In the world of link building, getting an authority link to your site/blog has been one of the most important aspects of growing your blog. Back in 2009 Page Level Link Metrics and Domain Level Authority Features accounted for over 46% of your pages own authority:
In 2011, that percentage has dropped, but only by 4% [42.58%], suggesting that link building will continue to be a critical factor to your blog/website’s success.
But we pretty much know that not just any link will do. The better the site the link is coming from, the better the link.
That’s why your link-building campaigns need to be built around attracting authority links. But how do you do that? And what exactly is an authority link? Let me explain.
Absolute and relative authority links explained
There are two types of authorities. There are the absolute authority sites like Huffington Post, The Daily Beast and Google’s blog. These sites are also labeled “informational” authorities versus navigational authorities like DMOZ.
On the other hand, you also have relative authority sites. These are sites run by bloggers or webmasters that are authorities in a niche. Bloggers like Robert Scoble, Dooce or Mashable are authorities in their markets. While the link juice they’ll give you if they link to you is not as high as what an absolute authority site could give you…they are definitely worth attracting.
But how do you actually get a link from these sites? Here are the ten golden rules to attracting authority links.
Rule 1: Write content that attracts Editorial In-content Links
The most fundamental tactic of attracting authority links is to write content that is worth a link. What does this content look like?
- Cornerstone – this content fills an obvious gap in the web information world that you fill with expert advice, detailed posts and well-reasoned arguments. This content will also define you, so it’s important to establish up front what your blog/site is going to focus on. This is also a large portion of the content you share.
- Personal content – About a quarter or less of the content should contain personal stories about yourself that helps your readers to understand who you are and where you come from. My How Being a Patel Made Me Somewhat Successful is a great example. It stays within the cornerstone content of the site, but it gives you a peek into my personal life.
- Spicy content – This is a small fraction of your content and is made up of controversial posts you write about. Typically you attack a high-profile idea or person or explain why something popular is really dumb. These are for linkbait purposes typically, but generally also give your readers an idea of who you are.
Building up a blog/site with this kind of content will take time, so you may not pick up a natural authority link out of the gate. Better yet, once you have a solid archive of content, approach these authority sites and ask for a link. Give them a good reason, which could be one of the following:
- You wrote about the author and now he might be interested in sharing with his circle the blog post that you published.
- You wrote a post that works well with a series that he wrote our compliments it. You could even critique something he or she did, which might spark an across-blog debate. If that sparks a firestorm of other responses…then you’ve won!
Rule 2: Fix other people’s broken links
Links die all the time. People shut down website or pull web pages. When these documents or sites vanish all the links pointing to them are dead.
For example, if you work through a web page by a publisher who links out a lot and the page is a few years old, you are bound to find at least one or two dead links on that page. Work through the entire site and you could find dozens.
Mashable is a good example of a site that links out a lot and will probably have a lot of dead links on older pages since they tend to report on startups that don’t always last.
You can easily solve this in 2 ways:
- Manual - Make a list of all the dead links you find, then approach the author of those pages. It’s better if you focus on one author/one person and offer several options for content instead of having to contact different authors for each dead link. That can become an administrative nightmare.
- Link validator – Use a tool like the W3C’s Link Checker to find dead links on a website or blog. It’s pretty easy to do. Here are the steps I took to check Mashable.
Drop link into sub form:
Choose your options:
Click “done” and then wait 644.47 seconds:
You can then work your way through the status report:
From that report you can build a list of dead links, the pages that need to replaced and the authors you can approach if it is a multi-author site like Mashable.
Rule 3: Create a desirable image library
If you have high-quality images on our site, you can use those images as an incentive to get people to link to you. Imagine you have a gallery of large, high-resolution pictures…well, then offer a contact form that allows a person to grab the file and linking code right there on the page.
You don’t have to go all out like a photl.com:
Or freepixels.com:
The last site specialize in photos, for you though being a content publisher looking for ranking juice, you could build a sub-domain devoted to photos like these.
Here’s what you have to do, though.
- Hire a decent amateur photographer - If you are not a good photographer and to keep it inexpensive you could hire a local photographer who is good but not really good to charge outlandish fees.
