Howdy Mozzers,
I've been spending a couple of weeks this summer in the Distilled office looking at the way they do linkbait in order to write up a guide on it.
Whilst researching and reading around what people had posted before, it became clear there were a handful of problems which kept cropping up why people were failing at linkbait. In this post, I hope to address some of the biggest headaches SEOs had.
We've Had Very Limited Success
1. No Outreach Plan
Don't wait until you've hit publish to start thinking about outreach. Like a marketing campaign in itself, you wouldn't build prototypes, injection-moulding systems and have a container load of widgets shipped across from China before you've spoken to and got reassurance from your customers well in advance that they'd love to buy it; ideally with pre-orders.
The same applies to linkbait.
You want to reach out to at least some of the linkerati beforehand and get your "guaranteed five links" before you even start your piece of linkbait. The good news is if lots of people are interested from the beginning and think it's a good concept, other people will probably like it and link to it later on too.
I interviewed some of the London Distilled SEO and PR team on their tips for effective outreach. Here's a sneak peak:
If you've already launched, Wiep Knol has some excellent tips for breathing life back into your linkbait here.
2. Your Concept Sucks
Tough love, but if your concept doesn't keep your linkerati wide awake at night buzzing about what you've just created (or have told them you're going to create) then your concept needs some improvement. Even in the most boring industries this is possible - harder perhaps, but possible.
Find out the motives for the linkerati being online; is it their job? Their hobby? Something they're expert in? Perhaps offer to interview them to build up a relationship to post on your website in advance to figure out what they're really passionate about - this will help with refining a pitch to them, even better when it's a warm lead.
3. You're Not Working Hard Enough
It's simple enough. You haven't worked hard enough. Now there may be some genuinely good reasons for that - family bereavement, hospitalization or some other horror - but most of the time it's down the lack of effective work.
You probably need a to hire a link building trainer...
… or get on a diet of productivity tips from the99percent pronto!
It's probably rooted in the fact that you're not excited enough. You haven't got a team around you grinning as you show them the latest update or the graphics back from the designer. You haven't got a clear purpose why you're creating a piece of linkbait. It'll help to identify why your creating this linkbait and what it means to people involved - that can be motivating.
My Linkbait Gets Copied by Competitors
1. You've Got Nothing or Little Unique
You don't have or you're not using something that's unique and can't be copied. Use proprietry data, your own contacts or something else which competitors don't have and can't acquire easily. It's only a really big problem if it's cannibalizing your links and preventing you from reaching future link targets. If it isn't though, don't fret too much - use it as a link prospecting tool though for future.
2. You're Not Thinking Creatively
Don't forget, you can still play the "first mover advantage" game if your kind of linkbait can be replicated fairly easily. That includes mashing up different linkbait tactics and hooks; perhaps an infographic linking back to an interactive tool. Try to maintain at least two different assets which are unique to you - that way you've got enough of a one-up over your competitors.
We Haven't Got the Resources
This one sounds plausible, but I still don't buy it for a second. Bootstrapped linkbait is harder yes, but still possible. You've just got to be more choosy in picking tactics and hooks to get links; there are some easy wins on a budget:
1. Design
If you've got a designer, or a designer friend or someone who's good but not ridiculously expensive.
Designers expect money in exchange for work. That's the way it works, even if you are on a wafer-thin budget. Look at crowdsourcing designs perhaps via 99designs or looking at the people using Fiverr for cheaper designers, at least to get in touch with them.
2. How-to Tutorials
You can't always outspend your competition, but you can out-teach them. Think of all the countless books on learning to program, and then Y Combinator startup Codecademy comes along - I can't wait to see what else they've got in store, but it's a fantastic, interactive how-to tutorial.
3. Interviews
Provided you can put together some riveting questions and pitch an interview in a way that doesn't tie up all their time. Wil Reynold's Pro Tip: Call them up with Google Voice [US only. Grrr...] during their commute or other "dead time", record your call and get it transcribed.
A good time to grab top end interviewees is when they're just about to launch a book. Hat tip to Andrew Warner of Mixergy.com for that one - when you're in a self-promotional mood, an interview opportunity is hard to turn down.
4. User-generated linkbait
Perhaps you've got a small email list, blog or twitter following you could work with to brainstorm and create effective linkbait?
One of my favourite tactics is to sound out a forum, put together a skeleton outline of what the article or guide might look like in Writeboard, then let the community edit it. If you establish yourself in the community first - be human and sincere like you would be face-to-face, not a self-promotional a-hole! - then it can be a incredibly effective way to crowdsource expert content. I've even had my spelling mistakes corrected for me :) Make sure to cite your contributors however; always be sincere.
It's All Overwhelming and Chaotic. I can't cope with it.
You've got no effective process. Try and map out the big picture of what needs to happen where before you start. With that all mapped out (maybe even as a printed chart on the wall), you can work on the very next step. By forcing yourself to jump over little hoops and checkpoints regularly your far more likely to produce effective linkbait.
There's plenty more tips and ideas like this in the linkbait guide, as well as a chance to get your questions answered in our Q&A Linkbait Webinar where two Distilled SEO Consultants will be answering your questions.
