Today.Az » SEO & E-Marketing » 5 simple ways to make your blog links better
06 September 2011 [20:30] - Today.Az
Blog links can be amazing. Links from real, powerful blogs that have a
strong subscriber base and an active community are worth their weight
in gold. Not just in the usual way links are useful, but they are great
for increasing brand awareness and industry authority.
But sometimes the natural format of a blog can dampen their power.
For example, over time blog posts move deeper into a site. They fall
off the homepage and they get pushed out of category main pages as newer
posts take their place. This natural progression results in most blog
posts having limited internal linking from archive pages.
Sure there are plenty of add-ons and plug-ins to help keep posts interlinked and out of archive obscurity. There are plug-ins to help with interlinking and related posts plug-ins. But not every blogger utilizes these tools and you can’t twist their arm to make their blog more SEO friendly for you.
What you can do though is use a few proactive and preventative
measures to help fight the natural dampening of link velocity from blog
links. Recommend Some Good Plug-Ins
If you have a link from a blog, and especially if you had a hand in
making it happen, why not make a recommendation? If you asked for this
link, or wrote for this link then you have an existing relationship. If a
blogger isn’t interlinking their blog posts in any significant way, a
little friendly advice might be warranted.
Try not to talk about SEO though. Instead suggest that interlinking
could help their readers stay more engaged. Sure if they know about SEO
they might appreciate the sentiment. But if they don’t, you might find
yourself teaching a 101 via email.
Keep it simple and focused on the one thing every blogger cares about: their readers. Build Links
Like it’s not hard enough to get links, now you have to build links
to your links? Hey I didn’t invent the system, I just make observations.
If your blog post link doesn’t get some external link attention it’s
not going to give you as much benefit as it could. Whether you wrote a
guest post or got mentioned in a collection of useful links, if that
page only has internal links, then it’s a minor league player in your
profile. But if that page picks up a few outside links then at least it
becomes Double-A.
Don’t leave the social media just up to the blog owner who hosts your
link. They have tomorrow’s post to think about. Make sure you pitch in
on the social promotion and help the post containing your link gain as
much traction as possible. And when it comes to building links getting
people to link to someone else’s content, that already links to you, is
often easier than begging for links to your landing pages. Title Tags
Optimizing title tags is a big part of on-page SEO work. But sometimes it can be useful in off-page SEO too.
If you’re doing content placement, or you’re featured in an interview
or review, then you may be able to impact the title tag of the blog
post holding your link. Do you want that blog post to rank for your
keywords? Not necessarily. But a targeted title tag can add a bit of
extra contextual relevance to the blog post and your link.
If your link has keyword anchor text and the page title contains
relevant keywords as well, that’s a great combination. You’re sending a
double whammy of signals to search engines about what this page is
about, and also what your site is about. And those signals are
incredibly important when Google or any other engine is trying to figure
out who should rank for what. Vary Your Bios
Guest posting is becoming a highly popular way to build links. If
you’re doing it right you spend a fair amount of time pitching bloggers
and creating content.
Obviously getting your link right in the content of the post is a
little better than just having a bio link. But not everyone is game for
that and you have to play by the rules.
Fortunately, the bio link is pretty standard on the guest posting
circuit; you can at least impact that. Mix up the pages you target, the
keywords you use and the text of your bio. These kinds of links are an
excellent opportunity to target sub-pages which don’t get a lot of love
and not using a boilerplate bio on every post helps keep each guest post
free of any duplicate content. Skip the Bad Blogs
Seriously, the best way to make your blog links more powerful is to
be more selective about which blogs you get links from. You can’t
control the links you pick up at random without asking. But if you’re
going to actively pursue blog links through guest posting, outreach, or
reviews, make it truly worth your while.
Settling for the bottom of the barrel links is almost as bad as not
getting links at all. Why not really invest the time and talent to score
placement on a truly great blog?
Getting a review for your electronics site on a blog that reviews
everything from cheap office furniture to the best credit card offers
isn’t really all that useful. Be honest with yourself, will the blog in
question review anyone or publish anything? Does anyone even read these
posts let alone comment on them or share them? If not, skip it. Ten of
those links aren’t as good as 1 link from a blog that genuinely takes
pride in its content and community. Summary
Blog links can be a great way to pump up a link profile. They can be
good for your brand and they can be good for your rankings. But all
things considered they can have some drawbacks. That’s why it’s so
important to pay attention to the details.
How a blog is interlinked, how many outside links a post gets, the
placement of the link, the words in the title tag, and the quality of
the blog all affect the overall value of the link. If you can address
any of those weaknesses then you can consider it a win.
/Search Engine Watch/
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