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Archive for the ‘Link Building’ Category

How to Become a Link Magnet – SES NY 2010

Links are the lifeblood of the web. Without fresh links, your website has no authority in the engines or consistent referral traffic.

Some companies and individuals appear to attract links without really trying. Others struggle and never break through to the point of building links at increasing velocity.

We’ve shared plenty of linkbuilding tactics at Online Marketing Blog, and it’s an ongoing popular topic for search marketers. In addition to direct and mechanical tactics, becoming a link magnet in your own right is an indirect yet powerful strategy to attract organic links.

The rise of the social web has set the idea of personal branding on fire. By developing a brand for yourself, your company and even the individuals within it, you can build an army of advocates ready to link to everything you post.

How can you develop your personal brand so that you only have to publish that sticky idea and links occur as a byproduct?

During SES New York 2010, Greg Jarboe, President & Co-Founder of SEO PR, moderated a notable group of linkerati:

  • Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOmoz.org
  • Jennifer Slegg, CEO, JenSense.com
  • Aaron Kahlow, Chairman & Founder, Online Marketing Summit

Jennifer Slegg, CEO, JenSense.com


Jen started things off by talking about the building blocks to creating a personal brand with the goal of link magnetism:

First, ask yourself, “What an I doing it for?”

  • Rankings
  • Clients
  • Job opportunities
  • Stardust
  • Recognition

Figure out why you want to be a link magnet before anything else.

Next, consider your name.

Personal name

  • Is your name fairly unique? If not, you may have a difficult time building a personal brand.
  • Are there others with similar names? If so, there is the potential for confusion, and you’ll want to consider developing a handle.
  • Is the domain name available? This is vital for your blog, and you’ll want your domain name to be your personal brand if possible.
  • If you use a handle, does it narrow your focus too much? I.E., if your name was “content queen,” you may limit your appeal.

Company name

  • This is potentially problematic in that you and the company brand are forever merged. This can create potential company marketing conflicts in the future.
  • Consider using a spin on a company name (i.e., GoogleGuy or Company CEO).
  • Remember company name and your name will always be tied together. What if the company gets sold?

Setting the groundwork

Whatever name you go with, register it everywhere. Then, set up your blog on your site – everyone who wants to develop a personal brand needs a blog. Create a unique design/logo and ensure it is just as brandable as the name you use.

Define your personality

People link to personalities as much as quality information. What do you want to be?

Helpful – Great way to start if participating in forums is key to your branding. If you show knowledge, people will follow and then link to you.

Informative/expert – The most important thing is, you need to know your stuff. If you don’t consider yourself expert quality, start researching and learning now. You’ll get called out if you post bad info. Try these ideas:

  • Guest blogs
  • Speak/participate in events (offline/online)
  • Answer questions via Twitter

Controversial – Take the opposite stance on any popular industry topic. If everyone is singing praise about a company, look at the negative. If a company makes a move that everyone loves or hates, take the unpopular view and run with it. But tread carefully – you could develop a reputation for being “anti” or “pro” on a topic.

Being a jerk – This is very difficult to pull off, but those who are successful can be extremely popular. This gets you noticed, but you live with the rep. It could prevent you from being an authority. So if that’s your goal, this route may not be the way to go.

The key point to remember is the entire world is a stage – everything you say or do will help or hurt your brand.

Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOmoz.org


Rand started his presentation with the notion that link magnets are the new paradigm of link acquisition.

How is a link magnet different than linkbait?

Linkbait = Content that’s built to attract links (but not necessarily reward their creation).

Link magnets emotionally or physically reward the linker, creating an incentive.

Why is this so powerful? Overall, the web has become jaded. Previously, we used to get plenty of legitimate blog posts/links due to great content. Now this has shifted. With a great post, we’ll get tons of Facebook status updates, Tweets, etc.

There was a golden era of linkbait where people loved and supported great content. Now we’re too sensitive; “The fish have figured out that there is a hook attached to our content.” This suspicion has created difficulties in attracting linkbait.

But people still link when it benefits them. Savvy marketers are rewarding linkers in non-financial ways.

For example, Yelp created a digital badge version of “People Love Us on Yelp” that restaurants could use on their websites. This made the most relevant pages on the web link back to the Yelp site.

There is the notion that great content earns links. According to Rand, this is a myth. You could post the absolute best piece of content on a subject on the web, and people will not link to it just because it’s good. It’s like saying, “The best ideas in politics are supported by the voters.” Instead, it’s branding and marketing to sell a concept that has an impact on where content goes.

The new bait is an emotional and obvious hook. Linking to content should do something for the people linking to it. Play to a linker’s psychology:

  • Self-fulfillment
  • Satisfaction
  • Efficiency
  • Effectiveness

One of the most beautiful things about the concept of link magnetism is that much of the time, especially when it’s embeddable, you have control of targeted links and anchor text.

