a day has also undoubtedly helped to increase Dosh Dosh’s Alexa Rank.
How do I get started with Alexa?
There are two easy ways to start using Alexa. If you are using Internet Explorer, visit this page and download the Alexa Toolbar. If you’re using Firefox, download the SearchStatus extension which displays the Alexa Rank, Google PageRank as well as other useful features.
I highly recommend that you use Firefox and SearchStatus instead of Alexa toolbar, which I find to be more bulky and less useful.
Can one actually game or manipulate the Alexa Ranking?
I believe that there are methods which will allow you to easily bring an Alexa ranking in the millions down to the 100,000 level. However, bringing it past the 10,000 or 1,000 mark is a considerably more difficult process, because of the stiff competition among websites.
Some have adamantly stated that there are no proven ways to game Alexa, while others have claimed that auto-surfs and scripts do work to some degree.
I’m not going to take any sides because I can’t guarantee that auto-surfs or other artificial methods will have similar effects for every blog.
The easiest way to know to know if any of the tips mentioned below really work is to actually try them for yourselves and monitor the results.

20 Ways to Increase your Alexa Rank
Here is a collection of methods you can use to boost your Alexa Rank. Most of these tips are derived from several fellow webmasters I know who claimed to have derived positive results through their experiments with the Alexa Rankings.
Some of the other tips were derived articles and sources, which I have duly referenced at the end of this post.
Do these tips work? According to some, yes they definitely do work. But do note that most of them require active effort of some sort and hence, they will work as long as long as you are consistently performing specific actions.
To increase your Alexa rank in the long run, I would highly recommended that one focus on developing quality content which attracts and maintains a large audience instead of purely focusing on artificially increasing your Alexa Rank.
Great link-worthy content will leads to an natural increase in site traffic and is an excellent way to passively increase your Alexa rank.
It is important to emphasize that you should devote most of your efforts in growing your site audience alongside integrated implementation of any of the following tips below.
- Install the Alexa toolbar or Firefox’s SearchStatus extension and set your blog as your homepage. This is the most basic step.
- Put up an Alexa rank widget on your website. I did this a few days ago and receive a fair amount of clicks every day. According to some, each click counts as a visit even if the toolbar is not used by the visitor.
- Encourage others to use the Alexa toolbar. This includes friends, fellow webmasters as well as site visitors/blog readers. Be sure to link to Alexa’s full explanation of their toolbar and tracking system so your readers know what installing the toolbar or extension entails.
- Work in an Office or own a company? Get the Alexa toolbar or SS Firefox extension installed on all computers and set your website as the homepage for all browsers. Perhaps it will be useful to note that this may work only when dynamic or different IPs are used.
- Get friends to review and rate your Alexa website profile. Not entirely sure of its impact on rankings but it might help in some way.
- Write or Blog about Alexa. Webmaster and bloggers love to hear about ways to increase their Alexa rank. They’ll link to you and send you targeted traffic (i.e. visitors with the toolbar already installed). This gradually has effects on your Alexa ranking.
- Flaunt your URL in webmaster forums. Webmasters usually have the toolbar installed. You’ll get webmasters to visit your website and offer useful feedback. It’s also a good way to give back to the community if you have useful articles to share with others.
- Write content that is related to webmasters. This can fall in the category of domaining and SEO, two fields in which most webmasters will have the Alexa toolbar installed. Promote your content on social networking websites and webmaster forums.
- Use Alexa redirects on your website URL. Try this: http://redirect.alexa.com/redirect?www.doshdosh.com . Replace doshdosh.com with the URL for your website. Leave this redirected URL in blog comments as well as forum signatures. This redirect will count a unique IP address once a day so clicking it multiple times won’t help. There is no official proof that redirects positively benefit your Alexa Rank, so use with caution.
- Post in Asian social networking websites or forums. Some webmasters have suggested that East Asian web users are big Alexa toolbar fans, judging by the presence of several Asia-based websites in the Alexa Top 500. I suggest trying this only if you have the time or capacity to do so.
- Create a webmaster tools section on your website. This is a magnet for webmasters who will often revisit your website to gain access to the tools. Aaron Wall’s webpage on SEOTools is a very good example.
- Get Dugg or Stumbled. This usually brings massive numbers of visitors to your website and the sheer amount will have a positive impact on your Alexa Rank. Naturally, you’ll need to develop link worthy material.
