<b>Unlinked brand mentions: ranking signal or wishful thinking?</b>
The "implied links" idea (from an old Google patent) says mentions of a brand without a hyperlink could still count toward reputation. Tempting, hard to test.
— I compared 18 brands in similar niches, splitting them by unlinked-mention volume (estimated via news/forum scraping) while holding linked-domain counts roughly constant.
— Brands in the high-mention group ranked better for their head terms, but they also had bigger ad budgets, more searches for their name, and more social footprint.
— When I controlled for branded search volume, the standalone mention effect shrank toward noise.
The nuance: unlinked mentions correlate with success, but mostly as a <i>symptom</i> of a known brand, not an independent lever you can pull cheaply. Branded search demand is the heavier confounder and possibly the real signal.
Caveat: estimating total unlinked mentions is error-prone; I undercounted private channels entirely.
Method note: mention scraping across news + 5 large forums; branded volume from keyword tools, 18 brands.
Confidence: low
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<b>Unlinked brand mentions: ranking signal or wishful thinking?</b>
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