Outbound links play a critical role in your overall linking strategy. This runs counter to the philosophy that used be popular in the industry, that of hoarding PageRank. You do read less about the notion of hoarding PageRank these days than you used to, but I still think that many publishers do not fully understand why outbound links are important.
It all comes down to what you need to do to receive authoritative links. You have to get inside the head of the person who is going to make the decision about linking to you or not. If you don't understand their mindset, your chances of success go down dramatically. Remember that these people are going to the sole judge and jury in terms of deciding whether or not to give you a link.
For example, someone that works at MIT lives and breathes an academic environment. Here are three quick facts about that environment:
- There is a lot of cutting edge research taking place there.
- People are voraciously reading the latest research papers published by others.
- They aggressively credit the sources they use (citation is required).
Imagine when that person comes to your site and sees nothing new under the sun in terms of content and no outbound links. It just does not feel or look right to them.
As a brief aside, earlier this week I reviewed a web site that had been heavily over-optimized. For example, it had links that had been crudely stuffed into the home page and pointed to lower level pages that added no real value. They were there purely for the purpose of linking to a page with anchor text that corresponded to a key search term.
When people go off the deep end with SEO, you end up with sites that don't even read correctly. An end user who did not know about SEO who read such a site would literally be scratching their head when they see the site. This certainly lowers the ability of the site to close business. In addition, such an over-optimized site has no chance of getting links from an authoritative site. None.
Your Targets
This phenomenon is not limited to the academic world. You will encounter the same conditions at government sites, or amongst people at major media sites, such as the NY times. The nature and depth of the types of research may be different, but the idea of citing sources and looking for high quality content to link to remains the same.
You can extend this notion further. Any time you look at a site and see that they have gone to the trouble of creating authoritative content (and cite other sources as well), you know you have someone that is going to expect similar behavior from any site they would consider linking to.
It's kind of a club, really. Once you become a recognized authority in a field, you are a part of the club. Along with other authoritative sources in the same and closely related fields, you will start to get links flowing without a tremendous amount of effort.
Publishers of authoritative sites almost always care about their users. They spend time thinking about increasing content quality and adding new content to their site. They are not afraid that when they link to someone else, they will lose traffic that will convert into business for them. They know that the links they send to others will mostly be used by people that are not finding on their site what they are looking for (so there really is very little to lose).
Picking Sites to Link To
The first thing that needs to happen is that you have to have the authoritative mindset. As outlined above, this means that you embark on a deliberate campaign to achieve a status of being an authority in your field, and demonstrating that authority in what you publish. This includes building relationships with other authorities in the field.
As you are researching on the web to learn the things you need to become an expert, make note of the sites that help you the most, in particular those that are not your most direct competition. Cite these sites as sources along the way. Your visitors will appreciate your site more, and you will make a much more attractive target for other authority sites to link to.
Yeah, I still see a lot of people who are afraid to link to their smarter competitiors just bcoz they are scared that they might lose their traffic to them. But if you don't keep up to the pace, you'll lose them anyway. So one has to be generous and look to build relationships instead. The very reason why it has become so important to build online relations for successful link building. This is something I find www.stuntdubl.com so good at. BTW, nice post Eric!
I agree with Pulkit. Lots of sites/webmasters are afraid to have links on their sites, even if they rank lower to some others. they just don't get the value of it !
Good post. I especially like the references to the environment that informs "inhabitants" and their behavior. Awareness and connectivity to the ebbs and flows of your industry/community via your website is essential. It confirms you and your website are connected to the paradigm and/or environment they operate in. Demonstrating this through thoughtful linking will make a positive impression. Thanks!
Digesting government produced data and then linking back to that source is a great way to build authority via outbound linking. When part of the paragraph describes how the data was used to produce the page or information on your site and then a link goes back to the .gov source it builds authority both in establishing how you went about the work and what sort of level of reliability you looked for in terms of data. For most people just seeing that short explanation is enough, for a few visiting the source site and seeing what you did to get your results adds all the more credibility.
