Author: Brandon Cornett
Website: www.armingyourfarming.com
The "10 Commandments of Link Building"
will help you achieve true linking success.
Links today are what keywords were several
years ago -- the hottest topic in SEO. Search engines,
particularly Google, use link popularity to help evaluate
and rank your website. Link popularity refers to the number,
quality and relevance of inbound links from other websites
to yours.
Some people waste a lot of time seeking
links in the wrong way and from the wrong places. The
"10 Commandments of Link Building" will help
you avoid such time-wasters and achieve true linking success.
1. Thou shalt recognize the value
of links.
For now, and for the foreseeable future, link building
and SEO walk hand-in-hand. Linking profiles are one of
Google's top ranking factors, and the "other"
engines use them as well. Once upon a time, you could
simply write a lot of keyword-rich content and rank well
for it. While that may still be the case with MSN / Live
Search, it no longer carries you very far with Yahoo or
Google. That's where links come in.
2. Thou shalt begin link-building
on thine own website.
"What is this heresy? Link-building starts on my
website? Who ever heard of such a thing?" All too
often, I see website owners throw up a new site and go
out hunting for links before they have a site worth linking
to. Link building always starts on your own website.
Think about it for a moment. Aside from
directories and paid listings, few people will link to
a bare-bones website that offers nothing unique, helpful
or interesting. If you start hunting for links before
your website has earned its place on the web, you're going
to have a long, hard time of it.
On the other hand, if you build the kind
of website that makes others in your industry or niche
say, "Wow, that's really something! I know some folks
who would like that," then your link-building efforts
will be a breeze. It all starts with what you put into
your website.
3. Thou shalt pursue the right kinds
of links.
Not all links are created equal. Sure, you want a lot
of links to your website ... we all do. But you should
always put link quality before link quantity. Jim Boykin,
SEO expert and owner of WeBuildPages.com, said it well:
"It’s not always 'He with the
most links' who wins the game … Really, very often,
he with the right 10 links can beat the guy with 1,000
of the wrong links. I see it all the time."
What makes for a quality backlink? Generally
speaking, the most valuable links for SEO purposes are
those that come from older, well-established sites within
your topic area.
4. Thou shalt alternate link text.
To gain visibility for more of your key phrases, and to
make your linking profile seem more natural to search
engine algorithms, it's a good ideas to mix up your link
text. For instance, instead of having a thousand backlinks
to my site using the phrase "real estate marketing,"
I strive to get a broad mix of link text. I shoot for
"real estate marketing" and "Realtor marketing"
and "real estate SEO" and ... you get the picture.
5. Thou shalt find links everywhere.
Links are everywhere, and they're what make the web, well
… a web. So link opportunities are everywhere, as
well. You can gain links by publishing articles online,
syndicating press releases, submitting to directories,
participating in forums, growing a blog or becoming an
authority in your field. You are only limited by your
imagination, and imagination is our next commandment.
6. Thou shalt be creative.
Quick story. I was doing some link building for a home
buying website once, and I thought I had exhausted my
options. I had submitted press releases online, submitted
the site to directories, published articles with the big
article directories, and even written a few link request
letters (which I normally don't bother with).
Then it dawned on me. There were hundreds,
possibly thousands of websites out there looking for the
kind of content I could provide, but not knowing where
to look. So I began searching phrases like "home
buying articles" and making a list of websites that
provided this content.
Next, I emailed these sites one by one and
invited them to use any of the 100+ articles I had written
on the subject. All I asked was that they keep the author's
note with hyperlink. By being proactive with my article
publishing, I earned more than 30 new and highly relevant
links! When you combine quality content or a unique website
with strong imagination, your link opportunities are limitless.
7. Thou shalt not waste time with
silly link requests.
The higher your website ranks, the more link-request emails
you are going to receive. It's a law of the Internet.
Let me save you some time and energy by saying you can
delete 90% of these emails. Why? Because 90% of the time
they are from sites looking to "feed" off your
good rankings, but offering nothing in exchange.
I have one website that's ranked very well
for its key phrases. It generates a lot of email requests
from brand new sites that aren't even indexed yet, much
less ranked well. Is that a fair exchange for me? Hardly.
What's worse, most of these sites have nothing to do with
my subject area. This is the 90% you shouldn't waste time
with.
Once in a while, however, you'll receive
an email that's actually personalized and specific. It
will be intelligent, it will be from a site similar to
yours, and it will be worth considering. In other words,
it will be part of the 10% club.
8. Thou shalt track thine own progress.
If you put a lot of energy into your SEO program, you
need to be able to track your progress. There are business
reasons for this. But more importantly, there are morale
reasons for it. You want to feel good about what you're
doing, right? You want to see some positive results to
justify your hard work, don't you? Of course you do. So
keep track of your link-building progress the same way
you keep track of your traffic and rankings.
There are a number of tools online that
can help you identify links from other websites to yours.
Yahoo Site Explorer is my favorite. You can use Site Explorer
(http://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com)
to quickly and easily find out which websites are linking
to yours. You can also export this information into a
spreadsheet for further use. Nice, huh?
9. Thou shalt keep the big picture
in mind.
Yes, links are a big part of your website's visibility.
But there's a lot more to SEO than links. In fact, let's
look at the bigger picture and say there's a lot more
to online success than gaining links. If you tend to get
carried away with certain tasks, like I do, then schedule
your SEO efforts to avoid focusing only one thing. Set
aside some time for link-building, article writing, website
improvement, product development, etc.
In other words, don't adopt "SEO tunnel
vision" to the point you neglect your website's primary
offering (whether that be products, services, content,
or a combination of the three).
10. Thou shalt enjoy aging well.
One of the things I live about SEO is that it gets easier
as you go. When you put the right fundamentals in place
up front, you'll be able to increase and/or maintain your
visibility with less effort over time. Most search engines
-- and especially Google -- place a lot of emphasis on
the age of your domain, your individual web pages, and
the links coming into those web pages. Like a good wine,
links get better with age.
* Copyright 2006, Brandon Cornett. You may
republish this article online provided you keep the byline,
the author's note, and the active hyperlinks.
Additional Resources
Brandon Cornett is the author of the "Agent's Guide
to Search Engine Visibility," available for immediate
download at ArmingYourFarming.com. Learn to practice real
estate search engine optimization the right way. Download
this marketing
guide today at: http://www.armingyourfarming.com/search