SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog |
Head Smacking Tip #20: Don't Ask Sites for Links. Find People and Connect. Posted: 30 May 2011 05:15 PM PDT Posted by randfish Many of us trained in the ways of classical SEO are familiar with the link building process: Step 1: Find relevant sites from which to get a link. Step 2: Search for contact information (email or phone number). Step 3: Get in touch and find a way to make the link happen (sell them on great content, do a trade in-kind, plant a seed and hope, etc.) If you've ever done this (for the first 2 years of my SEO career, it's practically all I did), you know how much it sucks. Conversion rates are low. Time/link is high. The ROI is there, but it's a painful, boring, awkward slog. I've got some good news. There's a better way. Try this instead: Step 1: Find relevant human beings (bloggers, journalists, forum participants, members of online communities, active social networkers, people in media, PR, or simply the well-connected). Step 2: Follow their contributions to the web world and engage (in blog comments, over Twitter, via LinkedIn, through Q+A sites and forums, or directly over email). Ask for nothing. Step 3: Build something highly relevant and useful to them. If you've truly built that connection and gotten to "know them," even if it's just virtually, you will know what they need/want/will appreciate. Step 4: Let them know about it. This can be over Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, email, in a blog comment, or whatever medium makes sense. There's huge advantages to this method, including:
Admittedly, the hardest part is Step 1: "Finding the Right People." Allow Google to assist: Pictured above is a Google "profile" search. You can search Google's public user profiles with search query strings like this http://www.google.com/search?q=travel+blogger&tbs=prfl:e or by appending &tbs=prfl:e onto any search URL. It's also easy to use tools like FollowerWonk and LinkedIn Search to supplement these results. Armed with these tools and this process, I'm bullish that any SEO with the passion to invest time and the freedom to build quality resources can earn great links, mentions and social metrics from real people across the web. Good luck out there link builders. I'll have my fingers crossed that this process can reduce friction and pain for people on both sides of the link equation. If you've got any additional recommendations, tools or methods to share, feel free to do so in the comments! |
You are subscribed to email updates from SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
Niciun comentariu:
Trimiteți un comentariu