- Use your phone - Now a days, however, most cameras on smart phones can take high-quality photos. It’s often the skill of taking a good picture…like having the right angle and light…that a decent photographer should know about. In any case, the better the photos, the more likely you will get interest in the images.
And to help you benefit fully from this tactic, keep this in mind when building a library of images:
- The higher the quality of each image the better link building potential these photos will have.
- Search out affordable ways to take pictures. This could mean hiring a inexpensive photographer or buying a decent smart phone with a great camera.
- Each image should be posted on its own page.
- The delivery service should be as easy as possible. Test different set ups and use the one that makes adoption easy.
- Add images on a schedule, whether one a day or once a week.
Rule 4: Offer to write a column or do a guest post
Giving a publisher practical, highly-researched content as a guest post is a great way to get links to your site from him or her.
Keep in mind this tactic typically be easier to pull off for those relative authority content sites than absolute authority sites due to their blogging policy. But if you have a guest posting strategy that involves focusing on building links, traffic and exposure via guest posting on a select few relative authority sites, you’ll eventually have an arsenal of content that you can pitch to the absolute authority sites.
Some authority sites like Open Forum or Huffington Post have so much need for content that you can usually get a post on there. But you typically still have to provide a portfolio of posts so they can understand what level of writing you are at and not just someone off the street.
Here are some resource to help you write, submit and get published guest posts:
- A Quick and Dirty Guide to Writing Your First Guest Post
- Neil Patel’s Guide to Writing Popular Blog Posts
- Write a Guest Post for I Will Teach You to Be Rich (while Ramit Sethi focuses on tips on how to write for his blog…they are valuable for any blog, really.)
- Why Submit Your Best Posts as Guest Posts?
- How to Land a Guest Post Without Fail: 21 Secret Tips
Rule 5: Go to where your target audience hangs out
As bloggers and people of the internet we often forget about all of the face-to-face connections that can provide us with valuable links from relative or absolute authority site publishers.
For example, travel to conferences and hook up with some of the people you want to influence and convince to link to your site. Don’t be a pest to these people, but hang out, be cool to them, and then leave them alone for the rest of the events. You then need to go to the after-event event at the bar. This is where you can make things happen by simply buying them a drink or two.
If you really want to take it to another level, offer to take them out for dinner and pick up the check. During that dinner suggest they link to you in some purposeful way…perhaps you offer to create an infographics or a beginner’s guide.
But even if you don’t get some agreement like that you can say as you grab the check, “No, let me get this. You give me a link or something.”
That way the person thinks, “A $50 dinner for a link? You got it.”
Rule 6: Fill gaps in content
As I mentioned above, when you are talking to content publishers, ask them what content they are missing…and offer to create it for them. It could be a video interview of Guy Kawaski or a periodic table of the fundamentals of link building. It could be an idea they’ve had for an ebook.
Whatever it is, offer to create it for them.
Once you create the content you will get the credit as a link back to your site. Make sure you offer content that you can create professionally and will attract people who are in your target audience. Creating a weight-loss calculator for a site when you are in real estate will drive traffic to your site…but it will be the wrong traffic. You might as well done nothing.
Rule 7: Contact big media at the right time
When you are trying to attract the attention of big media sites like CNN or The Economist, knowing when they publish their content is important.
For those sites who are less tied to a content schedule, like a Drudge Report, you will not need to know when they publish their links because they do it pretty much as the story breaks.
Still, having some kind of bead on when that time is will improve your chances. Here’s a guideline to follow:
- For many absolute authorities like the one I mentioned above, you can be certain that they will plan Monday’s content on Sunday.
- Around 6:30 am to 9:30 am, the media staff will put together a list of their top 15 stories for the day. This is the news list. Contacting them during this time is more likely to influence their decision even more than if you called or emailed them the day before.
- The next step for the media staff is to present the completed list of news stories to a team who will then decide which stories will get front page billing. This usually happens around 9:30 am to noon. This is your last chance to send anything. Do it now, because unless you have something spectacular, sending anything over after 1 pm will end up in the trash.
And even if you do get coverage…it won’t be a lot and it probably won’t be a link. Late content entries are typically reduced to the show that doesn’t impact SEO at all.
8. Approach government or education sites
A sure sign of an authority site is a .edu or .gov. This could be a link from a college like Harvard or Stanford or a link from the White House or Usability.gov. Getting those links are not always easy.
