-> Tip #1: Have great content
People need a reason to link to you – and it should be great content. Content comes in many forms:
o Editorial
o Research
o Multimedia – videos, podcasts, music, etc.
o Software
o Any valuable resource
o Two examples: Tools as content
E-Loan,
Inc. gets lots of links to its loan calculators, says Linda Harjono,
Director, Search Marketing, E-Loan, which helped the site earn a #2
Google ranking for “loan.”
One of the most linked-to pages on
Aaron Wall’s site, SEO Book, is the download page for his free SEO for
Firefox extension. The tool is useful, costs about $2,000 to create
(with more costs for later upgrades) and has more than 8,000 inbound
links, according to Yahoo! Site Explorer.
“When I first launched
it [in June 2006], after two days of direct sales, it actually paid for
itself…So, basically after two days, the links were all free,” he says.
o Link baiting
Link
bait is content designed to attract links. It’s similar to viral
content because it’s supposed to encourage sharing. Any relevant and
valuable resource, like research or a tool, could be considered link
bait. Other examples:
o Contests
o Humor –video, image, audio or text
o Controversial opinions
o Breaking news
o Free stuff
Host link bait on your site to get links. Do not make it a file to be shared like viral content.
-> Tip #2: Research your market
Valuable
links come from relevant sources – the websites in your market. Compile
a list of websites you want a link from. Go through the sites and see
how, why and where they link. Target pages with relevant content and
without a lot of other links.
o Research the competition
Yahoo! Site Explorer is a great free tool for uncovering websites that link to your competitors. Here’s how to use it:
o Type in your competitor’s URL, click “explore”
o Click “inlinks”
o Click “show inlinks: Except from this domain” to exclude internal links
o Click “to: Entire site” to see links to every page on the site
You’re
then given a list of every page that links to your competitor. Dig
through the list to find sites that might link to you. Ask yourself how
your competitor got the high-value links and build a strategy to do the
same.
-> Tip #3: Select good targets
Target websites that provide valuable links. A website’s link value is determined by:
o Content on the page
o Topic of the site
o Number of outbound and inbound links
o Amount of advertising
o Reputation with search engines
o Website age
Strive
for links from respected, well-established websites with a relevant
topic. The best have few outbound links, no advertising and lots of
content. Here are some universally good targets:
o Directories
Website
directories compile and organize links to sites all over the Web, and
their links are usually of good value. Almost every marketer we talked
to uses directories.
NOTE: Not every directory is trustworthy.
Some are prone to spam or have been created for SEO reasons. Search
engines look down on these directories and do not give them much value.
Three ways to tell if a directory is trustworthy:
o Rigorous editorial standards
o Submissions reviewed by humans
o Posting fee
See the hotlinks for three trusted directories.
o Partners
Your partners will usually link to your site. Several marketers we talked to said they were getting good results this way.
For
example, apartments.com partners with more than 150 newspapers in
leading markets as their exclusive rental content provider. “We benefit
from link building on the rentals sections of these highly credible and
relevant websites” says Maureen Boyle, Director of Marketing,
Apartments.com. That relationship helped Boyle and her team earn the #1
Google ranking for “apartment.”
Katia Adams, Assistant Manager, Interactive Marketing,
1-800-FLOWERS.com, says her team does reciprocal linking with partner florist shops to help keep their rankings high.
NOTE:
If partners do not share your level of SEO expertise, send them a short
document with some guidelines. Make some suggestions for the best types
of pages to link from, what content should be on the page, and where
the link should target. Be careful not to be too specific or demanding.
Too many identical links can bring severe search engine penalties.
o Clients, industry friends and contacts
Almost
anyone with a credible website and relevant content can give you a good
link. Eddie Smith, VP, Marketing and Business, SocialMedia Networks,
Inc, whose site is #2 in Google for “social media,” asks for a link at
almost every chance.
“Our inbound links are not coming from one
specific source, but from blogs, industry trade group postings, articles
that are written up about us, our own releases that the newswires pick
up, and so on,” he says. Other places you can request links:
- Web page that mentions your site
- Website of a conference where you’re speaking
- Journalists interviewing you
o Social media sites
Getting
on Digg’s or Reddit’s homepage can pack a big punch. Traffic to your
page will surge and links will pour in. Targeting these pages is similar
to link baiting and requires skillfully crafted content to meet the
tastes of an eclectic audience. (Find out how to get onto Digg from a
Sherpa special report, hotlinked below.)
o University, non-profit and government websites
These
non-commerce sites usually have deep content and no advertising. Their
links provide good value, but getting onto one can be difficult --
especially government sites. You must be a valuable resource for their
audiences.
o Blogs
Linking is ingrained in the
blogosphere. Almost every blog post links to another website.
High-profile blogs provide the highest value links, but their authors
are often inundated with requests, making it difficult to break through.
Most
high-profile bloggers will scoff at a direct link request. It’s better
to approach them casually with personal email (no templates) and forward
a great piece of content you think would interest their audience.
Relevancy and honesty are keys to reaching bloggers. Participating in
the blog’s forums will also build rapport.
Search engines tend to
pick up blog links quickly, Adams says. “If you need a quicker than
usual boost in ranking, blogs are very useful,” she says.