- Use PayperClick Campaigns. Buying advertisements on search engines such as Google or Exact Seek will help bring in Traffic. Doubly useful when your ad is highly relevant to webmasters.
- Create an Alexa category on your blog and use it to include any articles or news about Alexa. This acts as an easily accessible resource for webmasters or casual search visitors while helping you rank in the search engines.
- Optimize your popular posts. Got a popular post that consistently receives traffic from the search engines? Include a widget/graph at the bottom of the post, link to your Alexa post or use Alexa redirection on your internal URLs.
- Buy banners and links for traffic from webmaster forums and websites. A prominent and well displayed ad will drive lots of webmaster traffic to your website, which can significantly boost your rank.
- Hire forum posters to pimp your website. Either buy signatures in webmaster forums or promote specific articles or material in your website on a regular basis. You can easily find posters for hire in Digital Point and other webmaster forums.
- Pay Cybercafe owners to install the Alexa toolbar and set your website as the homepage for all their computers. This might be difficult to arrange and isn’t really a viable solution for most. I’m keeping this one in because some have suggested that it does work.
- Use MySpace . This is a little shady so I don’t recommended it unless you’re really interested in artificially inflating your Alexa Rank. Use visually attractive pictures or banners and link them to your redirected Alexa URL. This will be most effective if your website has content that is actually relevant to the MySpace Crowd.
- Try Alexa auto-surfs. Do they work? Maybe for brand new sites. I think they are mostly suitable for new websites with a very poor Alexa rank. Note that there be problems when you try to use auto surfs alongside contextual ads like Adsense. They aren’t also long term solutions to improving your Alexa Rank so I suggest using with caution.
Resources on Alexa Rank
Several of the tips listed above were taken from Aaron Wall’s article on Alexa Ranking. This post by Aaron will also give you some insight on Alexa’s webmaster bias.
A lower Alexa number means a greater level of traffic, and the traffic drops off logarithmically. You can fake a good Alexa score using various techniques, but if it shows your rankings in the millions then your site likely has next to no traffic.
Alexa by itself does not mean that much, but it simply provides a rough snapshot of what is going on. It can be spammed, but if a site has a ranking in the millions then it likely has little traffic.
Peter Norvig writes about Alexa Toolbar and the Problem of Experiment Design. He examines some problems with Alexa as a traffic measuring tool:
But one bias they don’t really comment on is the selection bias: the data would be good if it truly represented a random sample of internet users, but in fact it only represents those who have installed the Alexa toolbar, and that sample is not random.
The samplees must be sophisticated enough to know how to install the toolbar, and they must have some reason to want it. It turns out that the toolbar tells you things about web sites, so it is useful to people in the SEO (Search Engine Optimization) industry, so it overrepresents those people.
Google’s Matt Cutts compares his website against Ask.com and explains why his website enjoys such an impressive Alexa ranking:
One possible source of skewing in Alexa data is a bias toward webmaster-y sites. Alexa shows how popular web sites are, so it’s natural that webmasters install the Alexa toolbar.
Some do it just so that their normal day-to-day visits around the web (including their own site) are added to Alexa’s stats. The net effect is that webmaster-related sites are going to look more important to Alexa
Marketing Scoop has some tips on improving the Alexa Rank. (Thanks Beth!)
A very long thread on Digital Point which sees webmasters having a discussion on how Alexa Ranks can be gamed or manipulated through scripts and auto-surfs. Worth a read.
There you have it… twenty ways to boost your Alexa Rank and increase your site’s monetization potential.
What do you think of Alexa? Have you tried increasing your Alexa Rank by any of these methods?
If you’ll like to receive future updates on ways to improve your Alexa Rank, do consider subscribing to my blog feed.
I’m not a big fan of the over-dependence on Alexa’s ratings by ad companies and such. Here’s another recent article (not by me) on how Alexa is bunk.
But I guess that the main reason for its widespread use, as well as comparable nebulous measures of page importance like PageRank, is that there aren’t really any alternatives that can do a better job at offering easily-accessable and (theoretically) unbiased usage statistics. What a lousy situation.
Wow, very informative, surprisingly I finished the whole post reading every single word of it ’cause I think it’s very helpful for my blogs as I recently move my blogspot blogs to own domains
Some very useful tips there Maki goo job! I can smell the linkbait from here! The alexa ranking for my blogspot blog shows what your saying about the techie/webmaster bias. When I got 1 link from JohnChow.com (for winning the guess my income contest), it sent me about 130 unique visitors (roughly equivalant to a single days traffic), but the spike in my Alexa rank was over 5 times higher than It was before!
