Help Your Site improve by Properly Managing Links

Link building is probably the most time-consuming task of an SEO. Nevertheless it’s perhaps one of the most important aspects of search engine optimization. Today we take a look at the various techniques that can be used to create and manage inbound links.

Note: I’m aware that link building isn’t exactly related to web design. But because we want to create a complete SEO Session, we have no choice but to include it.

Let’s Back up a Little

In the very first article of this Session – An Introduction to SEO – we learned how search engines work. One of the factors that search engines use in their algorithm are links. Search engines see a link to a website as a vote for that website; the more links (or votes) you get, the higher the page will rank.
It’s important to know that not all links have the same effect. Links from trustworthy sites with a high authority are more valuable than links from less established websites.
That’s why link building is an important part of search engine optimization. Links can vastly improve the performance of your website in the search results.

Things to Consider When Building Links

Of course there are a few things you should keep in mind when you’re building links. As we’ve said before: not all links are created equally.

Domain Diversity

Is it better to get ten links from one domain, or one link from ten domains (presuming that all domains have the same authority)? In this case I would suggest to go for the single link on ten different domains.
Google’s algorithm analyses the domain diversity of inbound links to determine the PageRank of a page. For this reason it’s a good idea to build links from a wide variety of domains. Getting five links from one domain will not help you rank five times as much as a single link from that domain.

Page Context

On a related note; site context also plays a role in the valuation of links. Links from pages about a similar topic to your site are more valuable.
For example: if you sell furniture online, a link from an interior design website will help you more than a link from an unrelated site (for example a pet shop). Context is key.

External vs. Internal Links

There are two types of links: internal and external. Internal links come from the same domain (for example from the ‘about’ page to the ‘clients’ page) while external links come from different domains.
Internal links have some SEO value, but external links are much more important. External links pass more link juice than internal links.

Link Position

Search engines have a pretty good idea about the various elements of a page (body, footer, sidebars, etc.). Based on the location of the link, they might allocate more value to it.
That’s why links in the main content of a page are more valuable than links in a sidebar or footer. Why? Because these links are probably related to the content of the page, thus making them more relevant for visitors.

Anchor Text

The anchor text is the text that is used to link to a web page (usually in blue and underlined). The keyword used in an anchor text can help the underlying page rank for that keyword. So instead of using ‘this page’ or ‘click here’ as an anchor text, use a meaningful keyword.
As with most SEO-related practices, it’s best not to overdo this. The goal is to create a natural link profile for your site (not everyone links with a keyword, so you need to add some diversity).

Link Building Tactics

There are several techniques that can be used to build links. These techniques can be divided into two major categories: natural link building and manual link building.
We talk about natural link building when someone links to your site without your intervention. This is usually the case if you create informative or newsworthy articles. As we’ve said before: quality content will automatically attract more links.
However, the chances are that you need to put some effort into your link building. Manual link building is acheived via outreach to other webmasters. Usually you give something in return for a link to your site.
To get you started and make your link building a little bit easier, we’ve collected some link building techniques that can help you:

Natural Link Building

Natural link building is all about creating valuable content that solves a visitor’s problem.
The challenge is producing unique content on the web. You’ll find information about virtually any topic online – from knitting tutorials to a review of the latest smartphone. So that leaves us with two tactics: either create a more comprehensive source of information or be the first to break a new story.
Choosing a different content type can also help you get links. Some content types tend to attract links naturally, such as infographics, comics or quizzes.
If possible you can develop a tool that can be useful for your visitors. If it can solve a problem you’ll quickly get a lot of fresh links. Joost de Valk, better known as Yoast, has developed several popular WordPress plugins which earned him links from almost 3000 different domains.
yoast inbound links
Something that is done frequently in the design industry is the creation of freebies. By giving away free icon packs, textures, code snippets… you can easily attract links.
But there are plenty of creative solutions to attract links too. Romain Brasair, for example, turned his 404 page into a real eye-catcher. And even e-commerce sites can attract a lot of links by thinking outside the box. HEMA, a Dutch retail chain, created a Rube Goldberg machine in their online shop.

Manual Link Building

The first step of manual link building is finding relevant websites. As we’ve said before; it’s best to get links from relevant, authoritative domains.
Finding these can be a bit tricky. However, there are several tools that can help you, such as the Mozbar browser plugin (Chrome / Firefox). This plugin displays the Page Authority (PA) and Domain Authority (DA) in the SERPs.
seomoz toolbar serp overlay
These metrics can help identify potential websites to contact. As you can see in the example above: the first and last website would be really interesting to get a link from.
Now comes the hard part: contacting the webmaster. Finding a contact form or e-mail address shouldn’t be a problem. Convincing him/her to add a link to your site is a different story. That’s why it’s customary to give something in return.

Writers often provide the webmaster with a guest article in return for a link. This benefits both parties: the host has fresh content for his readers while the SEO has a link. The author usually gets free publicity in the form of an author box at the end of the article.

