I love freestyle link building. There is hardly anything more satisfying than getting in the zone and branching out into countless search iterations plucking opportunities one by one, thinking of great content ideas, implementing it, sending it out and watching it hatch. This article, however, is not about that. Instead I will take you through methodology evolved within Dejan SEO team over the period of last two years which helped us manage extremely competitive SEO projects. Large-scale link building campaigns for multiple websites require well-defined workflow, scalability and structure.
Planning Stage
Assessment of Current Backlink Profile
Before getting carried away with anything else it's wise to take a look at the current backlink profile and understand its strengths and weaknesses.
Risk Analysis
During backlink examination process make note of any suspicious links and create a 'liability' list. If you notice obvious linking patterns, request additional feedback from the client.
Questions to ask are:
- Do you know anything about this?
- Who was link building before us, you or another company?
- Did you have a link buying budget?
- Is there a list of all paid links?
- Do you still have contacts from link sellers and logins with text link brokers?
- During what time period did manipulative link techniques take place?
Risk of algorithmic penalty decreases with the size of the site you're working on, and by 'size' I mean its natural organic status. Typically larger brands and well-known websites have complex link profiles with numerous sources of links. A few scattered paid links are probably not worth chasing after. If it's a part of an automated scheme though, something that might poke a quality rater in the eye then it might be worth going through the trouble of cleanup - especially if you work in a competitive industry where spam reporting is a common practice.
Competitive Analysis
Competitive analysis is not only useful for copying links, but also for understanding if a competitor is really a competitor. If you are a brand new book seller and you examine Amazon's backlink profile you will soon learn that Amazon is not really your competitor because you are far from their status. Targeting somebody in a closer niche will help you benchmark properly and help you focus on more realistic link targets.
Qualitative Analysis
While examining your competitors' links it's a good idea to pay attention to quality of their links. This will enable you to prioritise your link building activities from top down by targeting most potent links first and least important links last.
Common tools available for this type of research are:
- Open Site Explorer - Accurate data.
- Majestic SEO - Deeper than OSE but contains noisy, unfiltered data.
- Official Google Toolbar (PageRank) - Single metric. Infrequently updated.
Quantitative Analysis
Search engines do care about numbers of inbound links. When examining numbers you can ignore the total link count and instead focus on unique linking domains and unique C-blocks. This is a no-brainer and more means better. Keep in mind that you've already performed risk assessment and already know if there are any liabilities and weak spots in your backlink profile which may reveal patterns and traces of link manipulation.
Link Velocity
It's good to have milestones in the SEO process. One of them might be to balance and overtake competitors in terms of quantity and quality of links. Pay attention to pace at which competing websites acquire new links as this may affect how your calculations work. Majestic SEO provides interesting graphs which may help understand your competitors' link building efforts in terms of newly discovered links for each month.
Existing Links
Log into Google Webmaster Tools and download all your links. Examine them manually looking for signs of quality (.gov, .edu, big brands). Observe what type of content attracted links and consider creating more of it. Take a look at your most linked pages and confirm your findings. Once the most obvious opportunities are noted run an automated link analysis and let the script do the rest. If you don't have the ability to create own link analysis software use OSE or Majestic SEO as an alternative. If you do use Majestic make sure you authorise your website so you don't pay for the analysis with much needed credits. Analysis of own backlink profile is an essential step which too many SEO professionals skip and ignore. It makes no sense to go hunting for new links if your old links could be fixed and great content ideas generated through observation of linking habits of others. While doing this keep an eye on 404 content and notify webmasters of your new pages and/or implement appropriate redirection to route link juice to new URLs.
Defining Targets
Pages / URLs
This may seem like common sense but your link builders should be well informed about which pages they are to target and which phrases to use when negotiating links. What may seem like an obvious target to you may be something totally different to a link builder. Typically this happens when trying to replace the ranking page with another one which may convert better.
Phrases
Have a clearly defined list of phrases and type of content corresponding to different pages on the site. Include all possible phrase variations within this list and make it available to your link building team. It's a good practice to put priorities or importance percentages in place to balance your targets to desired effect.
Assessment of Assets
Making links is really hard. Don't give your link building team any ammunition and the quality of links will be poor. Before you brief your team, have a chat to the client and examine all existing assets which may be of use.
Linkable Content
It's easy to get a link to a piece of content that deserves it. Why not arm your link builders with highly linkable pages and make their job easier?