Amazing post with all sorts of great alexa information. I have never really concerned myself with alexa but maybe I should. Thanks again!
Looks like I had underestimated Alexa rank. Thanks for the tutoral.
Hey Maki.
Again, another awesome post.
I have to say that the thing that worked best for me was when I put the Alexa widget on my blog. My ranking increased by 26% from 130,000ish to 80,000! I wrote about it in a Case Study at Yaro’s Forums in more detail if you wanna see it.
Cheers,
Adnan
hmmm I had heard about the alexa widget also, from Yaro I think, but one of his readers emailed Alexa and got a confirmation that the widget should not have any effect upon the rankings.
Nice site, Like the post it’s taken me 3 months to get my ranking down from 130 something to 1,116,528.
I read that installing the Alexa toolbar would help with rankings.
Fair enough but ultimately Alexa is a mass market measure. With the sheer number of sites and blogs these days I think it is more important to have focus and server a particular market segment.
thank for the valuable tips..i also post it in my blog..(“,)
Top post as ever, where do you find the time?
I installed the widget recently on the recommendation of eJabs, and my ranking has improved, but then so has my traffic, so it’s hard to judge its effects properly.
I shall definitely try out some of these, and probably write about it as well, you little linkbaiter you, as although Alexa is a load of crap, PayPerPost use it as well.
It’s quite comical though, as some advertisers don’t understand what they’re asking for and want a PR1 blog with an Alexa rank of 20,000. Good luck with that.
I never paid much attention to my Alexa ranking until I noticed the ranking getting better around the same time my readership started to increase. Great tips, Maki!
Nice write up. Actually, I’ve not tried artificial methods to inflate rankings, but since the past couple of weeks my ranking is steeply dropping from 26K to around 30K. I don’t know the reason behind this.
Adding a Alexa Widget might help? What do you say?
Thilak, you can try it and monitor the results for a week or so.. you should definitely be able to see whether it works or not within the time frame.
Ah… I’ve got a brilliant idea. I’ll set display:none for that widget, so that it doesn’t appear.
Thilak: If you do that, some browsers might be “smart” enough to not load something that the users can’t see. If you really want to play CSS tricks, try good ol’ {position:absolute; left:-1000;}
Hi DoshDosh,
Thanks for this article. I too agree that it’s pointless in general to hang everything on a ranking service that only determines rankings based on the use of its toolbar, but such as life. I’m going to try installing the toolbar at home and setting my homepage to customerservant.com and see what that does. I don’t know if recommending that anyone who works in an office setting should install the toolbar on all work stations and set the homepage to their particular URL. that could get a lot of people in trouble. I’ll be blogrolling this blog, and I look forward to reading through your archives.
I agree with Scott-content is key. What people fail to realize, sure, they may be receiving traffic, but in the long run, are the visitors to the site reading the content? When it comes to paid posts, this is the point I have been trying to get across. Advertisers do not necessarily understand Alexa and the ways people “game” the system. A blog can have an Alexa rank of 50,000, but how many unique readers are viewing an advertisers post or clicking on a link? If I had something to advertise I would rather a blog have well written content, a steady flow of regular readers as well as a high PR. Technorati rankings are important as well. I use the redirect and that’s it. With the sudden surge in bloggers wanting to lower their ranks, I went from 75,000 something to 244,000 something, yet my traffic flow has remained the same. Just my 2 cents worth.
Maki, Thank you
Great info!!!
Pratheep
I’m bookmarking this to try them later.. I was wondering why my Alexa ranking is so bad.
Thanks for informative post Maki!
Cool tips, I really like the Alexa redirect, although that just increases page load time.
I installed the Alexa widget and my ranking went up, but it’s been increasing steadily anyway, so I’m not sure if that has anything to do with it.
thanks for sharing this informative post.great job dude.
Thank you for this post! I am trying to increase my alexa rank. I bookmarked this page for later reference.
Thanks,
a lot of useful tips…
Great info.
lots of good info on Alexa
Cheers
Thanks for all the info there, I’ve just signed up to PayPerPost, and need to improve my Alexa rating – 4 months ago it wasn’t too bad, I’ve since dropped off their scale, despite my traffic tripling!
Need to try and figure that one out.
One thing not mentioned in your blog is that if your site is Tech/Security related, it is quite likely your savvy visitors will have run AdAware/S&D Spybot and removed Alexa settings from their reg… just a thought.
