9 Hot Tips for Linking with other Sites
by:
Gareth Davies
If you have a website the chances are you receive e-mails from
Webmasters asking you to make a link exchange with them. But how do you
know whether you should link to their website or not? Well here are 9
rules of thumb, to help guide you through the linking maze.
If you have a website the chances are you receive e-mails from
Webmasters asking you to make a link exchange with them. But how do you
know whether you should link to their website or not? Well here are 9
rules of thumb, to help guide you through the linking maze.
1. Is their site relevant to yours?
This is key, and more and more important these days. If the
answer is YES then it’s worth thinking about. If it’s off topic then
you may want to think twice before swapping links. A link from a
relevant website to your site is the preferred choice as it can help
reinforce your website theme and potentially send some useful traffic
your way.
2. How many links is too many on a links page?
When your link is being placed on another website, you ideally
want that page to contain as few outbound links as possible. 15 or less
outbound links is good, 150 outbound links is not so good. If there are
a high number of links on a page [such as 150] then the value of each
link out is weakened.
Whilst we can only make assumptions about ‘link weight’ some
Webmasters will use a cut off point of 50, 75 or even 100 links on a
page as a top end maximum. Anything over 50 outbound links on an
average resources page is certainly quite high. However if your link
will appear on the page of a good quality site or ‘authority website’
an exchange can still be worthwhile.
3. What is the Page Rank of the site on Google?
Some webmasters focus a lot on Google’s page rank as a measure
of a website. If you download and install the Google toolbar you will
see a measure of 1 to 10 shown via a horizontal bar for each site you
are on. Typically the higher the page rank, the more important a site
is perceived to be. A link from a Pr 5 page is often seen as a more
powerful link than one from a Pr1 page. However, Google’s Page Rank is
only meant to be a rough guide and should not be taken too seriously.
Tip one should always preside - a relevant link is always what you
want.
4. Should the links page be categorized?
Personally I prefer a well organised links page. If your citing
a resource in context of an article you would link from the paragraph,
but for the purposes of resource links it is a good idea to organise
your pages into relevant themes relating to your website and business.
If the site containing the link you are being offered is placed on a
page with 200 links all mixed up and covering every topic under the
sun, then it’s not ideal. If you’re an online shop selling Art Prints
should you really be on the same links page as Hosting Companies and
Travel Agents? Make the effort to organise your resource pages, even if
some link partners don't.
5. Is the links page being read by search engines?
It is important that the page your link is on can be found and
read by search engines. The page should be no more than 2-3 clicks away
from the homepage. You can even test if the web page is in the Google
index by visiting www.google.com
and typing into the search bar cache: with the full domain and page
name extension after it. So your query in the Google search bar could
read: cache:www.mywebsite.com/thelinkspage.html.
The page should then show in the Google index. If it does not
then there are a couple of possibilities. 1/ The page is very new and
hasn’t been crawled yet or 2/ The site has a problem being crawled by
search engines due to poor internal linking.
6. What if a Webmaster asks me to link to one site, but links back to me from a different site?
This process is sometimes referred to as '3-way linking' or a
'linking triangle'. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with 3-way
linking as it can sometimes be done for convenience. However the first
thing you need to do is 1/ Evaluate the site you are linking to and 2/
Evaluate the site and page you are getting the link from. So is the
outbound link destination relevant to your site, and is the inbound
link you are going to receive also coming from a quality related
website?
7. Do I want to associate my business with this particular site?
It is a simple question to answer and this should form part of
your decision making process. If you think you have been approached by
a good website then the chances are others will feel the same and
possibly the search engines too.
8. How do I know if my link partners are still linking to me?
You can do this manually by keeping the information for each
link partner in an Excel spreadsheet or similar and then periodically
check the exact URLs your link should appear on. However if you get to
the stage of having hundreds of link partners this may become rather
impractical. At this stage a reciprocal link checker might be
advisable. www.linksmanger.com
offers a link management system that includes periodic checking of link
partners as well as a link exchange system for around $20 a month.
9. So what are the best links?
One answer could be “the ones that deliver lots of relevant
traffic”. However links can mean different things to different people.
Natural linking [when people link to you without you asking] are a
great reward, but it is also wise to ensure you have some links from
quality sites in your industry. Teoma can be a good place to find such
sites as it focuses more on human edited results than say Google for
example. Simply make a search with a good key phrase on www.teoma.com
and you will quickly see which websites are the ‘authority’ sites. Set
about trying to get listed on as many of the best ones as you can.
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