Link Popularity
Link building has always been a hot topic. In the beginning of the Web
hyperlinks were virtually the only way to get visitors to a site,
because search engines were in their infancy. When search engines grew
to be the major source of the Web traffic, links didn't lose their
weight, as search algorithms started to rank sites according to the
quantity and quality of their incoming links. And today links become
increasingly important with the growing significance of the new Web 2.0
social networks.
Reciprocal Linking
Reciprocal link means your Web site links to another Web site and that
Web site links back to you. Search engines use link popularity to rank Web
sites. Exchanging reciprocal links with other sites will build a great link
directory that will motivate visitors to bookmark your Web site to get
access to your link directory.
One of the factors search engines use to determine your relevancy to a
search term is the number of Web sites linking to your Web site. This is an
effective way to increase your search engine rankings.
Three key success factors for a reciprocal linking strategy are:
1. Quality of links should outweigh quantity
2. Link partners must relate to your site content
3. Partners should link to you from pages listing as few links as possible
Link Popularity Building Strategies
Thus, links rule the Internet. Once a routine task of a Webmaster, link
building has emerged itself into a full scale industry with millions of
dollars in turnover. Ranking algorithms perceive links as a proxy for a
human judgment, or a user's positive endorsement of a page. The idea is as
follows: a user discovers a page, likes its content, links to the page, and
the page gets higher ranking. This is the so-called 'natural way' of
acquiring links.
Since the natural way of getting links for a new Web site can take forever,
some additional boost is required. There are many strategies of link
building able to ensure you some initial ranking and exposure, which are
necessary to make the 'natural way' work. Some of these strategies can be
very tricky and do more harm than use. Here are the steps in starting a link
building campaign:
Step 1 - Get people to want to
link to your Web site. Generating quality inbound links to your Web site
requires a systematic approach and hard work. But the payoff is worth it. To
begin with you must have good content on your Web site. Step one is to
analyze the value of your content in relation to competitors. You will also
need a page of outbound links on your Web site that visitors will find
valuable.
Step 2 – Research Web sites that are worth linking
to and that will bring relevant traffic to your site. You need to identify
the portals, directories, news sites, e-zines, blogs, and other information
sources specific to your industry. Google is a great help with your research
because it ensures your partners are properly indexed. Look for sites
closely related to your site in terms of theme and keywords. Google's
ranking algorithm takes into account each link's importance along with other
factors like the proximity of your search keywords in the documents. In
other words, it's not just about the number of sites linking to a given
page, but also the importance of those sites (measured by the links to each
of them).
Step 3 – Implementing your strategy. Like any
marketing campaign you need a plan. Develop a content plan for populating
your Web site with valuable content. Set linking policies, pages, and
linking code you can give to link partners for your site. Monitor the
progress of your linking strategy so you can see what results have been
achieved and adapt or tweak what you are doing to improve results.
A Reciprocal Linking Program will require that you manage the following:
1. The name of the site
2. The URL (address)
3. The name and e-mail address of the person who runs the site
4. The date you contact the person who runs the site and the date he or she
responds
5. The resulting deal (Some will say yes, some will say no, others will not
reply at all, others will want a link back from you, some may want money for
links, some will be out of town and take weeks to reply, etc.)
6. The status of the deal
7. Verifying that the link is in place
8. Checking the site periodically for the link (Yes, some folks swap links
and then pull yours for odd reasons.)
Link Building Tips
Be a user when building links. The point is to make your link exchanges
look like they are acquired the natural way. Make sure that your links
appear in places where search engine expect them to be. This should be pages
relevant to your content. Links should (if possible) be in the page copy or
in a sidebar possibly among the other links pointing to pages also relevant
to your topic. The anchor text must look naturally - so no keyword stuffing.
Analyze your own motives of linking to the sites you like. What motivates
you to cite a Web resource? Is it a collection of online tools or handy
tutorials? Or maybe it is a provoking title? Apply this 'reverse
engineering' to your pages, and use unique interesting content to attract
links.
Avoid things that can damage your reputation in the eyes of search engines.
No link farms (sites with hundreds of links), suspicious looking Web sites
or poor quality link exchanges. Do not participate in three-way or similar
linking schemes - these attempts to disguise reciprocal linking are easily
to detect. NASA managed to get a man on the Moon with computers less
powerful than a GameBoy, so why do you think Google can't discover link
triangles with all the computing resources at its disposal?
Buying links. This practice is pretty much discouraged by Google, because it
undermines the idea of the proxy for human judgment. So you have to be
especially savvy when buying links. Avoid link trading sites or any site
publicly announcing that is sells links. Don't mix buying links with paid
advertising. You pay for an advertisement on a high traffic page expecting
visitors referred by your ad. Buying links has a different purpose -
increasing your link popularity.
Do not be obsessed with backlinks. There is an intense focus on link
building but not enough focus of content creation. Links must reflect the
quality of content. If you think your site has not enough incoming links,
you should think about how to improve the quality of content and make it
more appealing, not about more link exchanges.
If the links to your Web site include the words for which you want to get high rankings in the link text, your chances of getting ranked for these keywords increase.
Google Alerts
Google Alerts
is a free program run by Google that allows you to keep track of any topic
on the web. You select your "keywords" or "URL's" and Google will alert you
via email whenever links/ content containing your selected topics appear
anywhere on the web.
It is an excellent way to keep informed about your domain or name. It is
also perfect for keeping up-to-date on the latest information in your market
niche or niches. It's also a great way to find out what other people are
saying about you or your site.
For example: if you have a site on "antique cars" then you would create a
Google Alert for those keywords. Google will alert you by e-mail whenever a
new link/content related to those keywords appears on the web.
This is a great way to stay informed in your niche, but it is also a
valuable source of potential linking partners. Many of those links are blogs
that will allow comments with a link back to your site.
Google Alerts will probably send you 10-20 links each day, depending on the
popularity of your chosen keywords. Just go to these blogs/links and see if
you can leave a comment with some valuable additional information on what's
been discussed.
To sum up:
Remember the most important benefit of a link exchange is the traffic
resulting directly from these links. Search engines are highly
unpredictable. They keep changing their algorithms every now and then. Your
site is on the top 10 results today, but it may not be so tomorrow. The most
important thing you can do for increasing your site's position on the search
engines is getting traffic from direct links.