The number one SEO practice you can employ to get people (and Google) to pay attention to your online content.
Links have become the online content creator’s currency. Get a lot of links, and you get “wealthy”. And the more quality links that point to a particular page, the higher that page is going to rank.
But how do you get those links without breaking the law, or looking like a scuzzy spammer? Well, here are some clean and pretty ways to get them.
In addition, in this roughly 12-minute episode you’ll also discover:
Listen to Rough Draft below ...
Demian Farnworth Hi, welcome to Rough Draft, your daily dose of essential web writing advice. I m your host, Demian Farnworth, Chief Content Writer for Copyblogger Media. And thank you for sharing the next four minutes or so of your life with me.
Now this is episode 7 and I’m calling it “A Crash Course on Link Building — ugh.”
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A few episodes back I mentioned that search engines like Google use links to evaluate the content on a page. A link to a page is like a vote. Since the early 90s this has been happening. Google was simply the first search engine to capitalize on links and make them a major factor in ranking.
But let me be clear. It is not the only factor. There are some 200 factors — Google s words not mine — but what exactly those factors are remains somewhat of a mystery. It is perhaps the most important off-page factor when it comes to getting found in the search engines.
So, links become the online content creators currency. Get a lot of links, and you are wealthy. The more quality links that point to a particular page the higher it is going to rank.
How do you get those links? Like I mentioned before — you create high-quality content. Now there are some quick and dirty ways to get links.
Google s PageRank algorithm attempts to judge the relevancy of a page by asking two questions:
How many links point to a particular web page?
How valuable are those links?
In practice, the theory is this: when you have two identical pages on training for a marathon, the one with the most links pointing to that page should rank higher in the search engines.
However, the quality of those links matters a lot.
If both pages have ten links pointing to them, but one of the pages has links coming from Runner s World and the official Ironman Triathlon, that page is going to be deemed more authoritative than the other.
In addition, a page with ten high-quality links could potentially outrank a page with 100 low-quality links.
In other words, PageRank rewarded keyword-rich content that attracted high quality incoming links.
On these sites, content is original, useful, and ultra-specific. Content is epic. So what made the links coming to these sites different from those who were punished?
Quality of links matters.
Do testimonials for other people and businesses and they will link back to you.
Interview big bloggers. Once you publish the interview, they ll link back to you.
You could run a contest.
Repurpose your content. Here are some ways to do that:
Some of these links will add value to your site either as that vote of confidence or actually sending traffic from those sites. One of the best ways to get links and build relationships and broaden your audience is to guest post.
Of course on your own sites you create link-worthy but there is a danger we need to talk about. Because there is this mindset that says lots of links and tweets and Facebook posts and on and on otherwise going for that viral headline.
We love viral headlines. However. There is a problem. And we will discuss that in the next episode.
But before I let you go I remind you to please jump over to iTunes and give this show a rating, a review, leave a comment. It would mean a lot to me. So please jump over to iTunes when you get a chance thank you so much, and look forward to talking to you in the next episode of Rough Draft.