Intro from Rebecca: Eric Enge is a guest blogger for SEOmoz and has contributed posts on topics like link building and APIs. Today he'll discuss the benefits of providing quality content on your site.
One of the most important things you can do to help create a successful web site is to build a site that provides a remarkable experience. If we look past the popular phrase "linkbait" (a term I don't like because of its negative connotations), we need to answer the question "Why would someone link to our site?"
When I first talk to a client I usually explain that I don't recommend buying links. I also don't recommend a heavy dependency on link swapping. Some swapping with strategic partners or others in your industry is fine, but you don't want 100% of your link profile (or even 50%) to depend on that.
So that leaves you with an interesting problem. You want people to give you something, and you are prepared to offer nothing in return. Sounds daunting, doesn't it?
But it's not so bad after all. The web is a medium built around the concept of hyperlinking. People who have built really valuable resource sites (or pages) care a lot about the quality of their user's experience on their site. And, if your site offers great complimentary resources, they will want to link to it. Almost all that needs to happen is that they learn about it.
Better still, these are the types of sites that have the best links to offer. The search engines are pretty good at figuring out which sites are genuinely authoritative, and value those links more than other links. If you want to reach tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of visitors per day, you need these types of links.
Quality Content
Writing 25 articles on topics that hundreds of other have covered before might be better than nothing, and you may get some links to it, but you are not going to drive big time links to that type of content.
The bottom line is that you or your company need to become an expert on the topic of your site, and you need to put it out there in some unique fashion that has not been done before (or at least not many times before). There are many schemes used by people who try to avoid this burden.
For example, the term linkbait arose from the notion of developing content for the sole purpose of getting links. My discomfort with the term arises because it was interpreted by many to mean that the content's relationship to the topic matter of the site did not really matter that much. Note: I am NOT saying that everyone means the term that way! But, for example, you could develop an article solely for the purpose of promoting it on Digg, even though you would never otherwise put it on your site.
This may be a viable strategy in the short term, but it will not stand the test of time. Note: I am a huge fan of social media promotion, and we do a lot of it, but we work hard to create things with a strong tie to the business of the client we are working with.
Once you have the expertise, the rest of the story is very straightforward. You do need to choose how and when you will show off that expertise, and how much of it to show. For many web based businesses, sharing a lot of rich information is the way to the best results. Note that there may be some businesses where you need to keep some secret sauce hidden (e.g., Coke would not publish their recipe for their product).
I wrote about the types of opportunities in my post So Many Ways to Pursue Links and So Little Time. Pursuing these links requires you to be remarkable. Someone has to go through the effort of placing it on their site. More often than not, they will not do that for yesterday's old news.
Presentation CountsIn addition to developing unique expertise, you also need to present it in a compelling way, but be careful about doing do artificially. For example, you might be able to create a great video, but your audience may not want to watch a video. They may prefer to print an article and read it while they are riding on the train.
You might be able to develop the world's neatest widget, but they may not want to put the content on their site. They may just want to read or view something.
I am a big fan of videos and widgets, but they just don't fit every situation. Sometimes a simple article, dressed up with pictures, screen shots, and/or tables is the right thing to do.
Regardless of medium, make those first few seconds count. In a text article, make sure you capture the reader's attention in the first few sentences. In an a video, get their attention in the first 10 to 15 seconds, and so forth. Your readers/viewers, and the potential linkers, will have a really short attention span for you if you don't truly get their attention in short order.
I spend time on the entire presentation of a piece of content too, but I spend the most time on the first few sentences.
Where to Put it?
If you have not yet established your (or your company's) expertise in the world, I'd recommend that you actively push your great content our into the world at large. You need to build that reputation first.
But, don't push it all out to other web sites. You need to have something at home too. It's a great idea to have a section of your site loaded with high quality content. That way, when someone sees your great article that you published elsewhere, and then comes to your site they end up seeing more of it. Now you have a chance of getting them hooked into your site (and business) directly.
With sites that are just beginning to embark on web promotion, we often recommend that they develop 20 to 30 pieces of content to start with, and plan on putting half on their own site, and half on the site of others. Of course, with widgets, you can potentially syndicate your content to others, and have no potential issues with duplicate content - a big bonus if that approach can work for you.
Over time, as your reputation gets more established, you can tweak the mix. Perhaps only 20% of your content gets published elsewhere, and 80% goes on your own site. Plan on adjusting the mix as your web reputation matures.
Summary
Content is a weapon on the web. Use it to help you win market share. Just make sure you have something that is truly noteworthy, and that it communicates that effectively.
And by all means please, please, please proof-read your content. Nothing worse than someone showing off an article or their expertise end thee speling gows lyke thes et thee ind.
Great article though. Showing that if you write it, and it matters, the links will come.
Don't thumbs down me, you know proof-reading is important!
Content is King, but context is the King's brother.
Great read, as usual. :)
Well put!
I'm curious... let's say you have an article and submit it to a site like digg.com... If you still have the article on your website, that is considered duplicate content? So anything you submit to a site like digg.com you MUST delete off your site to avoid duplicate content issues?
When you submit an article or some content to Digg, you're only submitting the link. Users will then click through to the content on your site. Nothing's duplicated to appear on Digg.
Nice article, thanks!
I have also written an article about content quantity and quality and what to push for. It may provide some extra insight into the matter:
https://www.hundred-dollars-a-day.com/2009/10/why-content-is-king-importance-of.html
Hi, the blog seems to me like to gain the attention of all seo’s and get the benefit of traffic.
whatever, I also agree with the title “content is king” and no body need to prove this as you might get your ranking high after doing black hat or some cheat seo tricks but when search engines find this they penalize you heavily and sometime it cost to get your website in black listed.
www.tradeindia.com
Hi, the blog seems to me like to gain the attention of all seo’s and get the benefit of traffic. whatever, I also agree with the title “content is king” and no body need to prove this as you might get your ranking high after doing black hat or some cheat seo tricks but when search engines find this they penalize you heavily and sometime it cost to get your website in black listed.