You need a strategy for promotion & spreading of links. You need to create a distribution mechanism and a way to attract people, or it will never work.

Examples of great link magnetism:

Vimeo – When you click the “share” button on a video, it creates the overlay box to copy-paste the code and share it. By embedding the video, Vimeo also gains three links.

OKCupid – They create trends all the time using their data to help market the site. Their blog is frequently an example of both linkbait and a link magnet. By sharing the information on the blog, users are rewarded by sharing something interesting.

Techmeme – When they launched the learderboard, more than 30 of the top 100 bloggers linked to them.

Simply Hired – They publish the data/stats/salaries behind jobs. It is both interesting and useful data that frequently acts as a magnet for media.

Aaron Kahlow, Founder, Online Marketing Summit


Aaron decided to be interactive and not give a presentation. He gave just a few tips before turning over the panel to an audience Q&A.

Content – If you don’t have great content, there’s no reason anyone should link to you.

Personas/branding – If you don’t have a personality or aren’t comfortable with yours, you’ll never form the affinity necessary to gain links.

Social – Every time you create something, ask yourself if your colleagues/constituents would share.

Friends – Make sure you build relationships with those who are link magnets.

Suggestions:

1. Decide who your target market is, and then address them appropriately. For example, you can’t “geek out” and get technical if your audience is not.

2. Make sharing simple and easy. For example, if your audience is active on Twitter, leverage the Tweetmeme button on your blog.

3. When you find things you like, say something about it and link to it as opposed to always linking to the source.


© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
How to Become a Link Magnet – SES NY 2010 |
11 comments | http://www.toprankblog.com

Two Biggest Advantages of Small Businesses SEO

agility-creativity-search-marketingWith search engine optimization, small businesses have two advantages larger competitors often can’t match: creativity and agility.

By embracing these two philosophies as part of their digital marketing DNA, small businesses can carve out a search marketing strategy that runs circles around larger competitors.

Today, we’ll briefly explore why creativity and agility are advantages small businesses have for search marketing, and some quick tips to activate each.

Creativity as a search marketing advantage

Large = more risk management – Small = creativity/individuality can shine

Larger corporations are naturally risk-averse. Most won’t create blogs that take sides on issues, create controversy or linkbait, push the envelope with snarky ideas or allow shining examples of individuality. Which is why individuals and smaller companies have a continued advantage: there are far less stakeholders so it’s easier to sell creative, controversial or compelling ideas. The more creative your content is, the more editorially earned, organic links you’ll attract from the web community that content builds.

Tips to activate for SEO benefit:

Develop creative linkbait – small, creative groups have the perfect environment to brainstorm linkbait. Where larger companies will mostly follow proven archetypes, a small business can break the mold with clever, catchy and outside the box linkbait ideas. It’s an opportunity to create the kind of linkbait social web influencers are looking for but larger competitors do not understand. By embracing this it’s possible to outpace those who can only engage in manual/mechanical linkbuilding efforts because the content they are working with is dry.

Create controversy – success in small businesses comes from dedicated team members passionate about their industry of choice. Due to this passion, they will naturally have strong feelings about the industry they are in. Why not turn that passion loose on the web to attract others who feel the same? It’s going to be more authentic, let you leverage an angle larger competitors can’t or won’t use, and more closely connect with an audience. Even those who disagree with you play into this strategy, because as they respond to you in droves, they bring an influx of links and referral traffic. Individuals in your niche are dominating the SERPs by leveraging this approach and it’s an opportunity if your small business can artfully direct controversy.

Leverage a creative CMS - where large competitors are stuck using SEO-unfriendly CMS platforms, your small business can take advantage of cheap/free SEO-friendly online publishing tools like WordPress. Creative web developers can turn WordPress into an entire CMS to power your site at an extremely reasonable cost. If you need something more powerful, a CMS like Expression Engine is both affordable and natively search engine friendly. Small businesses have a choice where larger companies frequently get locked into complex systems or dated technologies.

Agility as a search marketing advantage

Larger = slower moving – Small = the advantage of speed and agility

Agility isn’t just a factor for influencing the social web. It’s an effective way for a small businesses to create an SEO strategy disruptive to competitors. Because larger corporations naturally have complex layers of approval processes, lawyers and committees, smaller businesses have an opportunity to exploit this by being first. Many small businesses try to act like large corporations, however this is not embracing the advantage possible by being able to turn on a dime.