I’ve included the Alexa re-direct in my URL above, if anyone gets a spare 5 seconds, PLEASE do click it.
Even better if you want to leave a comment on my blog, but a simple ‘Alexa aware’ visit would be brilliant
Thanks again.
Thanks for the tips.
I’ll implement some of these tips and see how it goes from here.
Wish me luck.
Great tips there, I’m currently setting up a new website to review the make money online ebook and come across your blog. I think the missing pieces in most ebook is the latest information about how to promote website or blog, and it’s seem some of your blog info on “how to bring traffic” is more useful/helpful then the ebook!
I have just implemented the redirect URL (redirect.alexa.com?…) on my website. Will monitor and see if it makes a difference
Hello,
First of all, a big thank you. Great tips there, but unfortunately I am not able to use most of them for my football/soccer site.
Another great post! I’m curious about the Asian Social networking sites you mentioned. . . care to share some of them?
Great Tip’s! I’ll try to up my site rank. Thank’s
Hi Maki!
This is such an interesting post. I had no idea about any of this, except about adding the Toolbar.
Interestingly, my alexa ranking has increased phenomenally since I moved my blogger account to WordPress in just 5 weeks time.
Memes, original unique content, forums, etc. have been critical…I was just honestly trying hard to increase traffic to my blog, and not manipulate the ranking. I only installed the alexa ranking widget after I reached the 800K the # I left when I went offline last year. In a week I’m already at 500K. You definitely got me thinking over here…(a good thing too)
I subscribed to your Feed as a result.
I’ll definitely try and promote your tips.
Peace!
Well, I installed the toolbar into firefox. I also have the widget on my domain, however I was curious as to if just having the widget on the sidebar would be enough or do actual visitors really need to have the toolbar installed.
Back again…
Quick thought on #4 and #18.
As both of these instances would only involve a single internet connection, with many users sharing it, I’m pretty sure they would only count as one Alexa visit per day.
To clarify, in a workplace or net cafe, there would only be ONE IP address on the net, each user’s internal network IP address wouldn’t be recorded by Alexa at all, it is their WAN IP address that is important, not LAN.
Don’t get me wrong, the rest of the tips are still sound, but I’m not sure if the two points mentioned would actually help compared to the others.
@Chris
Thanks for your input. I’m aware that there is only one IP address for most workplaces or net cafes..I thought there might be some exceptions to the case (one never knows!) so I left the two tips up..
BTW have I seen you around at Digital Point? Your blog seems rather familiar to me
@Will
I think having the toolbar installed is by far the most important element when it comes to improving your rank. The widget I’ve placed on my blog gets clicked on a LOT every day so that counts as a visit, even if the visitor doesn’t have the toolbar installed. Best to combine both strategies.
@Ponn
Thanks .. glad you found the tips to be useful!
@Joshua
Sorry for replying so late but I think you can find a large number of Asian social networking/voting sites at the following link:
http://tinyurl.com/2d5pp6
It would be great if you knew how to read Japanese/Chinese/Korean though
cheers for the reply.
I don’t think I’ve posted at DP before, but you may have seen me on PPP’s forums.
Either that or I’m using the same theme on my blog as someone else who you visit :>
I’ve been monitoring my Alexa stats the past week, I’ve gone from 6901698 to 1462389 – still not amazing, but definitely a good improvement.
PS Any chance you could clarify/link which widget to install on blogs? I’ve seen a few around, and am not sure which is worth it.
Chris,
You can get the Alexa widget at the following link:
http://alexa.com/site/site_stats/signup
It’s the official widget from Alexa.com.. BTW Congrats on the improvement for your Alexa Stats.. something must be working
Dosh,
Thanks alot, I did your tips and my addition, I visited sites that used tool bar(Social Trading-Google it)…This took my rank from top 3,000,000 to top 13K yesterday…www.ezluv.com
Awesome!!! Great Tips…
Over the last few weeks I’ve added the widget to my site and also installed Search Status to all my pc’s Firefox installs.
So far I’ve gone from around 2.5mill to 650k.
Thanks for the good advice!
Cool Info Buddy
Maki: I take it the site stats Alexa button is only good for those who have their own domain? i have a blogger blog and when i input my URL it brings up bloggers stats, not mine. i wish veggie-blogs rank was 15. (lol)
Thanks for this tip. I’ve just installed a widget to one of my site. Will try it out.
Huuuuuuuge thanks.
