One great way to get lots of links is to launch a massive media campaign. This works particularly well if you are a large brand. What if you aren't? Well then, you are at a disadvantage. Massive media campaigns are great ways to get lots of links, and major brands launch these things without even blinking an eye.
Assuming that this is not an option for you, let's explore the kinds of things that you can do instead and win, anyway. It's one of the great things about the web today. While having a massive marketing budget is a significant advantage, if you are smart and fast, success can still be yours. In fact, you can create a brand in all types of novel new ways on the Internet.
This post will focus on deciding what methods you should consider for developing high value, authoritative links. Successful execution of high value link strategies almost always requires compelling content or tools, so know that going in. If you are not willing to make that kind of investment, move onto the next post, because this one is not for you.
You can't afford to waste a lot of time on strategies that are not going to pan out for you. In fact, if you start on a strategy that is not the right one, the best you thing you can do is fail fast. Why? Because then you can move onto the next strategy without a long delay.
It is critical that you analyze the best strategies to use with your business up front. There are many, many types of marketing opportunities that you can pursue, and each business has unique aspects to it. Let's start by exploring some of the major methodologies for link building (buying links will not be included in this list; for more information on that, see my recent post, I Don't Buy Links).
Link Building Opportunities
1. Social News Sites: Digg, Reddit, Propeller, and other sites like them. Success on these sites can produce hundreds, or even thousands of links. The big things to consider when examining this strategy are:
- What is the demographic of the social news site, and what content will appeal to them?
- Can you produce content that would appeal to that audience?
- Will the resulting links have a chance of being relevant to your business?
2. Online Media Sites: These start with high value sites like the New York Times, Boston.com, and About.com. However, these are very difficult to get on, and most will need to aim a bit lower.
The key question to ask here is what media sites provide coverage relevant to your business? If you offer a product related to diabetes, you might want to appear in Diabetes Health, Diabetes Digest, or Diabetes News.
The key question here is what can you do to earn a place in these magazines? One great thing to try and do is to write an article that they would be interested in publishing. Be aware though, the content needs to be really good, and it needs to contain something new. Rehashes of old topics have a much lower success rate.
Are there online media sites like these for your business? Can you produce content of a high enough quality to get into them? If yes to both of those questions, you may want to consider this type of strategy for your biz.
3. Widgets
- Develop a free and unrestricted application that is designed to go viral. The key here is to develop something that will cause users to want to tell other people about it - let them do the marketing for you. These can be applications that work better with multiple participants, or things that the user wants to show off.
Note that this is a bit indirect. Your application is not going to go viral if you require users to link to you to use it. But, have a widget go viral for you, and the links will follow. One of our clients, ProTrade had a great deal of success on Facebook using this approach. - Use widgets as a syndication strategy. To do this, embed valuable content that others will want to put on their web sites. Then use a market outreach program to tell people who can use that information about your widget. Since this is a bit more of a manual effort, you can require that you get one or more links in return for providing the content. One client, whom I can't name, has gotten links from over 2,000 relevant sites using this technique.
4. Good Old Fashioned PR: OK, so you can't afford a multi-million dollar campaign, but you can still do this. You can find PR firms that will do pretty good work for a few thousand dollars per month. Using these types of resources is a way of accelerating your online media strategy, and can be quite effective.
Nearly all PR firms will start off their work for you with a whole host of ideas regarding how to promote their business. They also have the tools, the contacts, and the experience to do some things more effectively then you can do those things yourself.
Just be careful to stay engaged with your PR firm. The more active you are in setting direction, the more value you will get. Have some ideas at the beginning of the engagement, and continue to feed them ideas throughout your engagement with them. You know your business better than they do, and they know media better than you do. Focus on leveraging both of those strengths together.
5. University Sites: This is an oldie but goodie. I am not talking about spamming forums on university sites and stuffing them with links. There are lots of places on university sites where it is possible to get an honest to goodness endorsement for your quality web site, provided that there is a reason for them to link to it.
For example, job sites can approach the career center department of schools and seek to get listed there. There are sites that have accumulated hundreds of such links. If this is a match for you, then this is a great strategy to pursue.
Note that there is no automatic match with getting a link from an ".edu" domain. EDU links end up being good for two major reasons:
- Many colleges and universities have powerful, and potentially authoritative, web sites. This is because of the links they have, not because the domain is an EDU.
- If you have a legitimate match to the needs of their students, these types of sites are usually pretty apporachable.
6. Government Sites: Another oldie but goodie. The story here is very similar to that of university sites. Determine if you have a match in terms of content to the audience that the government site is trying to reach with a particular web page. Then figure out who to contact.
Note that many government web sites have a published Linking Policy. Make sure you read the policy for the given web site before contacting any one at the site. Otherwise, you might accidentally commit a faux pas, and put the opportunity with that site at risk.