Unused Assets
Very often you will find digital content floating around emails, hard drives or just backed up on CD/DVD media - doing nothing. Not to use this type of content is silly. A single case study or a white paper may contain enough material for ten separate pages of content.
Data
Content is sometimes staring you in the face and you're unable to recognise it. This happens very often with data driven companies and even with e-Commerce websites. They collect information all the time without realising it. Using internal data such as analytics, pricing trends and consumer behaviour can provide valuable content which can add value to your content and arm your link building team with additional linkable assets.
Relationships
Yes, relationships are an asset - so you need to understand how the business you work with is connected in the digital and real world. Setup a meeting and go over this with the client and provide some original ideas which may help them think further. It's really hard to start thinking, but once you get warmed up great ideas will start popping up. Record all these ideas and prepare approach strategy and have client approve it. Asking existing partners, customers or suppliers for links could be a sensitive activity and could lead to embarrassing moments and even termination of your SEO contract.
Keep in mind that everything you do online impacts your client's brand online - so try not to spam or upset people with your link building activities. You may not be aware of it, but a single person on your team may be doing it right now - quality control is essential.
Forming a Schedule
Having schedules means being organised, but with link building schedules are more or less an arbitrary structural thing so don't get obsessed if a deadline has been missed. We're dealing with third parties and heavily depend on the speed of response of others.
Choosing Link Building Styles
There are many methods of link acquisition, some are instant, some require negotiation or money transactions. It's a good practice to define link building styles available to the team and set rules around usage. If you don't do this you will inevitably end up with more of easy links and not necessarily the ones that will impact the rankings.
Percentage Allocation
Similarly to allocation of anchor text and target pages define what type of link building activity is allowed or recommended and set guidelines around importance.
Balancing Targeting, Quality, and Quantity
Whether it's yourself or one of your team leaders, somebody needs to keep a finger on the pulse all the time. If you are link building towards ten phrases and one of them pops into #1 spot in the first week it may happen that link building continues for that phrase until the end of the month with other phrases not moving at all. Recognising situations like that can make a big difference for your client's profits. If it has been several months and a particular link building exercise yields no results perhaps it's time to admit defeat and change approach. Support your link building team and make those decisions for them - as they will be too absorbed in the negotiation process to see the big picture at all times.
Budget
Everything you do costs money: staff, content, resources and transactions. Even if you don't buy links, you'll need a clearly defined budget for link building activities which do require transactions (e.g. memberships, sponsorships, paid directories). Prioritise your spending in order of potential impact and provide spend as part of your monthly report. This piece of data will be appreciated by marketers and business owners as it's something tangible and they can easily understand it.
Selecting People
If you have a whole team of link builders it is essential to select the right people to work on the right type of project. Look at personal interests and abilities of individual staff members and keep in mind their current engagement. Load balancing will ensure everyone contributes evenly and you're not overwhelming a single team member as this can have negative impact on their performance.
Setup
Setup of link building activities is not just creation and allocation of tasks, but mostly two way communication between SEO strategists and the link building department where a proper handover of information and assets takes place.
Team Brief
During the briefing session cover the following areas:
The above are not just vague notions, provide solid lists and guidelines that are practical and actionable. You will also need to equip your staff with appropriate email addresses to use for link building and setup professional-looking email signatures. Each team member should already have their own developed online persona which will be looked at by people who are about to give a link or start communication with them. If they don't, then include it as part of the setup process. With directory submission details, keep in mind that you should probably not use own emails or phone numbers when submitting and also client's own email or office address may not be appropriate for public listing. Check with the client before you go sharing their contact details online. Use the brief session to allocate roles within the team in detail so they know who does what (e.g. content, research, negotiation).
Content Generation
I cannot imagine any type of whitehat link building to take place without great content to start with. There are numerous options available: articles, whitepapers, infographics, research material, multimedia content, downloads and templates. Start generating these early as they will take time to implement and often delayed in publishing due to approval process.
Creative Idea Process
Link Building Workflow
Research Activities
Research is the fun part of the link building and is much like surfing the web which can be enhanced with numerous research tools available out there, but not as a way of quality increase, but for productivity. Creative element of the research process remains with the individual performing it. Select your best and most creative people for this task, ideally somebody who understands the industry. Research should yield solid link opportunities and be well documented.
Obstacles in Research Activities
Link building research is meant to be just that - research, and its product is a tangible, actionable list of link opportunities. Anything that happens in the meantime fragments your process.
Distractions
You were researching links and all of a sudden you're watching a funny video, playing a game or reading a news article and you don't know how. It's good to have a break, but you can perhaps leave it for lunchtime.
