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Internet Marketing
Central > Newsletters > How
To: 5 Steps to Link Popularity, 4Q 2006
How To: 5 Steps to Link Popularity
Internet Marketing Newsletter
4Q, 2006
by Alli Denning
> download and print this How-To
as a PDF
Definition: Link Popularity -
the number of other web sites linking to yours or the number of
inbound links to your site.
There’s no way around it. Developing and growing
your web site’s link popularity is a must for any comprehensive
Internet marketing plan. The benefits are straight forward:
-
Traffic/ Visibility: The
more links coming into your site, the easier it is for people to
stumble across you, increasing site traffic and visibility.
-
Search Engine Rankings: The
more quality inbound links you have, the better your site will
rank in the search engines as all the major search engines now
have link popularity as a factor in their ranking algorithms.
So,
how do you get people to link to you? A link building campaign is a
step-by-step process involving lots of research and follow up. If
you’ll follow the steps below and then continue to do so regularly,
your link popularity will increase over time. Be warned, however,
that this is not an overnight process, but an ongoing effort to
improve the visibility of your site.
Let’s walk through each step in detail.
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Set Goals
-
Brainstorm
-
Research
-
Follow Up / Request Links
-
Keep Records
This process needs to be repeated monthly.
Ideally, you would appoint someone in your organization to be in
charge of link building and would set goals with that person
regarding the results of these efforts. This type of project
requires ownership and responsibility.
#1 Set Goals
By assigning a person and a numerical target to
this project, you will significantly increase your chances for
success. A reasonable goal might be to get one good new inbound link
to your site each month. It may be easy for you to get many more
depending on the subject matter of your site, but one a month is an
achievable goal for most sites. If you stay on target, you will have
12 good, quality inbound links to your site within a year.
#2 Brainstorm
At this stage, you need to think of all the other
companies and organizations that you work with that may be
possibilities for your linking campaign. A list to get you started
in the right direction:
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Professional organizations (chambers of
commerce, industry organizations, certifying boards or
organizations)
-
Business partners (vendors, re-sellers)
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Online directories (national, local,
industry-specific)
-
Online publications (if a story is written
about you, your company, your products, make sure that the
online version has a link to your site)
-
Customer/client sites
-
Other businesses similar to yours in different
markets
-
Other businesses in your market that offer
complementary services/products (e.g. real estate companies,
moving companies, mortgage companies, furniture sales are all
non-competitive businesses that are serving the same set of
customers)
Make a list of all the possibilities you can.
Then, ask all key members within your organization to do the same
thing. Once you have your initial list, move on to Step #3.
#3 Research
Armed with your list of inbound link
possibilities, its time to turn to the Internet and begin your
research. Start by finding web site addresses for all the
businesses/organizations you listed in Step #2. Chances are that you
will run across new ones along the way as well.
Next, do sample searches using your targeted
keyword phrases in both Yahoo and Google. You are looking for two
things:
-
Companies that are similar to yours and
placing well for your keyword phrases;
-
Write these companies and their site
addresses down. You then check their link popularity using a
tool such as this one: http://www.linkpopularity.com. You
will find among the sites linking to your subject site many
good possibilities to approach for links to your site. Add
these to your list. Keep repeating this process with as many
well ranking competitors’ sites as you can find.
-
Directories or information sites that are
showing in the search results for your keyword phrases.
-
There are loads of great
industry-specific directories out there. Many only require
that you link back to them in order to be included on their
site. Also, the link request phase (discussed in Step #4
below) is more straight-forward with these types of sites as
many have online forms in place to use for the link request.
Simply look for a link to “Submit site” or “add your site”
or the like and follow the instructions. Some of these
directories will have a submission fee (paid inclusion it is
called). Depending on the quality of the site, these links
can be valuable and can be worth the price of admission.
-
At a minimum (this list is by no means
all inclusive and does not include any industry-specific
directories), these sites can get you started in the
directory category:
-
Open Directory Project:
www.dmoz.org (free to submit and an important link
if you can get it)
-
http://www.Business.com
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Yahoo Directory (paid submission, but
worth the price)
-
CitySearch, TrueLocal, Local.com,
Yelp, Info USA and MerchantCircle
A note of caution: Only
high quality inbound links are of any value to
your site. And, in fact, low quality links (such as free-for-all
sites or link farms) can actually do harm to your site’s position.
Focus only on identifying quality sites that are related to your
site, your business or industry.
At this point, you should have a good list of
possibilities. These will be the sites that you approach about
linking to yours in Step #4.
#4 Request Links
Requesting links to your site is a basic two-step
process. These steps apply to sites that do not have in place a
formal submission process/form.
-
Identify the contact email
-
If there is a “webmaster” link, that is
the one you want
-
Otherwise, you will want to send an email
using the general email address provided on the site
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Write the request, to include at a minimum the
following 5 items:
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The request (that you would like their
site to link to yours)
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The reason you feel it would be beneficial
to them as well as you
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Your company name and URL
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A “Thank You”
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Your contact information
Be sure to make a note in your link campaign log
(see Step #5) for each request that you send.
#5 Keep Records
You can best gauge your link campaign’s success
by having a detailed log of all the links requested and the outcome.
It will prevent you from duplicating your efforts and provide you
with concrete, measured results.
In the printable
PDF, we provide a basic link campaign log for your use. You may
choose to adjust it depending on your site and your campaign goals.
If there is an Internet-related thing you have
always wondered how to do, let us know.
We are always looking for new ideas for our How-To Guides.
> download and
print this How-To as a PDF
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