Link
popularity - who should you link to
When you're building links to increase your link popularity, who
do you link to? The question of where to link to increase ranking
can be confusing. Logical thinking is needed to achieve link
popularity in a natural way.
Google PageRank
First and foremost, PageRank is part of the algorithm of Google's
ranking in the search engine results. Other search engines use
link popularity in their algorithm to evaluate your website as
well. But PageRank is only one of the 100 plus criteria Google
uses to evaluate your web pages.
Use
the idea of PageRank as a tool to help make decisions, there's no
need to live and die by the results. Link popularity itself is
merely one way to improve your ranking.
Should you link to them?
Think about it. You see a quality website, you see good content.
The site is a Mum and Dad website with little ranking. So what if
the Google Toolbar says PageRank 2/10? That 2/10 may one day be
8/10. More importantly, you're linking to it because it's good to
link to for your visitors - end of story.
Reciprocal linking fears
There is a general fear of reciprocal linking to websites who
inadvertently link to a bad neighbourhood with penalties or
PageRank zero, passing on problems to you.
Use your common sense. Is this a website you would want to visit
or your visitors would want to visit? If the answer is no or you
can't tell what the subject of the site is, make a note of it and
keep looking. A website full of links with little content doesn't
make sense because what benefit is it to you or your visitors? Of
course you are going to link to your partners in business or maybe
the small website that is doing a bang up job of selling widgets
and providing widget information.
Linking just to link
If you're going to link, what purpose does it serve? The idea of
acquiring link popularity by linking back and forth to other sites
to boost your popularity artificially is a popular method. But is
it of value to your website? Ask yourself:
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Would you link to this site if link popularity in the search engines didn't matter?
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Would your visitor care about this link or find it helpful?
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Does the website have good content?
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Is this an opportunity for you to publicise your website by being listed there?
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Will this link cause you to spend a great deal of time worrying about it?
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Is the link just a link or do you want a link from any site whose visitors care about what you have to say
Places to seek out links that make sense
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Accessibility & CSS support packages
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Get on-going help with:
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Problem HTML and/or CSS code
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Accessibility checking of new or existing pages
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The writing of HTML/CSS code
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Training or advice on accessibility and/or CSS
It
makes sense to list your website in the search engines and
directories. In fact, one-way linking, such as listing your site
in directories, is a good way to improve your link popularity
naturally. Well, you say to yourself, of course I've done that.
Besides the major directories, what else is out there? You'd be
surprised at the amount of good secondary and specialty
directories that drive traffic. Some even specialize in a topic -
maybe your topic.
If you have a product to sell, look at who your competitors are
linking to. Search for directories and business sites on your
topic. Look for websites that talk about the widgets you sell and
see if they accept submissions to their directory listings in the
category for widgets.
Do they accept original articles, product reviews, press releases
or white papers about widgets? If so, submit your topical articles
and watch your link popularity rise naturally. Always include your
author bio, website link, reprint and copyright information for
your company. With your good content on other websites as well as
archived on your own website, there you have it, links pointing
back to your website.
Think like a search visitor
You've heard about good navigation, website usability and other
ways to keep your site visitors interested in your site. Who are
the search engines catering to? Webmasters? Search Engine
Marketers? Google is a prime example - they want to create the
best experience for their search engine users.
It all ties in together - good content, good navigation, good
usability, validated code, and relevant search engine results -
because it makes sense. If Google as the leader in search engines
is concerned about the visitor, don't you think the other search
engines follow suit?
Hard work instead of worrying
Focus your time on good content which uses your important keyword
phrases. Optimise your web pages using those keywords. Develop
your website so once your visitors arrive, they'll want to stay.
The world wide web uses linking to connect us all. By using hard
work to create a quality website and common sense when linking you
can stop worrying and start succeeding.
This article was written by Daria Goetsch. Daria is the founder
and search engine marketing consultant for Search Innovation
Marketing, a search engine promotion company serving small
businesses. She has specialized in search engine optimisation
since 1998, including three years as the search engine specialist
for O'Reilly & Associates, a technical book publishing
company.


