<b>The exact-match risk number that isn't really about exact-match</b>
The oft-repeated heuristic — keep exact-match anchors under roughly 1 percent of your inbound profile — circulates as if it were lifted from a leaked algorithm. It was not. It descends largely from a small set of post-Penguin case studies and one widely-shared 2016 correlation pull where penalized domains skewed toward 30-60 percent commercial anchors.
There is a confound worth naming. Domains that buy keyword-rich anchors at scale also tend to buy them on low-quality sites, at unnatural velocity, into thin money pages.
— So is the penalty signal the anchor ratio, the source quality, or the velocity?
— The variables move together, which is exactly what makes isolating one of them from observational data nearly impossible.
On one hand, the original Penguin documentation does describe anchor manipulation as a targeted spam pattern. On the other, every public dataset that 'confirms' a specific threshold cannot separate anchor distribution from the donor profile it travels with.
Limitation: I have seen no controlled study that holds source quality constant while varying only exact-match ratio. Without that, the '1 percent rule' is a prior, not a measurement.
Open question: if you could acquire high-authority editorial links with exact-match anchors and natural velocity, would the ratio still matter at all — or does it only matter because it correlates with everything else that's wrong?
Anchor Theory
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<b>The exact-match risk number that isn't really about exact-match</b>
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