As an example of this, one of our clients, VisualDXHealth was able to get a number of links from the National Library of Medicine. This was part of a larger web site marketing campaign that has moved traffic from about 1600 per day in May 2007 to nearly 20,000 as of March 2008.
7. The Blogosphere: This really is a sub-segment of the online media campaign. However, I like to talk about it separately, because it has a lot of different dynamics. With a traditional online media person, you want to solve a problem for them. With bloggers, you want to start a conversation.
Here you start by identifying the influential bloggers in your space. There are lots of ways to go about doing this. I know the folks at SEO-PR like to use a tool called Buzz Logic, and that this has worked very well for them. One way to do that is to get your PR firm to do this for you.
The other way to do it is to do some research using tools like Dane Carlson's How Much is My Blog Worth widget (another example of a great widget success story!). You can also use your feedreader (e.g., Bloglines or Google Reader, etc.), to tell you how many people subscribe to that blog with that reader. Better still, use more than one reader so you can get multiple data points.
Focus on the more influential bloggers, because you will get far more mileage there. Other bloggers will follow their lead. Just remember, this starts by building a relationship, and you don't start a relationship by asking them to give you a link, or stuffing comments filled with links back to your stuff on their posts.
Matching Business to Opportunity
Above I outlined 8 methods to use in hunting for really high value links. These are the types of links you just can't buy. But there are more strategies than one company can reasonably pursue at one time. Even if you could pursue them all at once, they don't all fit any given business. For example, some businesses may be reluctant to develop the type of content necessary to score well on Digg.
So, you must choose. The way to go about this is to review all of your opportunities and brainstorm them. You actually start by doing the research on all the different approaches up front. For example, when you are looking at the blogosphere, you would make sure you knew who the most influential bloggers are in your space (you should know who they are, anyway), and assess whether or not you could develop a relationship with them, and assess the impact.
Very similarly, when you look at online media, you go find the major media that covers your space on the web, and determine whether or not you have a shot at earning a link from them. With universities, you might want to look at the universities and colleges that offer education on topics directly related to your space.
Put all of this research together and determine your chances of success with a link marketing strategy, the amount of effort required to succeed, and the scope of the benefit when you succeed. Then pick the one, or a few, that offer you the best chances of success.
Set Your Sights High - Think About Getting Links Automatically
Let's face it. Any form of link building is hard work. The good stuff is not cheap or easy. For many people, it pays to set your sights high. Not so high that you can't be successful, but push yourself to get the highest quality links you can reasonably expect to be successful in obtaining. Then, once you get your first win, use that one as a reference in pursuing your next few links.
Then, push closer and closer to the top, as quickly as you can. Extremely high value links beget more links. When you get cited by leaders in your space, others notice. Get cited by enough leaders, and more people notice. Some of the people who go to that authoritative site may be linkers themselves. Now you can start to get links without any manual effort on your part. Man oh man, that's linking nirvana, because you'll be off to the races at that point.
Summary
Ultimately, you want to consider all available strategies that you can reasonably execute. Then you want to choose a small number of strategies (possibly one) to focus on, and then be very focused in your execution of that strategy (or those strategies). Remember to push hard enough that you fail fast if you are going to fail with one particular strategy, so you can go onto the next strategy quickly.
Match your content to the target and you will have a much greater chance of success. Then start knocking down those power links and watch your traffic soar.
"With a traditional online media person, you want to solve a problem for them. With bloggers, you want to start a conversation."
Eric,
Great post with many thoughtful linking tips. To me, the sentence above should have been bolded, italicized, underlined and highlighted. It is a profound idea that is at the core of why advertisers have largely to date, achieved modest success (some would say utter failure), in approaching the social media crowd.
To be effective with that demographic, they need to be communicated with, not sold to.
Thanks for the post. Thumbs up.
This was a great article. Thanks... (Rand, you better keep an eye on this guy!)
Keep an eye on him? Nah, we've just gone ahead and contracted him to write for us every other week :) So far, it's going really well. We've enjoyed Eric's posts from afar for a long time and are thrilled to have him as part of the formal blogging crew.
That's really great of you! Congrats on another great contributer!
Eric, this post is very insightful. I passed it on to my team and had them bookmark it for reference.
If only the moz would let you reauthor and update this article in the future, as trends change, so it could become a more authoratitive doc. It seems to have that potential.
Very useful information, Eric!
I am curious to know what your opinion is about information disseminated through Online Media Sites in terms of:
Thanks for the article :)
Thanks for this comprehensive yet concise post on link building opportunities. I like the "fail fast and move on to the next approach"advice. Certain products or services simply do NOT apply to certain audiences.
Nice post Eric. Got some nice details that are useful.