One example is to look for ways you can register accounts with these institutions. For example, Harvard has The Harvard H20 Playlist Project. It’s simply a series of links to books, articles or content that hopes to spark content.
Simply create a playlist and add a link to a useful post inside your site.
Creating meaningful, researched content or break an interesting story and these sites might naturally attract these sites might link to you. Examples of content that you could write that might actually grab their attention include:
- Write a solid, thorough review about one of their programs, pulling in information from historical data sets, current events and future predictions. This will likely catch their eye.
- Sponsor a student event. This will not cost very much.
- Volunteer to be a guest speaker for graduates.
- Approach their business school and offer to be a case study.
The kind of content you could create that would attract a government link could be:
- Create a community page/sub-domain on your site that supports some club or event in your city.
- Create content that supports some sort of charitable cause.
- Put on an event. Not only the .gov sites will approach you, but the local press will do so as well.
- Run for an office in your community. The commitment is usually low, so it’s not like you will be consumed with it.
In some cases you will just have to approach these institutions. When you do, you are more likely to get an answer however, and a positive one at that, if you inspect their site, identify the content gaps and then offer to fill them.
Again, it’s going to be important that you have something to show that you can pull off the content professionally, so don’t try this tactic until you have a good catalog of posts in your archives.
9. Buy links without penalty
It’s no secret that buying links violates Google’s policy and the penalty can be very stiff. So you may be wonder why I’m suggesting you buy links.
There are ways to buy links that will not be a violation of Google’s policy. Here are two:
- Donate to a charity – Depending on how much you donate, some organizations will display you name and donation amount on their sites.
- Offer to pay influential bloggers to post on your site – The content is simple. Give an authoritative blogger some kind of incentive like cash to write a post you can post on your site. In all likelihood they’ll link to it once it’s published.
- Fund research – Sometimes when you fund research projects people will link back to your website to show people who provided them with the funding. It’s their way of saying “thanks” and showing appreciation.
As you can see these examples are based on an exchange of value between two people and their websites that can relate to the relevancy of content…so it’s an ethical way of buying links.
Rule 10: Know the difference between a good and a bad site
Finally, one of the most fundamental rules to link building is knowing the difference between a good website and a bad one. This might sound obvious but it’s sometimes easy to get tricked into asking a site that looks like an authority but is in reality spammy.
What are the elements that determine if a website is a bad one? Here are five ways:
- Negative PPC – If you come across a site that has SEO links based on pills, casinos or porn, then it’s not a good site to get a link from.
- Link overload – Also avoid sites that have a high link-to-content ratio. Anything above 20% links to 80% content is probably too high.
- Keyword stuffing – Some sites that rank high in search engines will be notorious for keyword stuff. You’re first clue is the title description. If it looks like someone treated it like a keyword meta tag, they are probably employing spam techniques elsewhere, too. Perhaps it’s in the footer, behind images or in the source code.:
- Ad overload – These sites will be like a sore thumb when it comes to the number of ads they have. They’ll have ads down both sidebars, above the header and multiple times throughout the content.
- Poor content - Another clue this is not a great site is the low content-to-ad ratio. This one can be tricky because even absolute authority sites can push the limits when it comes to displaying ads. Look at Marketing Pilgrim, for example:
- Poor design – Does the site look like they used a free theme? Are the fonts irregular in size or shape? These are usually signs that someone has not spent anyone on the site…which is a signal they could be spammers.
Conclusion
Trust me when I say that you will not be wasting your time if you invest it in attracting authority links to your website or blog. Remember: nearly half of what determines the rank of your site is based upon the types of links driving to your site. Hopefully this guide has given you the tips and the tools necessary to help you succeed.
About the author: Neil Patel is the co-founder of KISSmetrics, an analytics provider that helps companies make better business decisions.
"Rule 6: Fill gaps in content - Whatever it is, offer to create it for them."
Wow, this is one of those head-smacking tips that Rand talks about... what a no brainer. Every decent blogger has more ideas than they have time to write, getting it done for them is a killer tip.
Yep, it is the basic stuff that we tend to forget. Enjoy the tip.