Fragmentation
Resist the urge and temptation of trying to score a link straight away. Stay on your path and keep recording great link opportunities. You will be a lot more productive that way.
Topical Iteration
There are many paths research can take you and it's likely you will iterate into many sub-topics or your original research theme. Don't fear the scope, keep them coming. If your topics suddenly have no touching points perhaps it's time to zoom out, review your research and pick a new starting point.
Flow Mapping
Flow mapping is more of a productivity problem than anything and can help you get back on track much more efficiently than your million open tabs. One such tool is Voyage (for Firefox) which maps your browsing activity automatically.
Outside Intrusions
Close your email client, messenger, Twitter, Facebook and other forms of distraction. Tell everyone else to keep their questions for after your research is finished.
Recording Targets
Good record keeping is essential. If you don't have link building management software available to you then setup a collaborative spreadsheet and record your findings that way. Sharing link opportunities internally means less repetitive work for everyone and more links for clients.
Balancing Placement
Some links take time and others can happen straight away, surprisingly they may carry equal amounts of benefit in many cases. It's essential to recognise links you can get straight away and continuously grow the backlink profile while you research and negotiate others.
Negotiation
Negotiation is the hard part, so allocate people with best communication skills who are able to organise and followup. Remember to arm them all necessary tools and assets before they start.
Quality Control
Links can have a serious impact on both rankings and online reputation of your client. Continuous spot-checking and regular monthly link analysis is essential in order to stay out of trouble. Remember that no matter what measures you take there can always be new situations which you have not factored in during the planning stage. Google client communication and transparency can help in early detection of problems. This can potentially save both the contract and reputation of your SEO company. One measure which is easy to implement for monitoring of correspondence quality is setup Google Alerts.
Result Monitoring
Monitoring the results and overall performance of the SEO campaign is in the hands of an SEO strategist, however having link builders keep an eye on results can be very stimulating. Link building is not an easy task and celebrating success can do wonders to personal motivation of team members. Secondary benefit is that you end up with a better alert system if something should go wrong with the results or if particular phrase needs more or less attention.
Coaching
One of the most essential activities for large teams is regular coaching and sharing of internal knowledge. In-person or Skype and screen sharing sessions are ideal when in small groups of no more than four members. Focus on issues specific to their projects and do live link building, try out new advanced search queries and use the opportunity to collect feedback from people in the field. Outside of real-time coaching it's a good practice to send group email with wins and success stories. For rules and tips setup an internal wiki and allow members to make contributions. Followup regularly on new link building practices and ideas as they are not always adopted the first time - habits can be a touch thing to change. Reward individuals who adopt new strategies and perform well by both bonuses and public praise.
Productivity Tools
One area I did not discuss enough was the software-aided link building simply because there aren't any tools that truly satisfy our needs at present. We employ our own link management framework to record link building activities, opportunities, contact details, correspondence, categories, link building styles and stay on top of performance tracking. In a team of more than twenty link builders a lot of links are generated and it's hard to keep track of double contacting, link drop alerts, link partnerships and complex link scanning and data analysis. For those who are just starting out Ontolo and Raven may be a good solution.
Conclusion
If you are surprised by the amount of work that goes in the setup and execution of our link building campaigns, remember this is not a guide for managing small projects or a single account. Instead I have shared with you a set of measures we put in place to keep large-scale link building operations successful and manageable.
whoa. That was a great and phenominally detailed post.
I'm definitely going to implement some of these techniques in my next link building campaign.
Thanks for taking the time to write that beast.
At first I thought this post was going to be schlock due to some of the content at the beginning and I couldn't have been more wrong. This breakdown is for a SERIOUS link builder, and I am sure that your clients must be extremely happy with their results. Excellent job.
You're not the only one who thinks my intro is pretty ordinary... perhaps a short table of contents or a better summary would help next time I do a longer piece. I'll keep that in mind.
I didn't mean to be so harsh, you did an excellent job overall.
You get an avg. time on page of 32 minutes. That's A LOT! Clearly readers find lots of valuable info in your blog post. I know I did.
Wow... I didn't even look at the stats. That's very interesting!
Wow! To this point I have only done Freestyle Link Building. This is exactly what I needed to start looking at what it takes to truly build links for clients.
Not sure I would qualify as a legitimate tester for your Alpha, but I'm highly interested in the software and would love to get updates on it.
And I agree with EaZio, itd be great to have a Print option. I plan on reading this again!
