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How To :: Effective Link Building through Link Baiting
The Author's Background: Rob Sullivan is
a SEO Consultant and Writer for Textlinkbrokers.com.
Text Link Brokers is a full-service Text Link Advertising
Agency. Whether you need just a handful, a hundred, or even
thousands of relevant text links. Text Link Brokers will get
your text link campaign started in order to help increase
your Search Engine visibility and rankings. |
How
To :: Effective Link Building through Link Baiting by Rob
Sullivan
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Webmaster Tips, Hints and Resource Articles
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There is a tactic out there embraced by bloggers,
but rarely used by typical websites. It is called Link Baiting.
In this article I explain what link baiting is and how everyone,
not just bloggers, can use it to build quality links. This is a
topic that's been around for a while but I don't think a lot of
people know what it is, or how to use it to their advantage.
I think the name "Link Baiting" could be considered a
black hat technique, which is why most people wouldn't consider
it as a legitimate organic tactic. However link baiting is merely
link building with a twist: Rather than hunting out links, you are
bringing the links to you through unique and popular site content.
So how does Link Baiting work?
Link Baiting is just like fishing. You publish a new page on a topic
(I'll cover those later) and set it free on the web. Hopefully others
pick up on the content as fresh and interesting and link to it.
The article is the bait, and the link is the catch.
A properly created page can capture huge links on its own with
little to no effort from you.
For example, on another site, about a year ago, I wrote an article
about the Florida Update. I spend the month or 2 after the initial
update analyzing results and I then published my theory on what
the update was.
That article has earned 88 links to date. And the best link, in
my view, is a link from the ODP from the Google
News category.
In fact my article appears in the top 10, and is linked to as a
reference in many of the other top listings for a Google search
for "Florida Update."
So what was so special about the article?
While I never intended for it to be link bait, it turns out it
was a typical "hook" page. Performancing blog has a really
good summary
on link baiting which I will further explain here.
With link building there are essentially 5 types of "hooks"
or pages built to encourage links. They are: News, Contrary, Attack,
Resource and Humor.
A News hook is one where you report on industry
news. But it's not just a rehashing of someone else's post. It should
be unique – either a scoop that no one else has caught, or
it could even be a summary of various viewpoints. A news hook could
also be comprised of a story you have proved to be false.
Contrary hooks are when you contradict what someone else says.
It should be someone prominent in the industry and it should be
controversial.
For example, if I were to write an article that proclaimed that
Danny Sullivan's latest theory was bunk, it would probably generate
buzz, especially if I could provide corroborating evidence backing
up my assertion.
Recently Mike Grehan posted just such an article on Clickz
in which he again pointed out that he doesn't believe in a Google
Sandbox. He even refers to other posts in which the Sandbox has
been beaten to death.
Soon after he posted this article (which, by the way was posted
just one week ago) many others SEM's jumped on him purporting to
have proof of the Sandbox.
And, if you use Yahoo's
Site Explorer to look at who links to this article, you will
see that Yahoo! Has already picked up on almost 80 links to this
one article. I'd say that Mike has done a great job of link baiting!
Attack hooks take the contrary hooks a step further,
by launching personal attacks on people taking the debunking of
theories to the next level. The original post from SEOmoz was close
to an attack hook, but after they edited it, it became less of an
attack. They reacted to the Mike Grehan article on the Sandbox with
some haste and turned it personal. To their credit they did tone
it down some, but it's pretty close to a flame. Who knows, maybe
this article will be considered an attack on SEOmoz and will generate
similar buzz.
A Resource hook is more of an informational page.
It's one that aggregates a bunch of information and distills it
for visitors. In fact this site is much like that. We take a bunch
of news, distill it to its most meaningful and then provide our
interpretation of what it means. Then, others pick up on the article
and either reposts it, or at least link to it.
Finally is a Humor hook. With this link bait you
post jokes, funny stories, weird or funny pictures that you've found
or anything else that will warrant a review from others and hopefully
a link. There are tons of blogs devoted to this such as the Obscure
Store & Reading Room and Small Town Misfit, which scour the
web for weird and funny stories and then display them, encouraging
others to link to them. And it must be working – Small Town
Misfit has over 1,600 Yahoo! Links while Obscure Store has over
1,700.
So, if you were ever worried about the amount of link building
you'd have to do to become an "authority", consider link
baiting in your arsenal. It can be a very effective way of building
links quickly and easily. Also, it's an effective way to build your
reputation and brand online as more and more people learn about
you through these links.
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