I wrote a guest post on PointBlankSEO.com as a followup to this article:
"5 Ways to Build Links by Lending a Hand"
Thanks for the great tips, looks like I need to get bustin my butt on building more links!
Hey Neil -
Great post here and I'm so glad that you are writing on the Moz blog more often! Your tips are always valuable for the community.
One that I'd like to add to your "offer to guest post" point is offering to update some of their old content, or adding to their old content. A lot of great bloggers have written posts in the past that need some updating to the current times, so why not either a) offer to write a post updating their old one, or b) write the post, post it on your own site, link to them, and let them know about it via the different channels available to you?
I have found this to be a very good way to get an "in" with an influential site, usually a blogger.
SEOmoz does a great job of this. Their Beginner's Guide to SEO is constantly being updated. If they didn't do this, the guide would get out of date and that would be a shame as it is a great resource.
Absolutely agreed. It's a great way to keep content relevant and to keep adding to the conversation, and if you do it for a well-known online personality, you may also get their attention and be able to start building a working relationship with them.
A.m.a.z.i.n.g. post Neil... combine this post of yours with some presentations done by Wil Reynolds (this, this or this) or - if you may afford it - buying this video of Rand at Linklove last year or this other by Patrick Altoft from SearchLove 2010 (and without forgetting the great PR post Andrew Dumont published just a couple of days ago here on SEOmoz), then we can have a really complete "how to guide" about link building strategy.
Personally I liked a lot your "Rule number 3" (great photo library)... which I would enlarge to video too. Actually it made me open my eyes as it is a perfect idea for a client of mine in the tourism market.
I would just add to your suggestion this one, which maybe was implicit: add social buttons to every photo and video. I'm thinking especially of the Pin button for Pinterest and the new action buttons you can create with Open Graph 2.0 right now. We know that social signals are important in the ranking pot, but also we know how better is for natural link building to have the highest audience accessing to your content, as it is almost impossible to not obtain a good number of backlinks thanks to social media exposure.
Great idea. Video library would work as well... you can probably even expand it to other media formats/types.
Thanks!
Rich media in general works I say
My new burgeoning industry was rarely mentioned on the Harvard H20 site. I took the opportunity to educate the world's smartest students about high CBD strains. Thanks, Neil!!
Did you just recommend a way to check for broken links that takes 644 seconds???
Chrome extension 'Check my links' took under 20 seconds to run mashable.com.
https://urivalet.com/?https://www.mashable.com#Report is more in depth at under a minute.
Guys please dont engage in link building steps that take over 10 mins for scanning a site.
Also no offense but lets not write up Search Engine Factors survey results as facts - these are opinions.
It would be really helpful if you could share some examples of links you have gotten from the Golden Rules above.
Hi Neil,
On Rule 2 you say:
Link validator – Use a tool like the W3C’s Link Checker to find dead links ...
But if you click on Link Checker it will take you on
validator.w3.org not validator.w3.org/checklink
Will this give me a back link? :)
Is not a broken link but still ... :)
Really nice article.
Cornel
LOL! If it was broken, probably. ;-)
Thanks for the post. Links are definitely valuable, even though they are a ton of work to get. Thanks for making the task less daunting. Now the trick is to take the knowledge and apply.
Neil Patel = link building machine. Thanks for sharing these awsesome tips with us and congrats on your success with KISSmetrics.
Let me know when you want to go to dinner. I'll make sure to pick up the check :)
Thanks for the kind words. We will have to go out to dinner one of these days. :)
Great Post thanks for this Sharing with us...
thanks a lot
Interesting. This is one area I need to become more knowledgeable in.
Hi Neil! Great post for the blog! I learned new things from this and I also have one question: how would you present a portfolio with your posts? Which format do you think would be most suitable?
I really don't know wether to use a ppt or something else. Any suggestion would be appreciated!
I love link building and this post truly highlighted some important points like original images can be good source of authority links
I've actually used to build a lot of links to my blog by using original images that were funny. In many cases other bloggers will link back just because they liked my image and wanted to share it with their readers.
Love the images aspect. It has been my secret sauce for linkbait for a few years.
I use to hate link building but having seen during the past the reward of it obviously, well I had no choice other than to get into it and start learning. Actually, am loving it! :)
Great post and tips
Hi Neil,
Its great to see you blogging so frequently and this is another great post that you have written.