If content is king then why is this website: "https://www.creditcardoffers.com.au/" ranking number 1 in google.com.au for the word credit card (https://www.google.com.au/search?hl=en&q=credit+card&btnG=Search&meta=cr%3DcountryAU) when they have no content? Seams weird because their backlinks are a bit funky too.
Well thought and presented. Your experience shows in your article. I have tough time convincing my customers to invest in article marketing. I am sure going to use your article help convice them ;)
Good content is the soul of any web site. I think 80 - 90 % SEO related issues can be resolved with good and unique content. I am a developer. When I code I always start with a scenario. That Scenario tells me what I am going to solve. Then I write tests that validate this scenario and I write my code. I think that same process can be applied here. We should have a scenario before writing a good content. Then we need to do our research. This scenario and research will drive you to write a quality content that everyone will like. It would be good after the first draft give it to your friends to have a look. They can give you some valuable inputs. In coding world we call it "Pair Programming" or "Code Review". This is really useful.
Truly content is the king
Here is one of my blog in which the unique and Differential content helped https://www.teemper.com/journal/
The Blog traffic is 2x more then the brand traffic
The blog on Body art - Getting pierced gets 80% traffic
I have started adding a lot more content to my site, it has worked suprising well, as I have consentated on good useful content relevent to my target
This is definitely true. Just hours ago when I found out that my blogs was ranked. I really did not expect that because the content didn't have that much interest. Really, content is king!
Thank you so much for the comprehensive article. Yes it will be helpful. I always find such useful tools here at SEOmoz. Thanks!
Another important thing to remember. If you have fair page rank, you're growing and sharing good content, staying away from black hat; but people still reject your back link, then those people should be using websites, not blogs. You don't want to end up with dead links from those kind of places. It puts your site in a poor and unfavorable light. Believe me I know.
thats completely true, Link building is important but without good content it not that profitable. Both walk side by side.. for best results these are the best techniques.
Appreciate your views and knowlede that you shared..
Preach on brother!
I've seen similar sentiments from other industry biguns, and put it on my site as well, but it still amazes me how there are "professionals" out there that don't quite believe what you've put here enough to implement.
'Course, as long as I'm competing against them I should kick some arse yeah? You'd think so anyway. Heh.
I'd say this great blog can be summarized in just three words: find you niche. Most certainly got me thinking about my own blog...
Nice read, Eric. It's worth noting that there's a lot to be said for outbound links to people you'd like linking to you. Not specifically for purposes of reciprocal linking, but to put yourself on their radar. Many of the people on my blog found me initially because I linked to them where it was relevant for me to do so. Funny how what goes around comes around, eh?
Thank you for your post. It is very applicable to me. I launched a new website this week along with a blog to support it. I think the content is of interest to others in that community but they can not find it at present unless they either find the web site (still mostly unknown) or the blog which is not even picking up on Google blog search even though it is on blogspot.com. Any pointers as to how to "actively push your great content out into the world at large" would be appreciated. I am new to SEO and welcome all the help I can get.
Nice Post.............It will be very helpful while posting an article or some content.
And content stay (almost) forever in the interwebs.
My tought : great content, fresh content and easy to read/see content.
Great article.
This was interesting read.
We have all heard content is king. I liked how you emphasized the need to deliver that content in a unique fashion.
And also how our favorite communication channel may not be our audience's favorite communication channel.
This is very true for international audiences, my domaine. The channel you use can be a determining factor of success. And you may be surprised by what works best in different cultures.
Great article, I'm a little surprised that there weren't more comments.
One of the first tenents I picked up in relation to building a website was to always provide great content, the addage "content is king" was thrown around quite a bit, and I picked up on it.
I think that I take more of a purist perspective, particularly over the past 3 months or so. I have slowly been leaning towards no active promotion for the site. Just writing great content that is optimized for the search results, and keeping those visitors coming back and establishing a history with the site.
Over time, word of mouth spreads and traffic picks up. At the very core of this ideal, is the content.
Nice post Eric
The Link is King.
It always was the king, it always will be the king. Maybe content is currently the best way to get links, but if the purpose of your content is to acquire links, then it is just yet another tool to acquire the currency of SEO - links.
I greatly support linkbaiting as a method of link acquisition - and perhaps the method with the longest likelihood of success. However, linkbaiting by-and-large does not develop the level of keyword-specific anchor-text necessary to earn rankings for truly competitive terms.
Russ,
Have to disagree with you on a couple of points here. A great link is a byproduct of great content - plain and simple. Therefore - content truly is King - and Queen for that matter. In other words - it is both powerful and versatile.
It may seem like semantics, but I can certainly run and operate my business with a website that has great content and no links. The converse statement cannot be made. In fact, even with a bunch of great links coming into crappy content - I still cant' succeed. I may drive alot of traffic, but when people arrive at the destination, they're going to keep on going - so I have succeeded at nothing.
Finally, with regard to your comment on linkbaiting not developing the level of keyword specific anchor text necessary, I think widgets, quizzes, etc., which in my opinion are the the most powerful form of linkbait, with embedded links and specific anchor text, have proven to do quite well in achieving this goal.
I appreciate your views, Link building is a very important, but content is also equally important.
Let take an example of wikipedia... it is having very good contents and because of its contents and information, there is an increased traffic as people reads the info again ang again.
Thus you can see that for maximum keyword search results wikipedia is ranks in top 10.
So i do believe in links but content is also important... what do you think ?
Thanks for such a great post Eric