In spite of all this (and as most of you know), I Don't Buy Links. So what do we do to get good anchor text? Here are a few of the ways...
Naming Conventions
Naming conventions are about picking names for your company, site, and pages that contain your critical keywords. People who choose to link to you often use these labels as the anchor text in the link they give you. Here are some ideas for your home page:
- Pick a good business name - Perhaps you are already running your business, and your company name is Kalbertron. A large percentage of the links to your site will use your company name. If the big keyword you are looking to rank for is Orange Juice, consider setting up a DBA for your company, such as "Kalbertron Orange Juice Co." A name like this will print links with good anchor text (as long as your site is worth linking to).
- Pick a good URL for your site - While it is true that domain names are getting harder and harder to get, you can still usually get one that contains critical keywords in it. Let's say, for example, that your company is called Acme Manufacturing and you make blue widgets. See if you can get acme-blue-widgets.com or acmebluewidgets.com for your web site URL.
- Good home page title and header - Even if you don't have a great company name, using a keyword-rich title header on your home page will net you some keyword-rich anchor text. If you use the DBA concept as outlined above, or already have a keyword rich company name, make that a prominent part of the title and header.
You have only one home page, and you want to get keyword rich links to the lower level pages of your site too. Since you can't have a different name for your company on every page of your site, the area to focus on your pages other than the home page is in picking smart page titles and headers. People will pick these up and use them in links to your pages.
Off-Page Strategies
The key thing to focus on with regard to off-page strategies is to find ways to entice people to link to you, while using your superior content as a weapon. In order to remain compliant with search engine terms of service, you want to avoid being deceptive, and you want the link given to represent a legitimate endorsement of your site. Here are some ideas:
1. Write articles for distribution to third party sites. This is an oldie but a goodie. In return for providing the content to the third party free of charge, include an attribution link back to your site. Guess what? As long as you are reasonable with your keyword selections, most of the time the publisher will allow you to choose the anchor text.
In addition, you can point this at most any page on your site (but pick a page directly related to the article). As long as the relevance of your article to the page on your site that you provide the return link to is high, the link you get should represent a legitimate endorsement (after all, they took your content and published it).
2. Distribute widgets or tools in return for links. This is basically the same concept as with syndicating articles, except now it is encapsulated within Ajax or some other similar construct. Request a link from anyone who uses the tool or widget. Most of the people who use it will comply.
A couple of critical points about this are:
- Don't be deceptive. Recently Google Blogoscoped flagged a deceptive hit counter scheme section of their Javascript. Shortly after this post was done, the rankings for these sites plummeted.
- Keep it highly relevant. Putting aside the hidden link aspect of the example just given, a hit counter is simply not relevant to your business. A link in return for providing a hit counter does not represent a real endorsement of your business. But, if you are in the business of making furnaces for gold smelting, and you produce a widget that does calculations for flux recipe adjustments, a return link for that is a good one. This also greatly increases the chances that your link will come from relevant sites and pages.
3. Pursue Social News Campaigns. This is basically another way of promoting content, but with a little added twist. If you have generated an article that goes hot on a social news site such as Digg, it will produce a ton of links. In addition, on Digg for example, most of the links to your article will use the title of the Digg submission, not the title of your article (they don't need to be the same).
Summary
All the above strategies depend on having quality content and leveraging it wisely. None of these strategies rely o deception. Used properly, every single link gained will represent a real endorsement of your site, and it's content. This is ultimately what the search engines want the links to your site to represent.
Eric, I know you are a really smart guy and there is good information here, but you didn't just recommend buying a double hyphen domain name, did you?
Oh, Todd, you're just hoping people will buy up one of the non-hyphenated domains you are hoarding instead... ;)
Hi Todd - It's interesting that you bring that up, but a double hyphen does not bother me at all. I would stay away from 4 and 5 hyphens, and probably from 3, but 2 hyphens just does not seem like a spam signal to me, unless you have lots of other spam signals that you are sending off.
Very good post...
The only thing... as we saw recently widget distribution (even if highly relevant) won't give you the anchor text you want as "adding a keyword-rich link from a widget to our own site was an ultra-mega-Google-NO-NO."
Smart as always....
Eric, I found this post after reading your interview with Matt Cuttz from 2008 on Stonetemple. You have good opinion here and I'm absolutely agree with your strategy. Thanks and keep it on!
I came back and read this after your Link Building WBF. Thanks, some great info here, which some of it appeared on the WBF!
Great article. Simple & effective.
Thanks!
Thanks for the nice post, you are always good at writing and this one is not exceptional. see my own anchor text data entry Thanks
Hi Eric,
The information was useful.
How about press releases? Will it help?
Funny. I just forwarded along the OnePlusYou quizzes to coworkers as examples of linkbait.
There is no doubt that they are great ways to get links, but they are totally off the online dating topic. I think thats where the issue lies in the relevance of the widget, not that a widget was used to get the links. Despite how awesome the quizzes are, they aren't related to online dating.
Good post Eric interesting stuff that taught me a lot
I was looking at your website and noticed yours is titled stonetemple(dot)com. I just wanted to know that if you were to provide anchor texts for your website what would you do to put the keywords in there?
Is it harder to create anchor texts with keywords in there if you website is alreay 10 years old?
I wouldn't recommend changing your domain just to get better keywords. For example, I could change it to stonetemple-seo.com. However, the issues with domain moves would prevent me from doing it.
Eric,
Great post as usual. Article marketing should be a key strategy to every SEO campaign. Social Media is great when your target market is reached on the social media network, but doesn't apply to everyone. Overall, a great post for the beginners out there.
Write articles for distribution to third party sites.
I know this is kind of nitpicky, but what makes paying with your time better than paying with money in Google's and your (since you make a point of it) books? I get offers once a week to put up a piece of unique content with links in place back to their site. They're happy to also pay for it because they know the value.
Bartering, as this really is, is just another form of payment. Economics 101.
Having said that, it's not been called out yet by G, and I doubt they will soon with their KNOL (c**p name!) relying on it, but I think if it's over-abused it will attract some attention from the g (and a recent post by Andy Beal might be writing on the wall). Same as over-abusing buying links, linkbait, wordpress themes etc. etc.
I think the guiding factor is relevance. Are you placing an actual high quality article where readers will appreciate it, and linking back to directly related pages on your site.
The site taking the article is by definition endorsing your content, in fact much more substantially than if they simply gave you a link (because they are actually putting the content on their own site - if that is not an endorsement, I don't know what is).
You make a reference to Wordpress themes. These are fundamentally different - they are just like hit counters. A Wordpress theme is not related to your business, and any links you embed in one are not really endorsements of your site.
Eric,
Your linking information has been great and useful. I have 2-almost 3 active link building campaigns that I don't have time for. All of Your "linking" strategies have been greatly useful.
I work for a military reunion site (.com not a .gov) and actively pursue .gov and .edu sites because of our military affiliation. They are tedious to get but for the most part worth it.
Question for the Mozzers-We have a section called "Great Websites" I have been here for 2 months and reviewed this section and found it far from GREAT. These great websites are military veterans personal blogs, websites or whatever .coms. Some are pretty good but some are horrible and some don't even link to us!! (That is my first link campaign-gaining non paid banner ads or links from these "great websites" whom we link to). I know linking out to crappy websites is not good practice? How bad is this really hurting us? Yes All links are military related. We do have some pretty high powered links pointing to us from archvies.gov and some US Embassy's websites---should I just cut out the low level crappy sites? Thanks All
I would actively axe the link to a 3rd party site if you don't want to actively endorse it.
Nice Post ................keep it up.