Unfortunately for me, being in Greece, I can’t really take advantage of the .edu and .org sites. My clients are mostly Greek (.gr) and even our governmental or educational websites use the same TLDs. We do have .edu.gr and .org.gr but nobody seems to use them.
Anyway, good work, hope you can update this post in the future as roadies also mentioned before me.
Cheers!
Hi Papaspyropoulos - The important thing is not that the site has "edu" in the domain. The important thing is that it could possible be an authoritative site in the eyes of search engines. University and College web sites tend to be more authoritative because of how they behave and accumulate links, not because of their domain.
If I were you, I'd still investigate the possibility of working with sites in Greece. You can see a list of targets here:
https://www.canadian-universities.net/World_Universities/Greece.html
Thanks Eric! Will check it out
Good stuff, Eric.
Thanks for the light-bulb moment that resulted while reading this!!!
We're developing a new business that is expanding a line of custom products designed by a former client (now business partner). Our expansion has increased our "niche" to multiple markets. You opened up some avenues and confirmed the marketing of it is "doable" by not trying to take on all at once.
Thanks for your University Sites input, "If you have a legitimate match to the needs of their students, these types of sites are usually pretty approachable."
Most of us can look to our Alumni Associations for incoming links, articles about our current businesses. They are often eager for news releases from alumnus.
And, I realized we have a product that could be sold by my former University and possibly serve as a fundraiser for the students!
Thanks for sharing so much of your insight and experience!
Also, great interview on WebProNews when you were at SMX West. Excellent tip about optimizing images and appending the words, "picture" or "photo" in the ALT tags.
Cheers Eric. Nice article!
Very good article. It is quite interesting to actually grasp the complexity of seo and linkbuilding. It makes sense to focus on one step at a time. Thanks for the great information
The best link building advice I have ever heard -
"Remember to push hard enough that you fail fast if you are going to fail with one particular strategy, so you can go onto the next strategy quickly."
A bif thumbs Up for you ! :)
Links from Universities
Thanks Eric for a very structured post. I am an Alumni myself and actively participate in the Alumni committee. This has not only helped my business links-wise but has given me great exposure by being called everytime they had the opportunity for press releases or other.
One of my clients also works closely with the university as she offers internships to students - this is also a very good avenue to explore for great-value links!
Thanks again, now I have to figure out the best approach for .gov sites!
Eric,
This article is one of the best articles on pursuing links that I have seen in a long time
Hat's off for a job very well done ...
Edward
Florida SEO
Good post. I really like/endorse #4. It's amazing to me how many people over look a method that has worked for years.
Thank you for yet another comprehensive post!
Just be careful to stay engaged with your PR firm. The more active you are in setting direction, the more value you will get.
I particularly like the emphasis on communication. If you do not keep your PR firm "warm" and dialed-in to your needs and concerns then their strategies will undoubtedly wander off target.
This branches out to all of the areas you speak about in particular blogging. Remaining active and engaged is the best way to grow your online presence.
Eric, thank you this is a very valuable, high quality post, exactly the kind of thing I'm looking for right now. It can be daunting for a small business or brand to ponder getting all those high quality links, and I like your one-step-at-a-time, realistic approach. Thumbs up!
Its just so difficult for a new guy on the block to get started with all this, it seems overwhelming.
Just remember this...all things are difficult until they are easy.
You'll figure it out :)
Thanks for mentioning my How Much is Your Blog Worth widget. It has generated millions of page views and exposed hundreds of thousands of new readers to my site.
Thank you very much for writing this article. It was very interesting, and on a topic that I had really wanted to know about. I can't wait to try some of the strategies.
those strategies can be a great help for us to succes, relevancy of each element would be a great help too., match everything and succes would be followed
SEO-Solution
Thanks for a great article! I have a question though: you've mentioned the Social Media Sites. Isn't it true that making it to the front pages of these sites will only give you a spike in traffic rather then a permanent stream in audiance?
I'm sure it's covered somewhere here on seomoz but I just signed up and I'm fairly new to SEO so bare with the n00b!
Hi Lemon - Social media sites to provide a temporary spike in traffic that does go away. However, the more important thing you gain is links. Successful social media articles get linked to by 3rd party sites, and that is the real benefit of such campaigns.
Got it! thanks for the reply
thank you for the very long and usefull post Eric. It is just full of great insights and informations. It is true that sometimes, depending on a client or website content, you do not see right away all the different possibilities when it comes to link building. I'll keep your list always at a reachable distance, as I'm sure i'll use it more than once. ;)
Really exseollent post, Eric. Links are what drives traffic and your summary is insightful and concise. Thanks for that. The widget developing and employing a PR firm (funny that public relations and pagerank share an abbreviation) is above the means of the most of us, but the rest of your suggested link building strategies are eminently doable.
as before..
GREAT POST/ARTICLE!