| Why
Your Website Needs Inbound Links?
By Rick Hendershot
Most web-savvy people
quickly learn why they need "links" from other sites pointing
at theirs. Your inbound links are one of the most important ways
of getting yourself known in your field, generating traffic
to your website, and influencing the search engines to notice your
site.
"Traffic" is what linking is all about. Without traffic
your website is useless as a tool for selling your products or communicating
your ideas. Getting links from other websites is not the only way
to generate traffic, but it is probably the most important
one.
But how do links generate traffic?
**Direct traffic from links**
First, links generate direct traffic. Links from sites that
share your target audience will be an important source of traffic
to your site. A visitor to the other web site sees the link to yours,
clicks on it, and becomes your visitor. Some estimates put the percentage
of internet traffic
resulting from this kind of link as high as 21% of total traffic.
Why do people click on these links? One reason is they may
view a link to an outside source as an endorsement. They assume
the webmaster is saying "Here is a source you will find interesting
or helpful". They are looking for the kind of service you provide,
so they click on the link to check you out.
But just as important is simple curiosity. Someone sees a text link
with intriguing wording like "Powerful Cheap Advertising"
or "Win a Free iPod" or "See Pamela Anderson Video"
and, depending on their interests, a certain number of people are
likely to click on it.
This suggests at least three things about your links. First, you
should get as many links as possible on pages your target audience
is likely to be visiting. The more people see your links, the more
traffic you are likely to get.
Second, your anchor text (the words that are linked) should be intriguing.
It should be short and sweet, and suggest a benefit -- a reason
for people to click on it.
Third, your links should be on pages that people actually look at.
Having hundreds of links on pages that nobody ever looks at will
not result in traffic -- at least not direct traffic.
Putting your link on a link exchange page containing hundreds of
services similar to yours is not likely to generate very many clicks.
This is why exchanging links with link directories is such a questionable
waste of time. Web visitors rarely look at these directories.
Finding good pages where you can place your link is not always easy.
One method is to systematically do searches for your most important
keywords -- the search phrases people are likely to use when looking
for your kind of product or service. Many of the results will be
competitors of yours. But one or two may be secondary sources such
as directories or reference pages. Getting your link on some of
these secondary sources is almost guaranteed to result in traffic,
so it is worth the effort -- and sometimes the cost -- of getting
listed in the resources that score high for your keywords.
**Traffic from Search Engines**
The second reason for getting inbound links is to impress the search
engines. Most search engines use the quantity and quality of your
inbound links to evaluate the importance and relevance of your site
to specific keywords. For instance, if you sell a product like "Full
Color Vinyl Banners", or you are a Real Estate agent servicing
"Kitchener Real Estate", one of your objectives is to
rank high for searches done on your primary search phrase (and other
similar ones).
This will result in traffic because when people search for
your important keywords your site is more likely to show up in the
search results. The more inbound links you have that relate your
site to full color vinyl banners or web promotion services, or "fill
in your keyword here", the higher your site is likely to rank
for these terms, and the more search engine traffic you are
likely to receive as a result.
**Using Articles to get traffic and impress the search
engines**
Embedding your links in articles is one of the best methods of rapidly
increasing your inbound links. Many times a well-written article
will show up in hundreds of places on the web. And if it has your
link embedded in it, that will obviously increase your inbound links.
Webmasters pick up these articles because they want content to enhance
the value of their sites.
Articles
will also generate direct traffic because people who read them
are already interested in your subject matter, and are therefore
more likely to click on your link.
This suggests that the most valuable place to publish your article
is in a themed or categorized article resource. For instance, if
your product is "health" related, having it published
on health-oriented sites will be more valuable than having it published
on generic sites.
You can even take this a step further. If your article is about
something more specific like "mesothelioma advice", then
getting it published on sites that focus on "mesothelioma"
will get more "reads", and have a greater influence on
the search engines.
Second, when embedding your link, try to use anchor text that contains
one of your important keywords, not just your URL or web address.
Remember that search engines are dumb. One of your objectives is
to have them relate your website to specific search terms (keywords
or key phrases). And the best way to do that is to use them as your
anchor text.
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