I’ve gone from 1,462,389 to 834,837 in 10 days after installing the widget you gave the URL for.
(I previously went from 6,901,698 from to the aforementioned 1,462,389 in 9 days by using the Alexa redirects in a few forums sigs.)
hey, i didn’t know i can put redirect alexa … great tip … will change my template accordingly and see the result in a couple of days …
thanx … cheers
another question – can you actually put redirect into your blogger’s template? i tried to submit to digg with the re-direct (just to test) but it doesn’t allows but a real link without redirect is ok …
can anyone clarify? ….
cheers …
StockTube
I’m not sure if you can put the redirect into your blogger template. Perhaps it would be better to just use it as a link in blog comments/forum signatures etc.?
I had the Alexa widgets on all my pages (about 70,000 of them) and it made NO change to my Alexa ranking.
Rainer, can I ask which widgets you used? I’m using the highlighted in the comments above by the article author, and in less than a month went from just under 7 million to my present rank of 567,668…
Re. number 12 – Get Dugg or Stumbled. This usually brings massive numbers of visitors to your website and the sheer amount will have a positive impact on your Alexa Rank.
A recently blog post of mine was dugg and stumbled upon. Over 20,000 visitors during a 4-day period and not even a blip registered on Alexa.
I’ll try the stuff today. And the redirect tip is new to me! Thanks.
Will,
That is a little contrary to my personal experience and the experience of webmasters I know. Perhaps Alexa is slow in updating their traffic figures?
SEOMOZ has a more documented article on the positive impact of a frontpage Digg on factors such as Alexa. Worth a read.
http://www.seomoz.org/blog/anatomy-of-a-super-digg
Maki,
It wasn’t massively Dugg (50+), but it was referenced by a few popular Linux websites and this was back in early April.
Go figure!
Will,
Perhaps it has something to do with Linux users not using Alexa?
Generally, traffic spikes caused by social networks for all my websites always show up on Alexa.
Perhaps, its some fault at Alexa’s end. You could try emailing them for more information..
I have been reading Aaron Wall for quite some time, even back in the day when he used to frequent WebProWorld forums. I thought I knew quite a lot about Alexa, except for that widget idea — will have to give that a shot.
On the redirect in forum/comment signatures though. Maybe I will use that for the “nofollow” variety. Not sure if I want to give up any backlink clout if they are followable.
So everybody smack my link above … lol
“Perhaps it has something to do with Linux users not using Alexa?”
LOL! I joked at that possibility on my blog, but I wouldn’t have anything to base such an assumption on.
To be honest, I’m not concerned enough about it to chase Alexa on the lack of blipiness especially since there might well be a legitimate reason why it was so.
Hmm… My page did not have statistics at Alexa. Need to try out your tips here. Thanks a lot.
Maki,
Thank you for an excellent article. I am still fairly new to the whole webmaster experience and am finding your site very useful.
I have amended my post to indicate more clearly that your article was the original source. I have also moved the link to your site “above the fold� so that it is visible on the front page. Sorry about the original version; I was really in too much of a hurry to get my article finished and should have taken more time to make sure that you were properly credited.
Mine is a fairly new blog at 3 weeks old. I haven’t checked my Alexa ranking as I imagined it’s not going to be a pretty sight. Well, I guess I have to start somewhere.
I’ve just found the best resource to help me out.
Thanks!
The Tips Of All Sorts blog isn’t ‘webmastery’ but I hope the 20 methods will still work well. It’ll be strange if all the webmastery sites get all the attention, then in that case, Alexa should just rank sites for webmasters.
I think some of the methods should work to some extent, Clara. Some of the sites in the Alexa Top 500 are not webmaster sites at all so I do think you have a shot at improving your rank. All the best for your blog.
Thanks Maki!
Those who are able to squeeze within the top 500 are the super superpowers!
Hi Maki,
Thanks for this excellent rundown on Alexa, I found your post through David at PureBlogging.com.
I write about health so I won’t be writing about web topics, however I did install the firefox searchstatus extension, and just now put a widget on my blog.
Thanks!
A very good post to actually experiment with your alexa ranking. I have surfed a lot to get information regarding the ways to increase my website traffic, but now I feel like I hit gold at last. Lets see if my alexa ranks increase by applying the suggested ways…THANKS!!!
Hello Maki
It is an excellent post with details to improve alexa ranking. I beleive all these methods work only when the site ranking is too low. Once site ranking is high, these methods may not have much effect on alexa ranking.
