Link Building Blog

Link Bait Wednesdays – 10 Link Building Articles – issue 1

We’re going old school with the first 2 articles. Eric Ward from 2001 and Chris Sherman from 2002. It’s always good to brush up on where we came from. Then, there’s Sugarrae asking lots (and lots) of great questions to 4 expert linkers. Search Engine Ranking Factors v2 is another brilliant link baiting piece compiled by Rand Fishkin. I’m sure it added a few of those 1 million links. Here’s my contribution to your collection. Brandon Hopkins sums it up nicely:

If “Content is King“, then links are what put that king on the throne. Build links and you’ll be able to display your content to the world. Don’t build links, and your King won’t have a kingdom.

Jakob Nielsen weighs in on deep linking and rounding out the list is a few on social bookmarking.

10 Link Building Articles

Using Surveys to Find Linking Opportunities

Debra Mastaler from The Link Spiel has a nice writeup at Search Engine Land which explains how using surveys as a tool to discover the online habits of your website’s readers can pay off in links. Find the authority sites, which sometimes are hard to find if you aren’t a part of the community, and you find the links (and readers, subscribers, customers).

How Many Incoming Links Should You Have?

The answer to this question will always be… it depends. It depends on many factors like the keyword phrase you’re attempting to rank for, the website’s age, your on-page optimization and the quantity and quality of your competitors’ incoming links.

Choosing Your Keyword Phrase

If you want traffic, you’ll have to decide on a keyword phrase the page can realistically rank for. Notice I didn’t say the phrase you “wanted” to rank for. There’s a big difference. People naturally want to rank 1st for the most popular one-word keyword in their industry which, for this example, would be “Travel”. To be 1st for that phrase you’re going to need to dethrone the site in that position. As of today, that’s Travelocity. According to Yahoo! Site Explorer, they have 1.3 million incoming links, so for your site to rank for “Travel” you’d need to get busy. That’s a lot of links.

If you’re going to be realistic about the page ranking sometime in the next year, you have to decide on something a little less competitive. Narrow the search from a very broad “Travel” to something much more specific. Something geographically specific and perhaps lodging specific depending on how competitive the location is. It will be easier (also read faster) to rank for “Myrtle Beach Hotels” than “New York Hotels”.

The Age of Your Website

I won’t mention the “sandbox” word here but let’s just say a brand new site has some hurdles to overcome. Trust is something that takes time to gain.

On-Page Optimization

Compare your page to your competitors and do all of the usual title, h1, alt and keyword density modifications.

Now, How Many Incoming Links Does It Take?

With all three of the things listed above being equal and if most of your competitors’ links are coming from scraper sites, made for adsense sites and free website hosts then you won’t have to get as many incoming links as them if you go after links from quality related websites. If they have numerous quality sites linking to them, you have to get as many or more than them to compete.

If you have a new website with a long keyword stuffed .net domain name, you’re going to have to get a few more quality links to compensate. Even then, if your content isn’t something people want to forward to their friends, bookmark, stumble or reference as one of the authorities on the subject, you’re going to struggle with ranking and need that many more links. If you think of this as a long term project that will take time to grow (meaning you devote daily or weekly time building) instead of “what’s the fastest way to be 1st”, then you’ll weather the search engine algorithm storms much better and in 5 years you’ll have a site that’ll be hard to beat.

To Summarize

If you create quality content while actively building quality links, you will rank for the realistic phrases. Eventually, you will rank for the more popular, higher trafficked phrases because of the high quality natural links and the related pages on the site that have become a trusted resources in that industry or niche.

Related Blogs
How to Get the Links You Need – Doing the Math on Link Building – Stuntdubl

How to Stay Out of Google Supplemental Results

Jim Boykin has a good explanation for how to get out of Google’s supplemental results. The first thing you should do when you discover one (or a lot) of your pages in the supplemental results is to modify your internal linking structure so these pages are closer to the top of the site by linking to them from a stronger page(s). You don’t want the page to be buried 5 clicks from the homepage.

Ideally, you want lots of external links from authority sites linking to the page but that’s not always going to happen, and most likely isn’t if it’s in the supplemental results, so begin by making sure you’re treating the pages right internally.