What is Link Popularity?
Link popularity is a criterion that many search engines use when
ranking web pages within their index. Simply put, most search
engines give a ranking boost to sites that have incoming links from
quality, related sites. This method of establishing importance,
pioneered by the increasingly popular Google, is now used in some
form by 19 of the top 20 search engines. While it is still possible
to achieve high rankings for non-competitive terms without a great
deal of link popularity, it is unlikely your site will rank well
for very popular terms without it.
Directories
It is important to note that the sheer number of incoming links is
not as important as the quality of the sites that are doing the
linking. The fastest way to get some quality incoming links is to
get listings in the popular directories, such as Yahoo and the Open
Directory Project. For business sites, Yahoo costs $299 per year
(it is free for non-commercial sites, although it takes a while to
get listed). The Open Directory is free for all sites that meet
certain quality standards, but it sometimes takes a lot of
follow-up inquiries to make sure your site gets listed. When
listing your sites, try to get them in the highest-level category
that is applicable to your site. For instance, if your company in
Podunk Ohio ships wind chimes to consumers nationwide, make sure
you submit to the national "Wind Chime Dealers" category, not the
"Retailers in Podunk, Ohio" category.
Finding Partners
Once you have submitted your directory listings, you should look
for other sites that might link to yours. Ideally, the businesses
that run these sites will be related to yours but will not be
direct competitors. For example, if you had a site that sold
supplies for swimming pools, it could be useful to your visitors if
your site had a link to a swimming pool installer, and useful to
his visitors to have a link back to your site. Since your offerings
complement each other, neither of you are likely to lose business
by exchanging links. You also have to find sites that show a
propensity to link to others. Google is an excellent engine to use
when looking for potential linking partners. Typing in keywords that you think your customers
might use to find you, look for quality, well-ranked, non-competing
sites that have "links" or "resources" pages, and objectively look
to see if your site would fit with the other sites listed. If you
think it is a possibility, make a note of the site, including the
webmaster's address and something specific about the site you
particularly liked. It is also very useful to look at each of the
sites on these "links" pages, as many of them might also be
potential link partners. When you have found a good number of
sites, add a link to each of them from a "links" page on your own
site. It is important to do this before contacting the site owners,
as they are much more likely to reciprocate if they see that you
have already taken the trouble to link to them.
Making the contact
Once you have added a link to each of the sites you have
identified, it is time to contact the site owners. Usually this is
done by email. Due to the volume of spam most webmasters receive,
it is very important to let them know that you have actually
visited their site in the first few sentences. Compliment them on
the site and specifically mention the attribute you particularly
enjoyed (as previously noted). You should then let them know that
you have already provided a link to them, and give them the URL of
your links page so they can see this link for themselves. Only then
do you mention that you would appreciate it if they would
reciprocate.
Monitoring
Once all of your initial emails have gone out, check back to the
sites you have targeted periodically to see if they have added your
link. If they haven't added it within a month, one follow-up email
is normally acceptable. If you don't hear back from them for a
month after that, it may be time to remove their link from your
links page, unless you feel that the resource they provide is of
critical value to your visitors. Check your rankings every month or
so to see how they improve, and, if necessary, start the process
again.
The List Of Don'ts
Don't exchange links with sites that you would not want your
visitors to see. This type of link can make your site look
indiscriminate while defeating the entire purpose of link
popularity. Also, do not ever exchange links with sites that
contain nothing but a huge collection of links (AKA "link farms").
Search engines have been known to aggressively penalize sites that
are associated with such sites. In addition, do not harass people
who do not answer your emails. Remember that you are contacting
someone, out of the blue, who probably has too much to do already.
If they haven't responded within a month of your second email,
don't expect a link. Finally, do not expect overnight results. Link
building takes a great deal of time and labor, and there is no real
shortcut- a primary reason why search engines place importance on
it. If your site is terrible, you aren't going to convince many
others to link to you, no matter how sweetly you ask.
Conclusion
A properly executed link building campaign will help boost your
ranking with many search engines, but this is only part of the
benefit. The quality sites that have agreed to link to you will
also send you highly relevant traffic. Also, your brand and name
will become better known within your industry as a result of the
link requests that you make. Finally, your additions to Yahoo and
the Open Directory will send you a great deal of additional quality
traffic. Link building is a laborious process, but if done properly
it is most definitely worth the effort.
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