WebMaster Solutions
Search
Engine Optimization
Acquiring
In-Bound Links
by Kenneth Catto
Getting in-bound
links to your site is one of the most important
things you can do for generating traffic to your
site:
* It helps to get
your site listed in the search engine.
* It helps to
boost your position in the search engine.
* It helps to
build small streams of traffic to your site.
Links to your site
are normally given by also giving a link from
your site to the other one. These are called
reciprocal links or link swaps. And naturally
there are a few services available to automate
the link somehow.
Some of these
services will automatically add the link to your
site and the other site once your link request
is approved (through some software to be
installed on your site).
Some will simply
point you to sites which do use link swaps and
who are interested in hearing from you.
Some will also
check that the link to your site remains in
place, and email you if it disappears. It's then
up to you to either contact the owner of that
site to find out why the link has vanished, or
to remove the reciprocal link on your site.
But there is one
thing they do not do, and which you need to
watch for:
How would a
visitor to the other site FIND the link back to
your site?
Because you can be
sure that if a human visitor cannot find it,
then it's unlikely that a search engine will.
Let me give you an
example: Andrew was using the service at
LinkMetro.com to get links to one of his sites.
Someone had a site on a related topic, and they
requested a link back to Andrew's. He checked
the link back to his site, and everything looked
OK. The other site had requested a link back to
their homepage (rather than another specific
page), so Andrew checked out that home page.
What did he find?
* No links to the
"link directory".
* No link to a
"related sites" page.
* No link to a
"resources" page.
It seemed that the
link directory on that other site was not linked
from the home page of that site.
The other site was
requesting inbound links back to its home page,
but effectively hiding the return link from the
search engines and from website visitors. And
that makes the link back to Andrew's site
useless - it's like that link doesn't even
exist.
So next time you
get asked for a reciprocal link, check the route
that people and search engines would use to get
from that site over to yours. You might be
surprised what you find.
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