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The Wrong Approach To Take On Your Link Building Campaign

Monday, October 15th, 2007

With search engine marketing campaigns today, a key factor in your rankings is the amount of links you have pointing back to your website. That is why link building is so important when marketing your website. I am sure you have read it time and time again, “backlinks are key to improving your rankings”, “get more backlinks and your SERP’s will increase”, “more backlinks will mean more traffic”. Getting those links however takes time and will not happen overnight, unless of course you just buy a bunch of links and purchase featured listings with high PR directories. That is another post; let me tell you what not to do in your attempts to getting those links.

Email is a big part for most everyone these days, I respond to more emails then I do phone calls. So naturally people will try and use the power of email to help build up there links because it is so easy do to. Here is an example of an email I received that demonstrates what not to do with your link building campaign. Please note that the person’s name, website and business name have been removed.

Dear Website Owner,

My name is John Doe, I am SEO specialist for XXX company and we are assisting our new client with there website link exchange and popularity. I came across your website, www.semspot.com and am wanted to speak to you about advertising and link exchanging. As you know Google and several other search engines take your link popularity into account when determining your rankings on the search engines. In an effort to help both you and our client, we would like to offer a link exchange between the two sites. Please take the time and add the following link to your home page:

http://www.siteremoved.com>Anchor Removed

In return we will place your link on the following page

http://www.siteremoved.com/links1.html

Thank you for taking the time to exchange links with our client.

Now lets look at the flaws in this email and what I suggest that you never do.

  1. Ok first problem is never spam site owners. Get to know them a little first before asking straight up for any type of link. You are more prone to link to someone you know or feel comfortable with rather then a complete stranger.
  2. Always try and address them by at least there first name, first and last looks more professional though.
  3. Link exchanges are a think of the past, yes in years past they had great value, but those days are history. You want to focus more on one way links then setting up a bunch of link exchanges.
  4. Never tell them where to place your link, in this case I was told to add it to my home page. They wanted there link to go on my home page, but they were going to bury my link on there links1.html page which probably means links2.html, links3.html, links4.html are soon to follow. The more link pages you see, the more that looks like a link farm to the search engines.
  5. When asking for a link, make sure the website you are trying to get a link on has something to do with your website. If you are selling cell phone accessories, do not try and get links on a fishing website. It is important that links you are trying to build has something to do with your product.

Keep this information in mind when trying to use email to gain more links to your website. Yes it is very easy to email a thousand websites asking, it is also just as easy for the person hit the delete button.

Tip: Keep an Eye on Your Competition

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

Certainly over the months or years you’ve been marketing your wares online, you’ve come across a few key competitiors that you’d love to keep tabs on.

Part of keeping in tune with the niche you are in is watching the competition to see what they’re up to. Visiting their site(s) all the time trying to find their new content can be a real pain.

Enter the wonderful site: command. This little ditty can be used to our advantage.

When you use the site: command, you are asking the search engine to list out all the pages that it has indexed for a website (well, not all of the pages, but close).

Google alerts, on the other hand, lets us know any time a new phrase or word shows up on the Internet. For instance, if I want to know who is mentioning me, I may run a Google Alert for the phrase “Will Hanke” (with the quotes, of course). Every time someone mentions me (hopefully in a good way), Google will index that page, and it will send me an alert letting me know about the new page, and will provide me a link to said site.

So we can use the alerts in this manner, but instead of being alerted to a certain phrase, we want to be alerted every time there is a change to the list of indexed sites Google has for our competitor.
First, sign up for Google Alerts

In the ‘Search Terms’ box, type this exactly as you see it: site:domain.com

The domain.com should be replaced with your competitors website URL. There are no spaces.

Keep the Type as ‘Comprehensive’

Set your preferences and email. Now any time there are new pages indexed by Google, they’ll send you an alert letting you know about it.

Keep in mind, search engines only crawl low-level pages every 4-6 weeks, so don’t expect a bunch of updates in your email. They’ll more likely trickle in, but at least you’ll know what’s new there!

Build it, and no one will notice

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Since I started out as a web designer back in the mid Nineties, I’ve long been involved in my local community. Since that’s where most designers find their clients, its only natural that these same people want to now help these companies promote their wares locally, and globally.