Regarding Rule #7 - I have always wanted to toy with the concept of getting backlinks from big media websites but the bottom line is that it rarely happens. The content has to be exceptionally viral and to some extent promoted by a big brand, but nevertheless one can always dream right ;)
Regarding Rule #8 - I am slightly concerned about getting links from government websites or edu websites. Somewhere down the line when you consider relevancy as an important factor, from an SEO perspective these links might not help. In fact if the anchor text is a keyword then it might have a negative impact where a competitor goes ahead and complains foul play in the form of Paid links.
Using a brand name would probably be a safer option. If the government or edu website is very popular we should see a spike in referral visits.
- Sajeet
Best article neilpatel , I read whole and here you describe authority links which best way to describe it and also the steps you care it really effect also this also help in link building .
I totally agree with this statement. I love how much info he gives that EVERYONE can do.
Good article, I did the link fix way sometime May'11 for a guy who had anice application and due to a site refurnishment was loosing a PR7 from Google themselves, I thought (even before thinking of a backlink) that loosing a link from Google.com was too deep in misery to let it go... I earned a Twitter mention and a backlink from his blog (home PR5). Following the literal email:
Hello Peter,
I am Ricard Menor, freelance SEO consultant in Barcelona. I was editing a draft for my promocioweb.wordpress.com blog, an article about prefetching and SEO, some of my technical papers came from Google Web Accelerator page within Google.com
In https://webaccelerator.google.com/webmasterhelp.html I found a link (HTTP Header Analysis) to https://www.forret.com/projects/analyze/
This page of yours returns 404 (Not Found) and afterwards I discovered you have moved into a blog and this https://web.forret.com/ website
In resume, you are missing a Pagerank 7 backlink from Mr. Google himself!
If I was you, I would inmediately set a 301 from the mentioned failed URL to https://web.forret.com/tools/analyze.aspx
I hope you get good things from this warning, if you feel like thanking it do not hesitate linking back to this friendly SEO freelance guy.
“Creating a weight-loss calculator for a site when you are in real estate will drive traffic to your site…but it will be the wrong traffic. You might as well done nothing.” I love this statement. And I see this done so much and people simply don’t understand. I see so many people pushing volume of link s and not the quality of those links.
Thanks for a great article. Great tips, useful insight, and useful links (no pun intended :-)
Great stuff. We all may be focused on social a bit too much. Authority links are still king of the jungle!
Great post. Some very legitimate link building techniques that work time and time again. Good job Neil.
An awesome example of linkbait itself.
Excellent useful post. Nice one.
Note...to...self...
Must...run...for...public office...soon...
;)
Absolute authority and relative authority both have their own fundamental properties in their allies. Your explained tips and tricks regarding authority links are great and all are the most effective rules to get authority links which give a long term advantage.
that was a long read but once i started i couldn't stop, especially when it got into the .edu links and fixing broken links. not going to spam because that isn't fair but will definately be interested in linking back to here from my official blog, if you don't mindthanks for the 20 minute Phd:)
yup, authority is a big chalange nowdays, down with PR :)
I am unable to convey my own thanks sufficient for your personal views in this article. I am looking to learn more and also am hoping you intend to carry on compiling material such as this.
It is really helpful article. Thanks for sharing with us.
I have been following a site (if only because I studied the topic) that has filled its pages with spot on facts on the historic superstar Maria Theresa. They have also included views and interpretations of history, which as we know is never black and white.
Now my question if you don't mind: The site places each topic or person on a single page. So instead of clicking though one page after the next, they have a long, LONG page. Is this advisable? Or should a page be set at a given length?
Their reasoning is that on mobile devices people don't want to click forward and back all the time, which is true. PLUS their text size is above norm, which has also apprently been asked for by visitors.
I agree with text size, I loath having to expand or twist my phone to enlarge and read stuff. Theirs makes sense.
What do you think? Is there a wrong and right? Is listening to visitor requests always a good thing?
Buy link is not allowed by Google. So is it safe enough to doing so?? Some people already offer me for Sponsored posts (having one/two links) at my newsworldinside blog with some values. Do i accept them? will those safe enough for me?
Neil Patel is a legend!