I'll get one of my designers to make us a handy infographic to summarise the article.
Dejan - Excellent detail post on being effective and analytical while link building. I just noticed that this blog even got promoted this morning while checking my Google Reader. This blog is definitely worth being on the SEOmoz blog! Grats and thank you for the share.
Hi Dejan,
Good post really enjoyed it...Good to see Australian SEO's on SEOMOZ =)
I agree with alot of your processes with link building have used most of them for years but of course with our own little mix.
I would love to know what this special tool you use for link building management? I have been using Adgooroo link inisights and Buzz Stream and feel if set up right they are more effective then excel sheets.
Regards,
James Norquay.
I have tried every link management tool under the sun and nothing does the job... there are so many complexities in the process that only a true link builder can design a system that would fit the purpose. Link entry, recording, statuses, search, retrieval, categorisation, communication trail, alerts and notifications, toolset for link patterns, safety alerts, contact management...etc. We haven't designed our tool to go public but happy to put a limited number people on the alpha test as soon as it's available.
Hi Dejan,
Great post. I trully learned a lot. Would love to be on your "alpha test" list.
Roger that!
Here, I remembered!Drop us a line here to apply for alpha test: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dHRlcjcwdlRqLTh2ZXNLMHBBVkdPa0E6MQ
:)
If you want locals to test the tool let me know =)
Regards.
You will be one of the first invited as soon as it's available.
Hey Dejan, add me to your list please. And, thanks for sharing, I'm sure it wasn't easy sharing your company's process. Thumbs up! :-)
Here you go Donnie. Looking forward to having you on alpha test team.
Hey James. Alpha tester application: Here it is.
Would love to get in on the alpha as well, have tried a number of link management tools, none of which have checked all the right boxes.
an alpha test that sounds like some fun, glad to see the platform has progressed so far
Hey Dan,
although I read the post before it was published i have to say I'm glad to see some positive feedback :) This article (small book) of yours will surely come in handy to everyone looking to scale some serious link building campaigns.
PS. I'm not sucking up to my boss, I really found the article to be great to say the least
Hmmm.... a book you say. That gives me an idea! ;-)
Perhaps something short with minimal editorial and all raw actionable data. Even if it had 50 pages that thing would sell well. Anything like that already around?
Not sure, but if you add plenty of graphic examples to break the content this can be a real winner
This post is incredible and exhaustive! It also outlines my process exactly. Start from the existing backlink profile, pull competitor profiles, then research your own opportunities.
The breakdown of how to allocate resources and such is superb.
This post is so good that I'm jealous I didn't write it.
Props to you my good man!
What he said
Stuff like this I write a script with a dictonary of keywords and I search the database for the exact phrase then I know what pages the client is missing out on with internal linking.
This alone pushed clients up to the first page.
Thanks Dejan, that's an awesome post!
I shall be bookmarking to read again since it's one of those that need multiple reads for it all to be absorbed properly (which is a good thing of course).
You mentioned before in the Q&A that you'd put together a system for link management, is this what you meant?
Nope. This is just our methodology. We have actually implemented our own link management system as Ontolo and Raven...etc didn't fit our requirements. We're currently evaluating UX and interface and launching a new version in July-August.
hey Dan, congrats to getting featured on SEOmoz blog. a post like this deserves to be moved from youMoz to the main blog :)
Funny you said that. :)
mate a great post but now i'm feeling guilty about having Facebook open :)
Great post, posts like this are why I wish SEOmoz would have one of those "print to PDF" or even just a "print" button for posts. Would be nice to be able to make this a PDF and carry it around with me on my tablet. :)
Thanks for the good write-up.
That's a good idea - I like PDF option better than printing, it's greener and more portable.
If you use FireFox there are plenty of plugins which will allow you to create PDFs of webpages :)
@Dejan - Definitely agree with you there, the only reason I would want the regular print button, is because I use CutePDF, a virtual printer for Windows that creates PDFs of any document that you can print.
@Heart - Of course, but I'd like to get just the article by itself, without all the comments, nav menu, and side menu. Also, I use Chrome :P
Great post. I have to take a look @ Ontolo
Great post. It's nice to have post with real content and not just alot of fluff.
Everybody has the own systems for link building and tracking their progress. Every time I run across someone else system in detail it makes me re-evaluate ours. Now and then something comes around that we will adapt to our own process to make it better.
Thanks again for sharing.