-> Tip #4: Get well-built links
Links are more valuable when they’re well-made.
o Get links that work
Certain
links, such as display ads, are marked to not provide search engine
benefits. They will send traffic to your website, but they will not help
your search rankings. Two ways links are rendered useless in this way:
1. Marked rel="nofollow" in their HTML
2. Redirected to an intermediate page that is blocked from search engines with a robots.txt file
Make sure you’re getting links that help your search rankings.
o Write good anchor text
The
words used in your links’ anchor text (the text users click) will
affect your search rankings. The more links you have with the anchor
text, the more likely you will have good search results. You want your
target search keywords in your link’s anchor text.
Getting the
anchor text you want is not always easy. You often don’t have control
and a webmaster or blogger will use your company’s name. That said,
using your target keywords in your company’s title and domain name will
help build better links.
o Warning: Vary your anchor text
Do
not ask every person linking to your site to use the same anchor text.
Search engines penalize sites that have too many inbound links with the
same text; it skews their results. They argue that “naturally” created
links would have more variance.
David Airey, Graphic and Logo
Designer, whose site is #3 in Google for “creative design,” ran a
link-building campaign offering $4,000 in prizes for his blog’s one-year
anniversary.
“That attracted a lot of links, but Google
penalized me for what they deemed ‘black hat SEO,’ for asking for
specific anchor text in the links. I then emailed all the participants,
asking them to remove the links to my site. I don’t think all of them
did, but my efforts were enough to reverse the penalty,” he says.
o Link to deeper pages
Getting
links to your homepage is great, but there is more real estate in your
website. Have websites link into your deeper content to help boost those
pages’ rankings, too.
1-800FLOWERS.com’s homepage is ranking so
well that Adams and her team are targeting the site’s deeper content.
“It’s more beneficial to get people to the collection page, the product
page, if that’s what they’re searching for,” she says.
o Have a wide age range
Have
a mix of old, fresh and new links coming in. Search engines are likely
to give better rankings to pages that attract links over time, rather
than only recently or in the past. This is another reason why link
building needs to be ongoing.
-> Tip #5: Write lots of press releases
Press
releases describe your business; they are relevant content. Always
include links to your site in releases. Several marketers we talked to
for this article said press releases are great for link-building.
Any
coverage generated by a release opens link opportunities. And the
releases themselves, when they’re disseminated through wire services,
become Web pages linking to your site.
The better your releases
are written, the more coverage and Web traffic they’ll attract. Web
developers and content writers on Harjono’s team receive special
training on writing optimized press releases to capture the attention of
journalists and search engines, she says.
->Tip #6: Organize, develop a strategy
o Track targets on spreadsheet
After conducting some research and making a list of targets, create a spreadsheet to track:
- Who you’ve contacted and how you contacted them
- Who provided a link and who did not
- Placement, target and anchor text of granted links
- Links providing the most traffic and SEO benefits
Monitoring
your efforts will help refine your contact strategy. You’ll start
realizing how best to contact a non-profit versus a blogger. You’ll
notice which sources are pushovers and which are difficult. You’ll know
which links provide the most value and who to target later.
o Integrate tactics
Link building is not a marketing tactic unto itself. It ties into:
-Keyword research -- put keywords in your anchor text
-Content creation -- create content that attracts links
-Website design -- organize your resources to making linking easier
-Media solicitation -- put links in every press release; ask for links in write-ups
-Partnerships -- reciprocal linking
Link
building needs to permeate your online strategy. One-time efforts, such
as a link bait video, are helpful, but a long-term integrated effort
will have better results.
->Tip #7: Follow the rules
The
consequences for breaking the search engines’ linking rules can be
disastrous. Rankings are the lifeblood of many marketers. To be
penalized to a low-ranked position could kill revenue. There are plenty
of ‘black hat’ (against the rules) and ‘gray hat' (probably against the
rules) tactics that can send your website into obscurity.
Black-hat
SEO is too dangerous to toy with. You can find great success and remain
undetected for months and years, but being discovered (or reported by a
competitor) could cost you your job or your business. It’s much safer
to consistently create content that people will enjoy linking to.
Three practices to avoid:
o Link buying
One
marketer we talked to is buying links through an agency with great
success. The agency maintains a network of high-quality editorial
publishers. The marketer is allowed to stipulate the types of websites,
anchor text, number and the target for his links.
As good as
that sounds, we strongly advise against this approach. Buying links to
influence page rank is against Google’s Webmaster Guidelines. If the
search engines discover this relationship, the marketer’s website will
be almost impossible to find via search.
o Excessive reciprocal links
Trading
links with your partners and friends is acceptable, but keep trades
within reason. If the number of these links is too high, you’re asking
for trouble.
o Link spamming, or linking on spammy sites
There
are places and websites where it is effortless to post a link. These
places are spam havens and should be avoided. A link on an irrelevant,
link-laden site is more likely to hurt your ranking than to help it.
This link sends a clear signal that you’re trying to bend the rules.
Most
places that attracted hoards of link spammers in the past have been
rendered useless by SEO. For example, most online forums will only allow
links with “nofollow” tags, which was not always the case.
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