If you've gone through all the hard work of a link building campaign, you
expect to be rewarded with some impressive links. The reality
is that many people are disappointed with the trickle of links and the trickle
of traffic that their efforts produce. If that sounds familiar to you, then you
need to step back a bit and re-access your linking strategy. Are you really
giving enough thought to your strategy?
How do you define the online marketplace?
When potential customers look for an answer to their problem, they'll do a
search on Google, they'll scan directories, read articles and product reviews,
lurk on discussion groups and evaluate competitors.
The sites that your potential customers use to do this make up the online
marketplace around your industry. These are the sites you need to be
on and your linking strategy must get you there.
An effective link building strategy is not, “I'm looking for 50 links from
websites with a minimum Page Rank of 5” but rather, “I want 50 links
from the most important information websites that my customers and
potential customers regularly use.”
1. Understand your marketplace
What market sectors do you really service? How do these different sectors
rank in terms of importance to your business?
You may think you're selling to the technology market and you may look for
relevant technology portals like techwave, but what significant niches exist
within that market? Suppose education is an important sector for your technology
business, then you'd want to look for an education portal that concentrates on
technology .
Such niche websites can be ignored by competitors yet can produce great
business for the savvy link builder. You should typically look for between 3-6
significant niches from which to generate links. From those, build a minimum
target list of 250 important sites and concentrate your efforts on these
top 250 sites.
2. Develop good content
There's no substitute for good content. It's content that
customers look for, content that gets you up the search engine rankings and
content that encourages others sites to link to yours.
But don't publish content just for the sake of having something for search
engines to index. Every piece of content on your site should be there
for a purpose - it must support your sales proposition and take your
customers a little further along the sales cycle.
3. Make sure your content is well written
You copy needs to be well written and needs to be accessible to search
engines. That means being aware of the words that people will
use looking for your products and incorporating those words into your
titles and descriptions, headings and subheadings, and of course in your linking
text.
If you haven't got the time or ability to write well, then get someone who
can - they'll be worth their weight in gold! You can find good quality
freelance writers at Guru.com or in
the UK.
4. Look at media sites
Media sites have large audiences of people looking for information -
get coverage and a link to your site and not only will you get
a significant spike in traffic to your site, but you'll also get a percentage of
that audience linking to you because the media site did. Links attract
links.
So once you've identified your market sectors, and collated your list of 250
link targets, separate the high profile portals or information
sites from the rest of the list and start with them. That's right - at
the top! See if any of the portals have a submit an article or write for us
page. If they do, make sure you use it - it's an easy and valuable way to get
coverage and links for your business.
For media sites whether they're traditional or purely online, look for
reporter bylines and look for contact details. Many sites will publish
guidelines on how to submit a release.
5. Issuing online press releases
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Approaching media sites above is very much a one-to-one approach where
personal contact is essential. Issuing online press releases is more of a
one-to-many approach.
You submit your release to a newswire and they distribute your news to
thousands of journalists and editors on their database. Such
releases can be picked up and covered by both national and local media and are
certainly worth doing - but not as a substitute for the one-to-one approach
described above.
But perhaps the best way of getting media coverage quickly
is to use the knowledge, experience and contacts collected by others. Eric
Ward's service is the best I've
seen. Through many years of online promotion for clients, Ward has built an
impressive opt-in list of over 19,000 journalists, website reviewers and
writers.
Eric's contacts include some of the most influential on the
web - from the Yahoo Picks editors to Sam Meddis, the creator of USA Today Hot
Sites. If you're launching a quality website or publishing quality content, you
should give some serious
consideration.
6. Move on to non-media sites
Now move on to the non-media sites left from your top 250. Any editorial
coverage or links that you've already gained will help your cause. Other sites
will be more likely to link to you if you have been mentioned by an editorial
site they respect.
Many of these sites may give you one way links, others will ask for a
reciprocal link. Because you're asking only top sites, then it makes sense to
agree.
But instead of burying a link to them in some remote links directory,
include them in your content, write a short article little
about them, even recommend them if they have something useful to offer your
visitors.
7. Monitor and evaluate
At the start of this article, I said that link building was not about the
number of links you could get. Likewise monitoring and evaluating is not simply
a matter of counting how many links you manage to get. What is really
worth measuring is the benefit those links bring your
business.
So as a minimum you should measure:
- How much increased traffic comes from links
- Which links bring the most traffic
- How much does your search engine traffic
- How much your sales increase as a result.
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