What's been your experience creating linkbait? An exhausting path of misery or a thrilling success story?
Wow!! This is ground breaking to me, but it makes so much sense: contact the people you were intending to send the linkbait ahead of time to not only get them committed, but - more importantly - also get their insight on what THEY want to read from the info. You already open the gates for communication and build a relationship with these people/companies/websites.
And points for the vid! I played that first and already got a great take-away from it. Now I really want to read the rest of the article. Good job, Ed!
Hehe. A month ago it was groundbreaking to me too. I tried launching a guide on one of my sites once. I got all pumped about how people would love to link to it (it was a good guide, for users at least), but the linkerati just didn't care.
Whilst it did double my traffic, it didn't give the nice juicy boost in links I really needed to take my site to a whole new level. It was bleedin' frustrating!
So yeah... do your pre-outreach like you would with a business.
Glad you liked the article :]
Lovely post and great appetizer of the Link Bait Guide you wrote for Distilled (guys. It's great also physically, so download its PDF for you sanity too ;)).
So... following your tips and hints > I like to discuss and make questions, I am honored to have great (and influential) contacts in our Industry... So prepare yourself to a great series of interviews to great personalities of SEO and Internet marketing soon in your readers :)
Taking good note of this user-generated linkbait buddy... Awesome idea here! :)
Thanks for sharing!
Brilliant idea to do link-bait on a link-bait guide :) Lots of things to jumpstart my thinking and lots of great resources as well.
Awesome post Ed! So many good takeaways here - I have the difficulty on working in-house in a very large organisation and trying to get buy-in for us to do this type of thing.
Keep up the great work
Simon
Tricky, but still possible. Once I was at Distilled for one of the weekly 'beer o clock' talks - Rishi was doing a guest talk (https://explicitly.me/) about his situation. He works mostly as an inhouse at a huge brand and suffers the same kind of battle of getting folks up the chain to buy-in.
Just go ahead and do it - work through the ten steps in the brainstorm guide right up to test outreach; then go take it to your boss and say "hey, I had this idea and we're guaranteed 50 links from it from these 50 awesome sites. Give me a week and we can be ranking top 5 for X, Y & Z" etc. ideally over a lunch. Lunches are awesome - people relax and listen to you.
I find that the hardest industry to do linkbait in is this one - SEO. So many people are doing it so well that it feels like bidding on ads in the "PPC management" industry.
I love the tips for the clients I work for, though.
Really? I'd say it's the easiest. People know they should link to something if it's good. We recognize the value of giving a link. That, and there's lots of people to give links.
Linkbait get's harder when the linkerati aren't so savvy, or just don't link out to stuff all that much. Then, you've got think of more creative ways to get links from people (or perhaps links from other industries).
The bit on bidding for "PPC management" made laugh :]
That is very helpful. My industry, by defult, tends to be highly competivie. Because of this, link bait has been a challenge for us. I have been thinking about this issue for a while now. I think reaching out to people on our newsletter, and doing some "crowd sourceing" is a great idea. I plan to join the webinar next week. Thanks for posting.
-Bryant
No worry's about a competitive industry. It's whether there are folks who are in your industry who might link to it, and whether you've got the time and energy to make it happen.
Perfect for a competitive industry I say!
The webinar will be great for - perhaps mention a few things about your situation in the 'conference call question' field.
@Fryed7 Thanks for consuming my entire day and probably what's left of this week into next. This along with the accompanying doc on Distilled are world class and have been/will be tweeted and retweeted to death by me :-)
The video tips were a nice touch too.
@Mark Steven I think he's done very well to keep it short and the links have opened a whole new area for me... I LOVE codecademy!
Glad you like it :]
Yes, Codecademy is *awesome* - how far have you got? Itching for them to upload more lessons too?
Hi Mate,
Checked out the link bait guide also sent it a bunch of people on my email list, some good stuff in it mate.
My experience making link bait varies niche by niche, from my experience what works in a banking or law niche for link bail will never work well in a teenage telco market.
Really alot of research needs to delve into the specific demographics of the company you are targeting first, then really develop the plan and as I said a few times I would really push the link bait at the start.
But fantastic work mate =)
This is brillant, Web Design is so hard and competitive to do SEO and also to get the right links, but I can use this post as a good background to develop linkbaiting for some of my clients.
Well crafted post guys, but it seems like an awful lot of fluff to make a very simple point.
Hi Mark,
Sorry you found the post a bit fluffy. It sucks to let people down; what would you suggest to make it better for next time?
Idano, Mark, I think there wasn't any fluff to it. The article was pretty direct with multi-media materials and supplemental links. And there was more than one point this article can give with its problem-treatment layout.
@Fryed7 - You really need to stop gloating and floating on your Internship at Distilled, Ed, it's getting boring, it was ages ago. Nice post though, thumbs up for you.
Actually I believe Ed is currently an intern again. Also, please check out our Community Disclaimer on how we expect our community to not make offensive comments toward one another. We work very hard at keeping the community open, sharing and learning from one another. It's not helpful to try to put someone else down. You may also want to read more about TAGFEE, our guiding principles.