Nice tip on linkchecker - a nice speedy way to find broken links on large "popular" sites :)
Yes it is always important to hav ea content that is worth linking to because without that nobody would want to share an authoritative link. Still, Great set of tips Neil! Thanks for sharing.
I always like reading your posts. I liked the entire post especially the "buying dinner for a link".It sounds like an interesting tactic. I would try that along with the point where you described using original images for getting authority links.
I think I am going to use my own camera and photography skills for this right now.
Awesome post!
The photo library is a great idea. Has anybody else gone ahead and done this?
Great post, lots of tips especially love the idea of starting a photo library or something of this elk to gain links.
I think though the main points here are 1) be prfoessional < dont mis-spell things 2) offer great content that looks good, is written well and offers something different to other blogs 3) ask what people think 4) occasionally mention SEO's like Matt Cutts and Rand Fishkin (they tend to be searchers of their own names ;) and if you link to their own little blogs they are more likely to see it than say posting a link to SEOMOZ)
Excellent article with great tips. Inspires me to continue writing posts.
Great stuff. Thank you for sharing. Especially fixing the broken links idea.
An evolving industry.
Solid stuff. Good link building is not about getting thousands of directory submissions anymore. It takes work and great content.
Yet another great post, thanks Neil.
Highly structured article, thanks a lot! Am quite new to SEO and was looking for an article like this for a while.
Hey Neil,
Another great post! Especially enjoyed "Rule 2: Fix other people’s broken links".
I've had some great success recently by finding the orginal content being linked to via Wayback Machine and creating a new improved version to offer to the webmaster.
This way they get an awesome and updated resource for their readers, and I get a great link, awesome content and a potential contact at an authority website.
Really great post, very analytical!
Neil - I used to follow your Quick Sprout blog years ago. Good to see you writing again! Great post with solid information.
Thanks! I try to blog on a regular basis... it just gets tough with everything else I have on my plate.
It's really useful and intuitive to go on with your recommendations, and pictures help a lot. That's quite important because tons of posts don't add images and people lose a lot of time just for understanding texts.
Again, congratulations: clear, simple and le's see if that's effective for us :)
Great post Neil!, It is easy to lose enthusiasm when link building because it takes hard work and creativity to gain good quality links, but reading this post definitely will re-ignite link building fire!
I love link building. It's one thing that you should always be doing...
How do you always find time for it?
Good post but two points I want to add:
1. Use a domain level email to contact people, do not use free emails like gmail and hotmail.
2. With the charity donations pages watch out for sites that link to 100s of people look at Wikimedia Foundations donations page they have too many keyword focused links.
But overall great post =)
Funny enough, sometimes I have recieved more backlinks when I use a free email (gmail), instead of a domain level email. Maybe I will have to test this out a bit more.
Thing is I will use HSBC as an example..
Say you have a few charitys who you sponsor and you want to reach out to get logos or links.
you do not email the charity from [email protected] or [email protected] you email them from [email protected] correct?
I have tested free email vs domain level email many times in the past and it comes out on top 100% especially in these more high end link acquisitions.
There will be many times (depending on the scenario) where you can't get the client's email. This being the case definently use your work email and be honest in your intentions. There was a great post on this on Distilled last month
I couldn't agree more about avoiding free email accounts for any correspondence linked to a professional endeavour. I'm amazed at the volume of cold emails I receive from gmail accounts. Gmail, hotmail and yahoo are all great for personal emails but not for anyone making contact to sell their services or establish a professional connection.
Great article Neil. It's easy to forget Rule 5. Getting out into the community you're trying to reach can really pay off. As far as I'm concened it's a win-win situation. You find out more about them, their motives and their needs/problems that you can help them with and in return for a little bit of your time/advice you can get all kinds of support (and not just links). It shouldn't be a surprise that a little face to face contact can have a dramatic positive effect on how you're perceived.
Yea, a lot of the rules are actually easy to forget. Sometimes we just need to be reminded about some of the basic thing as those tend to be the ones we forget the most.
I noticed your link to W3C's Link Checker actually goes through to their 'markup validation service' and not their link checker. OK, so it's technically not a broken link, but you can still link through to my website instead if you'd like? :-)
Seriously though this is a great post! People are much more likely to respond if you offer some advice or a helpful tip.
Wish I could, but you have to find a broken one...