Great I'd love to hear more. You'd be suprised how many people don't have a system in place... better yet - many SEO companies don't even do link building and charge their clients for "ongoing fees".
Hey Dejan,
I already noticed you and your company several months ago, especially because of your website and blog which aren't typical but really interesting.
It was just obvious that I had to read your post here, and I wasn't disappointed. Not many people share this kind of information, because this could prove very useful for your competitors...
Looking forward to your next pieces of content. Cheers
This post is to know what is link building and I know it. In that case of blog is to achieve your goal being an SEO and to be a professional in link building.
Hi, Great tips. I'm currently doing linkbuilding for a client and I am having trouble with the quality of my links. I have looked at competitors backlinks and they have a lot of directory submission. But I have been told to stay clear of all directories. IS this true? Also how do you put a target on how many links you should do a day a week? You can force people to get back to you and some people take longer then others to reply to emails? Also what should be the cut off point with regards to quality of links? I usually use domain authority and Linking Root Domains to make a call. I try to find the highest I can but what should be the minimum I should look for? Can you also explain to me the c-block majestic stuff as I am confused? how whould I use this data and what should I be looking?
There are obviously a number of difference approaches but if you are looking to understand quality why not use the SEO Toolbar? As for the cut off it depends on the client, but I would try and get links with a Moz score as close to the client as possible or higher than their competitors backlinks.
Cheers I will certainly have a look at this. Also is it true that all gov.uk sites are good to link to? I have found some gov.uk sites but the google PR bar is grey on the page I want to put the link on? will this be bad in the long run for me or is it worth linking to all gov.uk sites no matter what?
Amazing detail! Thank you for taking the time to share and outline such a thorough process. We often find that people are extremely capable at doing thorough competitive link analysis, but lack the patience, focus and dedication to execute.
Perhaps have two teams, one in research and others in the field?
You're absolutely right. That's what we do. We have teams consisting of an SEO consultant, client success manager, social outreach specialist and editor. These teams combined with our account reps (sales people) conduct competitive link research before entering it into our workforce management software. Our author and social teams then follow a prescription based on that research to execute on link and social strategies. Sometimes the SEO consultants and outreach specialists will directly execute strategies that are way outside the box and not yet built out for our execution teams.
This is a really great, detailed article - thanks very much. However it's quite late my end, so i'm going to download it to my desktop to take in tomorrow morning when my mind is fresher.
Thank you for taking the time to give us great notes, it's really appreciated.
You have given quite detailed and expert professional tips back there. I will have liked even more if it was something for a small time webmaster easy to grab and implement stuff. Although they are not much far from them.
Yes not a bad idea. Perhaps in a followup article and get down to a practical level.
Holy S... Cow!
Thank you for taking the time to put together such a highly detailed work flow.
Kevin
Wow! That was a crazy detailed post! Thanks for the insight. Any link building help is appreciated!
Just as an aside, you may want to obscure the "who links to me" image as well. If you're trying to remain incognito I'm sure some folks on here could reverse engineer it and figure out the site. Just a suggestion. :)
I enjoyed this post a lot although I agree, it took a little while to get into it - competitive analysis and backlink analysis are common steps so I wasn't sure this was going to go anywhere special, but it did! Linkbuilding requires tenacity, organization, AND creativity, and it's always inspiring for me to read about how other people and firms go about it. There are three things that I use/think about when linkbuilding now.
1. Google Alerts. Nothing special to this tip either, but I scan these everyday for three distinct keyphrases and am willing to drop comments in articles if I can't email the author. It not only helps me stay current in the conversation but has led me to a few very relevant linking opportunities.
2. Email Addresses. I really prefer to be upfront with the people I contact for a link request. I've had people answer me back specifically mentioning "sleazy emails" they get from people posing as teachers or whatnot. However I do think spam blockers single out company emails at times. For example, I kept trying to submit a message to a government site and kept getting flagged by their contact form's spam blocker. Finally I realized it had to do with my email address and changed it to my personal email. Not only did that get through to the agency, but I got a response a few days later (don't get too excited, I didn't get a link!). So switching at times to my personal email is something I'm thinking about, despite the risk of being seen as slightly unprofessional.
3. Inspiration. John Jay, Executive Creative Director & Partner of Wieden + Kennedy, a global advertising agency, provides my favorite quote of the month (source, the project room) - "Inspiration is a fulltime job and we take it seriously." A great quote for linkbuilders, I think.
Interesting point. Inspiration comes to me mostly when I step back and slow down... as soon as I add pressure the creativity seems to be going down and everyone tends to go for well known tactics and sources of links. Where is the balance?