When I started out, I was doing static websites; just helping businesses get online. And I’d be willing to bet that most web designers are still that way. They don’t understand marketing. They don’t understand search. They don’t understand advertising, and they don’t want to. They want to make a set of pages, FTP them up, bill the client and move on.

This puts their client in a bad situation. So the client has this new (unoptimized, most likely) fancy website. Most small businesses put out a good chunk of change to get their sites built, and then they think the people will come. Build it and they will come, they think.

Not on the Internets, they won’t.

The ‘BIATWC’ mantra is a far cry from true on the world wide web. More like ‘Build it and no one will notice’ if you ask me. Web designers who are purely building websites and dumping them onto the web are doing their clients a huge disservice. Sure, they’re doing what they’re paid to do, they do good work, and they provide just what the client asked for.

The problem is that most designers really have no idea that they’re even doing this disservice. They have no idea what is involved in marketing a website, and (for the most part) they prefer to stay ignorant of those skills.  They still tell their clients to supply them with ten keywords for the meta tag so they can rank well. And they’re the same ones that are still putting each state name in those tags, too.

So what’s the lesson here?  Simple.  Learn what you’re doing.  Believe it or not, every web designer is also in marketing.  That’s what you’re ultimately selling your client, right?  Another way to market their business?  So if you don’t know the marketing  aspect of it, make sure (at the least) that you hand off your crappy code work to a professional SEO/SEM when you’re finished raping them for that fancy design.

Hosting Affiliates – Make $100 per Signup

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Hosting company Lighthouse Technologies has just launched their reseller hosting affiliate program. For anyone wanting to make some nice payouts ($100 bucks per!), sign up here

One Way Backlinks

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

I’ve written quite a bit in the past on one way backlinks, so I’m not going to go through it all again. However, one very popular way of getting these gems is to submit your site to various online directories. Finding these directories can be hard, particularly if you are promoting a very niche product.

Enter One Way SEO Backlinks – a site that gathers all the hot directories for us in one place. Now all we have to do is join this great service (its FREE) and submit to our hearts delight.

Other ways to get backlinks include article submission and purchased links. We’ll tackle those in the future.

Promote Local

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

If you’re just starting out in SEM, a great way to get started is to find a local business that will pay you for leads. I mean a real, brick & mortar store that will pay you.

The reason I say that is because it is a good way to make some money, and you can rank for local terms fairly easy. Its a great way to get started in SEM and play with your rankings. Once you’re comfortable with ranking for local terms, take on a term that has half a million results. You’ll be surprised that with a little finesse you can rank for that as well.

Targeting Your Competition (Without Mentioning Them)

Friday, May 25th, 2007

This post should be of interest to those of you delving in SEO (aren’t we all at some level?) to help better target your SERPS. In particular, I’d like to talk a little about targeting your SERPS for phrases that don’t even appear on your website. Is this possible? You bet.

Click to continue »

Turning Cheap Articles Into Free Publicity

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

Yesterday I got a local newspaper in the mail, and as usual I just glanced through it. As you may know, I’m in the middle of launching a local niche site that promotes a particular local service, so I’m always interested in seeing what ads are in the paper.

As I glanced through, I noticed an article titled “When obtaining automobile repairs, follow these tips to protect yourself“. Now, I’m not interested in auto body, but the placement of this article was a little odd. For a local paper, this article just didn’t fit. It was really generic, mentioning things such as getting multiple bids, etc.

So I fired off a quick email to my friend, a public relations and publicity guru, asking him about the article.

“Yep, that would be PR from the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud,” he replied. “The difference between an article like this and a standard press release is that it’s pre-packaged — basically an unsolicited, ready-to-print article.”

Oh realllyyyy??

Click to continue »

Top Spot Isn’t Always Best (Bowling for Dollars)

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

When I first jumped into PPC, I was all excited to get clicks to my affiliate site. I was disillusioned to think that everyone that visited my site would click through and apply for whatever it was I was presenting them. Boy was I wrong.

Not only did they not click through, but I was paying a fortune for those no-good clicks.

So how can I get people to my site without paying so much?

Well, start by targeting the third or fourth spot in PPC. Click to continue »

Get Hooked Up With Important People in SEM

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

Since the majority of my readers are just getting started in SEM (as in 2 years or less in the biz), its important that you, the reader, start rubbing elbows with some of the people that have been around for a while.

An easy way to do just that, and promote yourself at the same time, is to use LinkedIn. Click to continue »