13 Steps to Increasing Your Link Luck
by:
Courtney Heard
Link development can be an absolute nightmare. It takes up most of a
marketer’s time and the yield isn’t always what we originally hoped.
Worrying about PR, one way inbound links, triangle linking, where to
find quality sites to exchange with, it’s all just a huge headache. To
be honest, there’s no real way to wash your hands of it, unless you
have a huge budget for purchasing text links or to hire someone to do
your linking for you. So here are 13 ways to increase your linking
luck. They require a little bit of effort, but executed properly, these
steps will only bring your site success.
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Create a page or series of pages on which you
will post the links you are reciprocating. It is important to make sure
these pages are a valuable resource to anyone who actually visits them.
Try to avoid the use of the word “link” or phrase “link exchange” in
your body text, title or file names. Use “resource” instead. Allow
visitors to these pages to suggest additions without using link
exchange language like “submit site”.
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Keep your outgoing links relevant, but don’t be too specific. It is important to keep your entire web site’s
keyword density to a decent level and this includes not just the
keywords you are targeting, but keywords that relate to the theme of
your site. keeping your site’s keyword density to a good level is the
reason why you should only list related web sites.
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Keep
an eye on your link to text ratio. Write paragraphs for each link page
explaining what types of sites visitors will find on this page, how you
hope this will help your visitors and that they can suggest additions
if they know of any. You can also add comments to each link you have on
the site. Too many links and not enough text will tell search engines
that this page is a link page and is only there for search engine
optimization purposes. Search engines like real resource pages, that
are there for the use of your site’s visitors.
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Don’t worry too much about PR - search trends are
beginning to show that PR is less and less important. As I’ve said in
previous articles, just like the saying “no publicity is bad
publicity”, no inbound link is a bad one, the more links you have, the
more your site will be seen, plain and simple. Relevancy is the new PR.
Keep your outbounds relevant and useful, regardless of PR, and you’ll
do fine.
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Submit your site to directories, including industry
and geographically specific. This is a universally known tactic, but
most people just do it once. You’ve got to search every once in a while
to find new directories, search engines and other people’s resource
pages. They pop up daily, keeping on top of it will be the most
beneficial thing you can do for your site.
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Talk
to the people in your geographic area. If your store is in a mall, ask
the other stores in your mall to exchange links. If you’re in an office
building, ask all the other businesses in the building. Look through
your chamber of commerce web site, or local business directory.
Remember, relevancy includes geography.
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Ask
any clients with businesses to link to your site. Offer them a discount
on further purchases for the duration of time they keep your link up.
Not only does this produce a one-way incoming link to your site, but it
also promotes repeat business.
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Ask every site you come across that you like or find useful for a link exchange.
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Triangle
linking, though hard work, can be very beneficial. Triangle linking is
the process of creating one way links between three sites. Eg. Site 1
agrees to link to site 2 if site 2 links to site 3 and site 3 links
back to site 1.
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Write articles and submit them to places such as articlecity.com and goarticles.com.
Make them valuable articles that people will actually read, and they’ll
get picked up by more places. Make sure your Author’s bio has a link to
your web site.
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Create a “Link to Us” page and allow visitors who
find your site a great resource to link to you on their own. Avoid
banner links or button links and stick to text links. Relevant anchor
text is as important as the link itself.
And finally, be patient. Obtaining a lot of incoming links all at
once can raise some flags in search engine algorithms. A well conducted
link development campaign takes time but is well worth it. The pay-off
can turn your new business into a massive success and can mean the
difference between flipping burgers for operating capital, or sipping
Mai-Tais in Bora Bora while all your worker bees back home keep things
going. Trust me, Tahiti’s worth the wait.
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