Dejan mate this is Incredible and detailed post, I really loved this one!
Link Building can be fun or pain depending upon how you manage it… (Pain for non famous or less commercialized niches, as they have lesser opportunities to grab a link) but you are absolutely right at management regardless of multiple or single project and regardless of how big or small your industry is if you are not going to manage your project you will most probably end up having not so good relationship with clients.
Also, thank you for the Creative Idea Process and I am defiantly going to share it with the people in my team.
Superb and worth Reading Post!
This was the most informative report that I have ever read about back linking strategies. Sometimes this stuff seems so complicated. Thank you for shedding light to something we all must do!
Great write up, I like the questions you've posed.
I think that same list, with slight modification, should be standard when coming into a new company for any service - link building, content management, paid search, online marketing, even offline marketing.
It's good to know how things were done previously and to get as much info as possible upfront while still developing your plan. It's easier than back-peddling and can save countless hours if contacts have already been made and niches have already been broken into.
It often suprises me how much data and connections everyone has already and always a headsmacking moment when they realise it's all convertible into online content and links.
The internal wiki idea is a great one, especially if you have new team member who will need to rely on the reference for a while or for developing strategy collaboratively. Great idea!
One note about internal wiki - if you spend time writing it and nobody reads it then you've wasted time. It happened to us. Best thing is to get everyone engaged and able to contribute content to make the manual building more meaningful to them.
I didn't know "link building management" could be so fun to read. Link building without a proper strategy can quickly turn into a nightmare, so this is great to see such organization and hierarchy for an immensely complex task. Thanks for the tips!
Link building is one of those efforts that really evolves every single day. You have to always be hunting for different locations and organization plays a very important role.
This guide is really comprehensive and takes a look in all angles and aspects of link building!
I find the item "Distraction" amusing - but you are right, that really like it is.
Some time ago I cann't link building and don't know about link building but this information makes me a perfect link building master. Thanks for sharing useful information and tips. I really need to this.
just joined in. this is the 1st ariticle I read here, and it's really cool.
thanks for sharing
Hi, Great tips. I'm currently doing linkbuilding for a client and I am having trouble with the quality of my links. I have looked at competitors backlinks and they have a lot of directory submission. But I have been told to stay clear of all directories. IS this true? Also how do you put a target on how many links you should do a day a week? You can force people to get back to you and some people take longer then others to reply to emails? Also what should be the cut off point with regards to quality of links? I usually use domain authority and Linking Root Domains to make a call. I try to find the highest I can but what should be the minimum I should look for? Can you also explain to me the c-block majestic stuff as I am confused? how whould I use this data and what should I be looking?
Brilliantly presented and enlightening, this article helps a lot!
Great article. Very informative indeed. I'd like to get some quotes from here. I'll be starting soon.
I don't know why there is no followup since two years before for a great post like this ;)
Hi Dan, is your tools completed? Are you still offering alpha test position? I'd like to try your tool.
By the way, we launched a link building management system which aims at improving SEO team's collaboration and productivity. Would you give it a try at buildlinkapp.com? It would be great if you have some time to review and send us suggestion on it.
Good day!
Fantastic breakdown of link building management. A lot of site owners, when they first get into SEO, don't really understand how much time and effort it takes to implement a strong link building campaign. You could spend 30-40 hours working on a campaign and the client still doesnt' understand what you aren't doing more faster! Well, here is why!
Thanks
Awesome post...thank you..
Great post , thank you
Whoa, that's gotta be one of the most comprehensive posts on link building that I've read to date. Fantastic job!
Great post - looks like this took you ages to write! [BOOKMARKED]
The infographic sounds awesome look forward to seeing it.
Need to build a ton of links so this will be very useful indeed!
Love the bit about getting distracted whilst researching links - its so true! Will need to dig up some old plug ins I had that ripped away all the styling and videos. Very handy.
Consider this puppy bookmarked for future use. I've got a lot of linkbuilding to do once our new site is complete. This will be an excellent resource. Thanks Dejan!
Great post Dejan. Good to see someone from Brisbane on SEOMOZ.
Great post. Bookmarked for sure!
Excellent post, it really pushes the boundaries of link building posts which are usually along the lines of 'Create good content and form relationships with people' (good advice, but far too frequently quoted without a new take). - Jenni
Absolutely one of the best posts I've read on Link Building from planning to implementation. Very realistic. Thanks for the insights.
Good food for thoughts!