Regards and thanks for great tips.
Great post! Some new ideas in here, thanks! I esp. like the alexa category creation idea.
Good post, but I did see that you’re guessing on some of the tips.
Jason,
I never claimed that they worked 100% in the article so nobody is guessing here. I’m just reporting what some friends and webmasters have suggested has worked for them based on their experiences. You can pick and choose whichever methods you want and try it for your sites.
I never gave a preference to alexa rank but after this I felt I should do some attention on my alexa rank.
Thanks for sharing us
I’ve been seeing my alexa rank slowly go up for quite some time already, in the past few months so far I’ve reached up to a rank of around 420.000 and still going up (or should I say down).
Many of the tips given here are valid tips, and definitely if you’re going for the entire alexa rank thing something you should pay note to.
Excellent post! I wish I would have read it months ago. Since then Ive joined EZ hitz and put an Alexa widget on my site…. My page rank # (with the effects of both) has literally dropped by 1/2! Thank you very much
The best description about “How to improve the alexa rank”.
Thank a lot!
Thanks for the great post.
Does anyone know how to contact some computer cafe places about getting your site set as their homepage?
Thanks for the post
I installed the alexa site meter and over night I saw a jump in my stats.
my stats where already on the rise but not at the same rate.
Thanks again
Thax alot about the hints, so let me add 21th:
Write some comments on this page as redirecting your site from alexa
http://redirect.alexa.com/redirect?www.leothemaster.net
I just create a blog and put the alexa widget on my page, and i am with a alexa rank of 16. I think something is wrong. Could you help me?
That is the Alexa rank for http://www.blogspot.com , until you get a little more traffic, your blog, which is a subdomain of blogspot – jotavelog.blogspot.com, will display blogspot’s traffic, not yours.
At least that is my understanding of the situation…
For #10, maybe just post some blog comments on tech/webmaster blogs that are based in Asia or have an Asian following.
I think that these tips are very useful, but sometimes I am worry about cheating our self. If we play fair and nice, we can feel proud!
Thanks for the great information. I tried out a suggestion today.
hey thnks
nice article i will try to implemet a few on my website http://www.pixelgroups.com
thanks again for the info. looks very informative
You have offered content that is very valuable. It has helped me in the maze of information about rankings and other things I am learning to get information about my art strategies to artists and art lovers.
I really appreciate your unselfish sharing.
Thanks,
Ray
I’ve created a Wordpress Plugin for the Alexa Redirect. You might want to check it out.
http://www.thebloggable.com/one-step-to-50-improved-alexa-ranking/
Interesting idea for a plugin; I’ve left a comment over there re. a couple of queries regarding it.
PS Quick note to admin at doshdosh , it looks as though your template needs a small adjustment – you have the word ‘at’ following the date section for each comment, but not the time itself; might be worth either removing the ‘at’, or adding the ‘g:i a’ and related stuff to your single.php or wherever it is stored…
Has anyone noticed that there appears to be no way to review a site for Alexa anymore? I’ve searched every corner of the Alexa page for my blog for a review link but I couldn’t find any. Or am I just going loopy?
How about this idea: make a url on your site which redirects to any URL you pass it, and whenever you want to link to an external site, use alexa with your redirect – like this: alexa.com/?redirect=mysite.com/redirect.php?anothersite.com
That way you are always gaining an extra hit when you send users away. Do you think that would work?
It is very useful article. I got many things clear about Alexa. Thanks
Great tips, I didn’t know that a click from the widget counted as a visit. I’m going to give a few of these a try, thanks for posting it. I’m glad I found the blog.
Cheers
-Brandon
I installed alexa toolbar on my desktop, it works fine. But whenever I try to install it on my laptop my Avast anitivirus tells it`s a Adware (desktop has another antivirus) and I stopped immediately. Shall I install it in laptop regardless of the warning. Please suggest.
Great, easy to try tips:)
[...] Website owners concerned about making money on their sites should therefore strive to increase their Alexa rank. Maki wrote an excellent article on how to do this [...]
A better option is to make the Alexa redirecting JavaScript-powered: in this way
the HTML will not be modified, and the redirects will still work. I’ve applied
this technique to a new plugin called Better “Alexa Redirect” WordPress
plugin. If you are interested about it, visit this URL to learn more
about it:
http://kaloyan.info/blog/better-alexa-redirect-plugin/
or visit this page to download it:
http://wp-alexa-redirect.googlecode.com/
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