Hey neil,
Did you check how many Errors and Warnings w3c validator shows for your domain quicksprout.com? Buddy it is more than more than 50 and i guess some of them could be severe.
By the way, taking you out on dinnner may give me a backlink but i don't need a backlink instead i would ask you to keep posting us ;)
I have. It's probably going to get a bit worse as we are making a few more modifications to the site. Once they are all done in the next few weeks, I will then make sure the site is validated.
Great post - authority links all about building relationships, good deeds, timing and off course worthy content mixed with enough front to ask and maybe a sensible purchase! Thumbs up :)
Rule no: 5 is nice, taking out for dinner and getting link.
I've it so many times... it works well with really big bloggers too.
Here in Spain we call it "Link Tonic"...
Agree, if you build your relationships offline will increase the likeliehood of people linking to you online. Afterall if you have a familiar face, likeable and posting quality content there's no reason why I wouldn't link to anyone.
Ouch, my brain is hurting. Awesome post, there was soo much useful information there, I will have to come back and reaad it again. But from what I could grasp in this sitting was brilliant. Thanks alot for doing all that research and summing it up for ME!!!
No problem. Hopefully you end up using some of the tips.
Thanks!
Great post Neil! Always great to read a post from yourself. I think you hit a home run with Rule 1! You must write content that is worth a link first and foremost.
It's hard, but anyone can do it. You just have to be willing to spend more time and try to write content that is a bit advanced.
Hi Neil, everytime i read your post, i feel an excel file with new ideas, thanks for that. Personnaly the broken links finder is an excellent point; because even if the result is not a new link, there is the possibility to build a relationship for future partnerships
I'm the same, it's like there are too many things that I'm getting out of this. I've read it 3 times and get something new everytime I read it. Thanks Neil
Neil, you forgot one: Offer to fix typos in a blogger's post ;-) Good ideas. Running for office may be a bit extreme in order to get a link from a .gov, but I like the 'think-big' attitude. Also, asking for a link after taking someone to dinner is an idea I've heard before, but it just seems like it would take a lot of dinners to actually get someone to follow through. Maybe you just have to ask the right person. Thanks for the post.
Thanks for including the info on reaching out to edu potential links.
Dead links! I had not seen an approach for that yet, thanks for the article.
Jason
https://www.rcpre.com
Thanks for sharing the H20 Playlist. It reminds me of Squidoo.
Fantastic overview neil. I find that it's so easy to get lost in specific link building methods - this post really pulled me back to the bigger picture!
Thanks for the post, you just motivated me to look at the opportunities I can be missing due to dead links ! I knew I have, but I took the time to adress this.
I like how Marketing Pilgrim is a crappy, spammy site, but you've just given them a free backlink. Can I pout now?
Marisa, we may be even agreeing... but remember the SEOmoz blog rules and try to comment in less explicit tone ;)... sometimes irony can be stronger.
You're right. I'm sorry.
I have done a little guest posting, one idea I may take from this is have a go at contacting some local government sites. Maybe time to make that move.
The thing that puts most people off this form of link building (i.e,. the right type, the white hat seo type) is that it is not something that you can do to create unlimited links without any effort - unless something goes viral.
One thing I have noticed is that when people talk about viral marketing they often seem to focus on their niche. Real viral is reaching out to all audiences. That is the real trick!
I actually hunted for broken links once but never found any.... maybe I just did not look hard enough!
And succeed we shall. Great post!
Neil,
Great post as it makes one realize that their is so much that can be done in the linkbuilding arena.
I ha a question. How much time did you take to come up with the post. If I was to write this post I would be happy if I did it in 15 to 20 hours. Is that a fair estimate?
Thanks in advance.
Thanks for putting in the time to devise this post, Neil. I agree with gfio above; catalog this along with other recent great posts and you have some serious weaponry in your link building arsenal..
I highly champion #4 - I think there are a lot of smart minds in the blogosphere- guest columns and posts are a great way to show those of authority you want to contribute. I think one could probably make a popular online sitcom based on real or embellished interactions spawing from #5 haha.
Awesome post! Cheers!
Thanks for taking the time to read the post.
Now a days guest posting technique is also getting spammed, do you have any suggestions for that?
Vishal
https://www.webygeeks.com