Links Range from Good to Bad to Ugly: Ride Your Links to Success |  | Visited: 1056 |
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| | by Frederick Townes October 05, 2007 |
| Frederick Townes |
| Frederick Townes is the the owner of W3 EDGE Web Design. W3 EDGE is a Boston web design
company that provides extensive conversion optimization, SEO-friendly
web designs and Internet Marketing services. W3 EDGE is also pleased to
offer their clients reliable professional web hosting solutions with tons of features and extremely fast servers. |
| Frederick Townes
has written 9 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Frederick Townes... |
As a site owner, it’s important to devote what link building time
you have to creating connections that count – really count – as far as
search engine spiders are concerned. In fact, there’s a range of site
link types – links diversity. Some are more valuable than others. Spend
your time and resources building the highest quality links and you’ll
quickly see the value of these efforts.
Hosted Content
Hosted content, also sometimes called pre-sell pages, makes your
site look very good. The problem is, there are usually costs involved.
Here’s how it works.
You, the content expert, write an article. It should be longer than
600 words but no longer than 1200 words. It should be well-written,
completely researched, edited, re-edited and finally proofed so that
it’s letter perfect. Okay, now you have host-worthy content.
Hosted content is content that’s placed on another site for a fee.
In other words, you rent a page on another site to display your work.
Now, what do you get for your money?
First, position your article on a site that’s (1) related to the
topicality of your site and (2) has a tons of one-way links to content
that’s “deep” in the site (in other words sub-pages that rank well in
SERPs based on their title tags, for example). These two factors are
the best way to measure and quantify the strength your page has in the
target site, and ultimately, the link love it creates passes to your
site. As you already know hosted content creates editorial inbound
links, also known as pure gold.
Second, because it’s your article and you’re paying for the space,
you can embed text links directly to specific pages of your site. This
does a couple of things. First, you spread your web net further. Links
to your site now appear on other sites – some several incarnations
removed from your own site. This, ultimately, increases your site
traffic as people read your interesting commentary and click on those
embedded links to see what else is on your mind. That’s good. More
hits. More page views. Higher conversion ratios.
Third, if you spread your words across the web, you start to develop
some name recognition within your niche. Unless you’re Dan Kennedy or
Skip McGrath, it’s tough building name recognition. However, by
crafting numerous, informative articles you’ll start to be recognized.
And wait until you Google your name and find 15 SERPs because your
articles appear on dozens and dozens of sites.
The downside is the cost. Site owners charge you for the use of
their space. If you’re well capitalized, no problem. Spend the money to
spread your words. If money is a problem, choose your host sites
carefully. Use Google Analytics or ClickTracks data to determine not
only number of unique visitors you create from these pages of hosted
content, but quality of traffic as well. Look for sites that match the
two criteria above. Very important.
Article Submission
Okay, money is a problem. You don’t have a lot. You can still get
your name and your opinions out there through various article
submission sites.
Once again, site owners need green content and many rely on article
submission sites to pick up fresh content for free. Here’s the deal.
You write an article and go through the same steps of researching,
editing and proofing until the piece is pristine and makes you sound
like a savant. Perfect.
Now you place that piece on sites like www.goarticles.com or www.ezinearticles.com
for free use by other sites. The plus side is, if the content is solid,
you’ll get picked up by literally hundreds (even thousands) of sites.
And in return for the free use of your written brilliance, the sites
that display your content are obliged to include a link back to your
web site. So, you put out 10 articles on topics related to your
business, each one gets picked up and used by 20 other sites and you’ve
got 200 non-reciprocal inbound links. Well done.
But isn’t this the same model as hosted content except it’s free?
No. There are two key points to consider. First, with articles you
syndicate it’s much more difficult to embed editorial links to your
targeted web site. Instead, you take advantage of the target link and
anchor text in your bio box that appears at the end of the article.
What does this mean? Ultimately syndicated articles are not unique
content like hosted content is, and ultimately it’s more challenging to
place links to your own site editorially without appearing to be hyping
your goods or services. So there’s a tradeoff when you go the article
syndication route. The key, just as with hosted content, is to have
killer, useful information in order to entice webmasters to repurpose
the article for their communities and give you credit, a bio and a back
link.
But, it doesn’t cost you anything but your time, assuming you can
string words together into cogent sentences, or at least your
brother-in-law can.
If you’re good at syndicated content or article submission, you
control the anchor text – the actual links readers click on. You can
also embed editorial links in syndicated content. Now, these aren’t
links directly back to your site but they will take the readers to a
target page that you want them to read, so if you’re building links for
other sites in your portfolio, this approach has a proven track record.
Reciprocal Links
Sites still exchange links. The concept isn’t moribund but it
certainly doesn’t have the impact a non-reciprocal link has. Reciprocal
linking is simply an exchange of links. You link to my site; I’ll link
to yours. And since spiders follow links, it’s not a bad arrangement.
A couple of warnings, however. Any site with which you exchange
links should be related to the topic of your site. If you’re selling
baby clothes on your site and you’ve got a link to transmission fix-it
site, you’ll get nicked by the search engine. Remember, the whole
purpose of a search engine is to provide useful, relevant content to
users so any links you exchange should be considered from the point of
view of the site visitor. Is that link going to further the search of
the site visitor or is it a dead end?
If a site appears to have a significant number of back links, and
better yet, ranks well in the SERPs, it’s a likely candidate for a link
exchange even if it’s a PR 2. Look for quality sites, or at least
quality characteristics.
One-Way Link Building
This comes a several forms. First, there’s the ever-popular ‘link
begging’ where you contact a site owner (you can find that information
in Whois, if it’s not on the contact page) and basically
plead your case to have that site owner accept your link. This is a
tough sell because, naturally, the site owner wants to know what’s in
it for him or her. Custom written, tailored emails tend to do better
than form letter emails, obviously, and there’s definitely nothing
wrong with a phone call provided you make it abundantly clear what you
have to offer.
There are paid links programs. For example, www.textlinkads.com
lists web sites willing to sell links to your site. You can bid on the
cost of the link, agree to the length of time the link will appear and
where it will appear. There are other programs that will hook up sites
– usually with decent PRs – with site owners looking for good deals on
paid links. Again, don’t forget to buy links with relevance to your
site.
You can pay to advertise on another site with banner ads, though
this has been shown to deliver lukewarm results unless you know your
market very well. Do a competitive analysis and see what’s working for
the competition. The click-thru rate on banners is less than 3% but
they aren’t usually too expensive.
Finally, you can post your thoughts and opinions on forums and blogs
related to your site. Each post will create a back link, but one that
spiders will recognize as a blog back link – not a bad thing, just not
a gangbusters way to build site credibility, especially considering
that most links have a nofollow added and forums capable of giving any
link love tend to moderate (and eliminate link spam) quite heavily.
Don’t be fooled though, links even with a nofollow attached still have
some magic – even on Google.
From hosted content to blog posts, anybody can get a little
recognition on the web. And if you’ve actually got marketing capital,
you can pay for hosted content and watch your site grow quickly.
Very quickly.
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