Tips to activate for SEO benefit:

Flip your mindset about web content from formal to improvisational – particularly with content published through a social channel such as a blog.  According to the recent TopRank Marketing survey on blogging and SEO 94% of bloggers reported seeing measurable SEO benefits from blogging within 12 months. A majority see benefit, since more content  equals more hooks in the water for search engines. Data from Hitwise showing search phrases are getting longer reinforces this, showing you should feed the tail now more than ever. By having an agile content development process, smaller companies can and do outpace larger competitors who have more resources, but can’t get out of their own way.

Embrace personal brands – when a company embraces their team members having personal brands, this will as a by-product provide a search marketing advantage. For example: in interviews, on their own blogs and through their own exposure, a company and the individual both benefit since both parties frequently get mentioned/linked together. It’s a win-win situation. Where larger corporations use their many partners as an advantage for links, small businesses can encourage and embrace their passionate, trusted team members to develop personal brands in their industry.

Break news – as we’ve noted previously in social media marketing applications (and also discussed by Brian Clark at Copyblogger): every company is now a media company. By breaking news right along with media, you’re going to attract links and referral traffic. Instead of relying on external entities for attention, your company will start to become a trusted source as its own brand of media. To embrace this in a way that matters, agility is essential.

The more small businesses take advantage of their ability to be more creative and agile than larger competitors, the more their online content marketing and SEO programs will succeed.

What other advantages do you think small businesses have for search marketing?

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© Online Marketing Blog, 2010. |
Two Biggest Advantages of Small Businesses SEO |
25 comments | http://www.toprankblog.com

Reverse Engineering Linking Patterns to Create Link Equity

By Justilien Gaspard, Search Engine Watch, Aug 9, 2007

In your quest for finding new trusted links, it can be distressful when you run into the mental roadblock of where to search next. We all face the question, Where do I go next to secure high-quality links?

In this week’s column, we will explore different ways to find links in a round about manner, while maintaining the focus on quality trusted links.

Finding Trusted Sites Through Google

Those of you who are acquainted with some of my specific tactics know that I’m a huge advocate of finding sites to get links from using Google search. The reason for this is plain and simple. If a site is turning up high in search results in Google, it is most likely a trusted site. If the site is ranking particularly well, it might be one of those highly trusted sites that can really give a remarkable boost in rankings to the sites it links to.

At the same time, always using Google can be tedious. Especially as the quality of the search results erode the further down you drill into the SERPs. The question remains, How do you find good links from sites that are most likely trusted by Google?

Finding Trusted Sites Through Industry Leaders

There are other ways to find good links and know the site is probably trusted in Google. One way is to explore what sites the trusted Web sites are linking out to. Perhaps Forbes.com will not link to your business. At the same time, getting links from the sites that Forbes links out to will be a more reasonable endeavor for most.

This method of link building will also help to establish your site in trusted linking neighborhoods and associations. When search engines are mining linking data for patterns, it will be apparent your site is associated with other highly trusted sites for your industry.

More Ways to Find Trusted Site Links

Following are a few more suggestions for securing trusted site links, including online publications and journals, old directories, college and government resource pages, industry bloggers, and top ranking sites.

  • Online Publications and Journals. Investigate the sites that industry and national publications covering your industry are linking to. As mentioned, you may not be able to get a link from Forbes, but you can get links from the sites it links out to. Also, check to see if these publications have a business directory or classifieds section with clean links.
  • Old Directories. Find old human-edited directories that have been around since the 90s. Explore the sites they are linking out to and see if it makes sense to get them to link to your site. Remember the important vertical and niche directories. Often, these are well researched by human editors who are experts in their field.
  • College and Government Resource Pages. Find those links pages on college and government sites. (Yes, contrary to some rumors, those links pages were made for people, are well researched, and still have value!) These can be a gold mine for finding high-quality sites to get links from. As with directories, try to find those pages that have been around since the 90s. That will be more of a trust signal than a new page created in the last year.
  • Industry Associations and Non-Profits. These sites tend to have very high-quality backlinks and even links from your competition. Explore the sites they are linking to in articles, press releases, directories, and in the classifieds section.
  • Bloggers. Find the leading bloggers for your industry and then keep track of the sites they are linking out to. Soon it will be apparent there are certain sites they all regularly link to. These are the sites to target first.
  • Top Ranking Sites. Do an analysis to identify the sites that the top-ranking sites for your keywords are linking out to. While your direct competition probably won’t give you a link, the sites they are linking to will. Pay close attention to certain linking patterns. Do a number of these top-ranking sites link to the same resource or industry site? If so, then you definitely want to get a link from those sites. In a round about way, your competition will be helping you to rank higher.

One of the great benefits of this approach is it puts your site in a linking neighborhood of highly trusted sites. This will boost your trust profile and provide additional credibility in the eyes of the search engines. Remember, at its essence, Google is a data mining company; it is looking for patterns. This is just a way to reverse-engineer certain linking patterns.

Tags: how to get back links, backlinks wheel


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