| SEO
One-Way Web Links: 5 Strategies
With so much talk about
search engines putting a damper on direct reciprocal links, the
hunt for the elusive one-way inbound link is on.
As someone who works with small business website owners, I've heard
just about every inbound-linking scheme there is. In the end, I've
only seen five strategies that really work consistently for getting
hundreds of links.
Less Effective One-Way
Link Strategies
Yet there's perennial interest in alternative linking strategies.
They range from bad to OK, but none offer as much potential as the
five major ways of getting links.
- Link farms never seem to die. The latest variations try to
pass themselves off as viral marketing, but are really a sort of
endless pyramid scheme: you link to me, so I link to someone else,
who links to someone else, and on and on down the line. Link farms
can get you delisted from search engine indexes, so don't even try
them.
- Affiliates can provide you with one-way inbound links if you use
affiliate software that links directly to your site rather
than through a redirect. But many, many affiliates are now placing
all their affiliate links in redirects of their own invention,
to help protect their commissions from pirates who will simply apply
to the program themselves to get a discount.
- Posting to web forums and blogs regularly will get you one-way
inbound links, but they'll only have search-engine value a small
percentage of the time. Many blogs and bulletin boards use search-engine-unfriendly
dynamic file formats, automatically encase links in script,
or use robot instructions to prevent spiders from following links.
- Many one-way inbound
linking strategies fall into the great-if-you-are-lucky-enough-to-get-it
category, such as winning a web award or being featured on a high-PageRank
website just for being so great.
- Other one-way incoming link strategies are in the this-will-take-forever-to-get-anywhere
category, such as offering to provide testimonials to all your
vendors in exchange for a link to your site. (Hint: If you can get
more than twenty links that way, you probably need to simplify your
supply chain.)
Now, on to the five major
ways of getting large numbers of one-way inbound links. Some are
better than others, but they all have more potential than some of
the more madcapped strategies. Of course, none is a good strategy
all on its own. You have to understand all five strategies in order
to really gain a distinct advantage in the one-way link hunt.
1. Waiting for Inbound Links
If you have good content you will eventually get one-way inbound
links naturally, without asking. Organic, freely given links are
an essential part of any SEO strategy. But you cannot rely on them,
for two reasons:
- Unfortunately, "eventually" can be a very long time.
- Worse, there is a vicious cycle: you can't get search engine traffic,
or other non-paid traffic, without inbound links; yet without
inbound links or search engine traffic, how is anyone going
to find you to give you inbound links?
2. Triangulating for Inbound Links
Search engines will have a tough time dampening reciprocal links
if the reciprocation is not direct. To get links to one website
you offer in exchange a link from another website you also control.
This would seem to be a mostly foolproof way of defeating the link-dampening
ambitions of Google and the rest. If you have more than one website,
you probably are already employing this linking method. There are
only a few drawbacks:
- You need to have more than one website in the same general category
of interest or the links won't be relevant.
- The work required to set up this kind of arrangement and verify
compliance is not insignificant. The process cannot be automated
to the same extent as direct one-to-one reciprocal linking.
- As with traditional reciprocal links, a very big drawback is that
the links are mostly on "Resources" pages that are just
lists of links. There's only a small chance of getting significant
traffic from these links. Plus, any "Resource" page
may well eventually become an easy target for link dampening, if
that hasn't happened already.
3. Submitting to Directories
They are the legendary fairy lands of SEO: PageRank-passing, no-fee-charging,
and actually well-run directories of relevant links. Yes, they really
do exist. An SEO acquaintance tells me he knows 200 good ones just
off the top of his head. Plus, there are other kinds of directories:
directories of affiliate programs, of websites using a certain
content management system, of websites whose owners are members
of this or that group, of websites accepting PayPal, etc. etc.
Ah, a link in a PageRank-passing link directory: it's a good deal
if you can get it. But let's say you do get links from all 200 such
directories and a hundred more from the little niche directories--now
what?
4. Paying for Inbound Links
Buying and selling text links on high-PageRank web pages has become
big business. Buying good traffic-generating "clean" links
is a great alternative to pay-per-click advertising, which confers
no SEO benefit. But, there are a number of pitfalls of relying primarily
on paid links for SEO:
- The cost of the hundreds of links required for substantial search
engine traffic can become prohibitive.
- As soon as you stop paying, you lose your link--you are essentially
renting rather than owning, with no "link equity" building
up.
- Google is actively trying to dampen the impact of paid links on
rankings, as revealed in various patent filings. A website can try
to mask the fact that the links are paid, but how well it does that
is out of your control.
- Given Google's mission to dampen paid links' effectiveness, paid
link buyers have an interest in verifying that a potential paid
link partner is "passing PageRank." But identifying appropriate
PageRank-passing paid link partners is quite a task in itself.
- Google also has a stated mission of dampening the value of any
"artificial" links. Having most of your links on PageRank
3 or higher web pages would seem to be a dead give-away that your
links are "artificial," since the vast majority of web
pages (note: not necessarily websites, but their pages) are PageRank
1 or lower. Meanwhile, buying PageRank 0 or 1 links would have so
little impact on a site's PageRank that it would not be worth the
expense.
5. Distributing Content
All of the above four inbound-link-generating methods really do
work. But it is the fifth method of getting one-way inbound links
that is the most promising: distributing content
The idea is simple: you give other websites content to put on their
sites in exchange for a link to your site, usually in an "author's
resource box," an "about the author" paragraph at
the end of the article.
The beauty of distributing content for links is that the links generally
generate more traffic than links on a "resources"
page. Plus, your article will pre-sell readers on the value of your
site.
The downside, of course, is that it's no small amount of work to
create original content and then distribute it to hundreds of website
owners. But nothing good ever came easy. And on the internet, one-way
inbound links are a very good thing.
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