The "Digital Credit Score"
A Beginner’s Guide
to Domain Authority
Imagine you are trying to get a loan from a bank. Before
they hand over the cash, they check your Credit Score. The higher the
score, the more the bank trusts you.
In the world of SEO (Search Engine Optimization), Domain
Authority (DA) is essentially your website's credit score.
If you are new to blogging or business, seeing this metric
can be confusing. Is it from Google? Do I need a perfect score? Why is my score
stuck at 1?
Let’s break it down simply.
1. What Exactly is Domain Authority?
Domain Authority is a search engine ranking score developed
by the SEO software company Moz. It predicts how likely a website is to
rank on search engine result pages (SERPs).
The Basics:
- The
Scale: Scores range from 1 to 100.
- The
Goal: Higher scores correspond to a greater ability to rank.
- The
Reality Check: DA is NOT a Google metric. Google does not use
DA to decide where you rank. However, DA is a very accurate prediction
of how Google views your site's authority.
Analogy: Think of the internet as a high school.
Google is the Principal. Domain Authority is a popularity poll created by the
students. The Principal (Google) doesn't look at the poll, but the poll usually
predicts who the Principal will pick for Class President.
2. How is the Score Calculated?
Moz calculates this score by evaluating multiple factors,
but the biggest one is Backlinks.
Think of a link from another website to your website as a
"vote of confidence."
- If The
New York Times (DA 90+) links to your blog, that is a massive vote. It
tells search engines, "We trust this guy."
- If a
random, spammy website links to you, it’s a vote that doesn't count
for much (and might even look suspicious).
DA uses a logarithmic scale. This means:
- Growing
your score from 1 to 10 is very easy.
- Growing
your score from 20 to 30 is harder.
- Growing your score from 70 to 80 is extremely difficult.
3. What is a "Good" Domain Authority?
This is the most common question beginners ask. The answer
is: It depends on your competition.
You don't need a DA of 90 to be successful. You just need a
higher DA than the websites you are trying to beat.
|
Typical DA Score |
|
|
1 |
|
|
10 – 20 |
|
|
30 – 50 |
|
|
Major Media (CNN, BBC) |
90+ |
|
Google, Facebook |
100 |
The Strategy: If your competitors have a DA of 15, and you reach a DA of
20, you are winning!
4. How to Increase Your Domain Authority
You cannot simply "buy" a higher DA (and you
should never try, as Google will penalize you). You have to earn it. Here is
your cheat sheet:
A. Get High-Quality Backlinks
This is the #1 factor. Write amazing content that other
people want to link to.
- Guest
Post: Write articles for other reputable sites in your industry.
- Create
Resources: Make infographics or original studies that others will
cite.
B. Audit Your Bad Links
Sometimes, "toxic" websites link to you. Use an
SEO tool to find these spammy links and disavow them (tell Google to ignore
them).
C. Improve Your Internal Linking
Make sure your own blog posts link to each other. If you write a post about "SEO Basics," link it to your post about "Keywords." This creates a web that keeps visitors on your site longer.
5. The Golden Rule
Don't obsess over the number.
Focus on your content and your users. If you
create helpful, expert content that solves problems, high-quality websites will
naturally link to you over time, and your Domain Authority will rise on its
own.
Use DA as a comparative metric (to see how you stack up against competitors), not as your only measure of success.
Summary Checklist
- DA
is by Moz, not Google.
- It
measures your site's "reputation."
- Quality
backlinks raise your score.
- Aim
to beat your direct competitors, not Wikipedia.
Email: vijeeshkozhikode@gmail.com
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