Are outbound links a necessary evil on a new site?
Hi, I would like to add a comment to your question if I may.
Yes, I always add outbound links to other relevant sites! Google loves it when they see you linking out to others and making the user experience more beneficial!
Regards
Catherine
First of all, great post. I find myself explaining the benefit of actively linking out quite often. I do have a few points I’d like to add to this if I may.
**Unless creating rare content as deliberate link bait, be mindful that you don’t write too much content based around linking out to a site you’re courting. Not that good content can’t be created when doing this, but after a while the efforts run the risk of becoming translucent and could be considered spam.
**Assuming you’re working on content that has already been created, outbound linking strategies should begin while doing keyword research. Once you have the words or phrases you’re going to target, quickly run down the top 10 on Web, News, and Images for at least Google and Yahoo. This can give you some great ideas for additional content and places you can link to or at least be cognizant of.
**Your content should be good enough as a whole that you shouldn’t need to worry about your juice box leaking too much. Spoon full of euphoria anyone? Okay, so maybe not all your content is seo-tastic, but if you’re creating somewhat consistently solid information for your readers and have inbound links coming in on a regular basis, it will equal itself out in the long run.
Nice piece Eric :)
Well I agree with you that its important to cite sources as well as to link to other relevant 'high quality' content.
The ultimate goal is to feed your visitor with as much as information as possible. Because some of your visitor might just be happy with what you wrote but some might want to research deep into that topic. So you can make their task 'easier' by linking to other high quality web documents that are related to the topic that you just wrote on.
Ofcourse you will get the best result if its been done manually by you, but there is a new 'plugin' for wordpress which does something simmilar.
https://tinyurl.com/2b2zr3
Hi Eric,
This post makes so much sense! I have just written a post on this exact topic. If we use outbound links to our site, it surely adds value to not only our site but also the web in general.
Thanks,
Catherine
What about linking to clients say for a web development company who has outbound links to clients sites. Should they put no follow tags on or not link? There are like 10 links out and they are not related.
It still goes to say that even for outbound links, quality still matters. A link from a high authority website is naturally 10 times or more better than a normal site.
dsfa
What if we can give outbound links distributed over our inner pages?
The Role of Outbound Links - It was a great read. Thanks for the information.
This is obviously one great post. Thanks for the valuable information and insights you have so provided here. Keep it up!
I like the thought process you outlined in giving links from authority sites.
Eric, thanks for reminding us that quality is the future! I am glad that there is more emphasis on creating high value content. With the growing popularity of premium resources, I think the Inernet is heading the right way.
Damn, another link for Marshall Simmonds. ;-)
Great Post Eric! And, great philosophy... btw... I know of a few websites that you can link to. LoL.
I agree with you that a good choice of links to related documents is a great idea. I need to do more of that.
Thanks!
I can see Google in the "not so long term" penalizing pages that hoard Pagerank by incestuously linking to lower value pages, where much better resources can be easily found elsewhere...
If that happens, people might mistake that for an anti-wikipedia/wikia move from google :-)
good point!
Is there any way of knowing roughly how much juice a page loses with each link that goes out of it? I think that should be weighed against the value of the link for a user as a resource for more info or citation...
Excellent Post Eric...I especially liked the last two paragraphs about building relationships and linking out to sites you respect.
Not the answer I was looking for... I think you pressed "reply" instead of "add comment"...
As far as I'm aware you don't actually lose Pagerank through outgoing links, its assigned to the page based on incoming links and thats it. This is then the basis for the value of outgoing links, but you don't actually lose that value.
Sculpting who gets that value is the issue, and exactly how it gets treated between internal and external links is more of a grey area.
Good post !
but i have a problem about link website ,how to get a good link that it has a high pr!
for example: https://WWW.ICR.COM.HK
thanks!
What? Not sure what that link has to do with you question...