My ABC guide to link building, Wash Rinse Repeat |  | Visited: 807 |
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| | by Neil Jones August 30, 2010 |
| Neil Jones |
Neil Jones is a search marketer by profession, having cut his
teeth running his own web based company for 5 years. Now head of web marketing
for eMobileScan he has also been
recently appointed CEO, tasked with guiding the company to being the biggest
online supplier to the AIDC industry in Europe. Specialising in Barcode Scanners and handheld terminals
eMobileScan have positioned themselves in line with the world’s leading
manufactures in this industry.
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| Neil Jones
has written 3 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Neil Jones... |
If you read my CV it will say my profession is a search marketer, but
when it boils down to it I’m a link builder, sure I can optimise a
site, I can spend hours crafting content so that it will rank for as
many long tails as possible, I can optimise a site like you wouldn’t
believe, canonical, nofollow java links, you name it I’ve done it. But
the mantra of build it and they will come doesn’t cut it on the web, you
can have the best site in the world but if Google doesn’t know about it
chances are nobody else will.
There are 2 simple questions you need to ask yourself when launching a
new site, how many links does my competition have and how many links do
I need beat them. If the answer is too many, look at a different niche,
if the answer is yes time to get to work.
Let’s assume you know your niche, launched your site. Spent countless
hours researching and writing kick ass content that you know if it does
get picked up, people will see it as useful and openly throw some
links at it. But don’t hold your breath on this one. Google has always
said produce great content and reap the rewards. This is an idealist
notion and doesn’t work on the modern web, every Mommy and Daddy blogger
knows about nofollow and link juice and they are just not willing to
link out like they used to in the good old days.
As a link builders this is where we earn our wages. Now I’m assuming
that you know what keywords you want to try and rank for so I won’t go
down that road, this post is about links.
For every site I launch I have a pretty straight forward game plan,
start with what’s easy and build on that, this is my sequence.
Article directories: what can I say, they are what they are. I get
some cheap articles thrown together and have them published and wait for
the scrapers to pick them up, from my experience the best sites to have
your content scraped from are ezine articles, articlealley and Isnare.
Directories are next on the list, if I am launching a ecommerce site,
I will pay for a listing on the yahoo directory and business.com, as
well as some industry specific directories. Everyone has their own
favourites and a quick search on Google should return more of these
directories then you could ever hope to submit to.
So that is the monotony over with and now things will start to get
interesting, by now you should have a much clearer picture of the movers
and shakers in the industry and also some vertical industries that
complement your industry but doesn’t directly compete. Now it’s time to
put some rss feeds together so you can keep up to date on industry news,
take the rss feeds from all the players you have highlighted. Build
news feeds with Google alerts or yahoo pipes, now sit back and watch
your feed reader fill up. Granted most will be rubbish but you will
always find some gems which will help to give you some ideas for
articles to keep your site fresh but it’s a big help for moving onto the
next step on the ladder.
Finding sites that will publish your content. My first step here it
to run all the articles I had submitted to the article directories
through copyscape, this will return the sites that have taken your
article ( word to those who are easily annoyed) chances are you will
find plenty of sites that have taken your article but conveniently
forgot to add your link, the rest will probably have a nofollow on your
links, this is part for the course, but you will always find a couple of
sites that are worth shooting a quick email to and of they have
published your articles already chances are they will publish another.
Be up front about the Nofollow link, if you are giving them quality
content that nobody else has I think that is a fair swap for a link.
Now we’re on to the part I enjoy the most. Your rss feed is now full
of article ideas, it will just take a bit of reading and some brain
storming but once this is done you’ve got some great articles to pitch
to prospective sites, now you just need to find them. Time to start the
trawling, there are some sites that can help get you started, soloseo,
ontolo and seobook all have link prospecting tools These will give you a
start but with a little creative thinking you can take things a lot
further, remember each search engine will show different results for the
same search so it is worth running through each to see what pops up.
It’s also worth looking at the Google suggestion wheel along with ask
and yahoo advanced search and suggestion options, these can all return
some really interesting results.
Now you should be armed with a list potential sites along with some
ideas for articles that are relevant and up to date in the industry, if
you can pitch an article like this, chances are you will have a higher
success rate then if you just sent out the normal drivel of a link
request email most of us see on a daily basis, some people say email
some say a phone call, try both and see what works for you, what I would
say that if their number isn’t freely available on their site don’t
bother digging around trying to find it.
By now your grey matter should be full of knowledge and you should be
pushing out decent quality, relative content and if you can supply
these sites with good content they are going to want more, pretty
quickly you will find your self in a position that once you have
finished an article send it with a quick email and it will get posted.
The only inhibiting factor here is the amount of content you can produce
without compromising on quality.
Getting to this stage is a slow and sometimes painful process, but by
now it will be clear for you to see sustained rankings and a steady
increase in traffic month on month. The steps outlined about are the
basics to any of my link building campaigns, different circumstances and
different industries will force me to tweak things slightly to adapt to
the circumstances I find myself in. Other “special of the day” tactics
can work, you just need to know how to exploit the opportunities that
arise, for instance, I work for a company that sells bar code scanners,
this year the laser beam had it’s 50th birthday, this screams
infographic, sadly I missed the boat on that one as it was before my
time with the company, but I could guarantee it would of been a home run
and this is how I know why, tech related blogs are a dime a dozen and
they constantly scream for new fresh content, all I would have to do, is
feed it to some of my contacts who run tech sites, ( one has 50,000
twitter subscribers) and once it was in the channels I could just watch
it sky rocket and let the links pour in. I’m still kicking myself about
this as I can’t see another opportunity like this presenting it’s self
any time soon.
Well thanks for reading this long winded post and if you have questions, please leave a comment and I will get back to you.
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