Editor’s note: I have a serious dislike for people approaching me with article ideas when their primary motive is link building! Ninety-nine percent of these article concepts are weak (sometimes plagiarized) attempts at getting the author’s domain linked to from tutsplus.com. Kevin’s said it before during this session, but it’s worth saying again: quality content is more than ever recognized as being important – that’s what you need to be creating!
no thanks
Don’t expect a reply if you send me an email like this..

Alternatively you could help webmasters solve problems. Notify them of broken links or code-errors. You can even help them with other aspects of their site, for example by designing a new header image.
If you’re selling a product or a service you might do a giveaway. Contact a website and tell the webmaster that he can test the product / service or give it away for free to his readers (in return for a link of course).
You can even sponsor a local event or sports team. These events or teams usually have a ‘partners’ page where they link to all their sponsors.

Managing Your Link Profile

If you have a suspicious link profile you might get a penalty from Google. This means that your page can disappear from the search results completely. To prevent this we need to make manage our links.

Nofollow Tag

The nofollow tag tells search engines not to follow a link. This means that no PageRank is transferred to the underlying page.
You might remember the nofollow tag from our Robots.txt article. If we use the nofollow tag in the robots meta tag, Google will ignore all outgoing links on that page. However, we can also add this tag to an individual link:
001
<a href="http://website.com" rel="nofollow">Website</a>
Google wants webmasters to add this nofollow tag to paid links. Paid links are a violation of Google’s Webmaster Guidelines. Besides paid links this tag can be useful for comment sections. There are plenty of spammers out there who want to build links via comments. To discourage these practices it’s best to add a nofollow tag to comment URLs.
When it comes to link building: if you were able to add a link to an external page, make sure it’s a follow-link (i.e. there’s no nofollow tag). Otherwise it won’t help you rank.

Disavow Tool

The Disavow Tool is a brand new tool that was released at the end of 2012. It can be used to remove links that point to your website. Remove is perhaps a bad choice of words – it tells Google to ignore certain links that point to your site.
This tool can be used to recover from Google’s Penguin update. Some webmasters have received an ‘unnatural link warning’ in Google Webmaster Tools due to a high amount of low quality links pointing to their site (something the Penguin update is looking for). Websites with a suspicious link profile were affected by this, often to their surprise. James Farmer from WPMU was hit by this update because he had a link in the footer of the WordPress themes he released.
Thankfully you can use the Disavow Tool to clean up your link profile. Here’s how it works:
  1. First you need to go to this Webmaster Tools page (you can only use this tool if you are registered as the ‘owner’ of the domain).
  2. Select the correct domain and click the ‘disavow links’ button.
  3. Select the link file (more info below) and hit the ‘submit’ button.
disavow tool
You need to upload a text file with a list of bad links. For example:
001
002
003
004
#contacted website owner to remove link, no response
http://website.com/page-name.html
#multiple bad links from domain
domain:website.com
It’s best to add a comment (#) to every URL. It can be useful if someone from Google evaluates the disavow file. URLs need to be placed on a separate line. You can add the URL of a single page or ignore links from an entire domain (be careful with this!).
How do you know which links to remove when you get an unnatural link warning? Matt Cutts explains in this Google Webmasters video.

A Note About Social Shares

What about links from Facebook, Google+, Twitter and other social media? Do social shares have an impact on your performance in the search results?
Actually, we’re still trying to figure out the effect of social shares. Multiple studies have shown that the importance of social shares is increasing. They might – and probably will – play a big role in the future.
However, classic links are still more important than social links. Social shares don’t have the same value as links from web pages because they are rather volatile.
That being said, social shares can still be extremely valuable. I’m sure some of you will get the majority of their visitors from social media. Social shares can improve your online visibility and in turn improve the chance of gaining natural links from other websites.

Resources

To end this article I’d like to share two useful resources:
The first is a collection of Link Building Strategies from Point Blank SEO. Jon Cooper has compiled a huge list of tried and tested link building techniques. You can filter the list by time to execute and dependencies.
The second resource is a list of email templates. If you need some ideas for your email to contact webmasters, this list can be a great starting point. You’ll find templates for a wide variety of questions.

Conclusion

Link building is a crucial aspect of search engine optimization. If you want to grow your site and attract more visitors, you should start building quality links. Some links will be created automatically, but most links require some effort from your side. In case you need to clean up your link profile you can use the nofollow tag or Google’s Disavow Tool.

SEO FAQ



Thanks everybody Today’s post about SEO.So far we’ve answered several SEO-related questions in this Session. however it’s a good idea to bundle some important questions, add some new ones and create an SEO FAQ. Can’t find the answer to your questions? Post a comment and we’ll try to help you.


To help you quickly find the way between sections, here’s a break of what’s covered:
  • SEO Basics
  • Search Engine Result Pages
  • Domains
  • Content
  • URLs
  • Links
  • Additional Questions Submitted by Readers


SEO Basics
How do search engines work?
Search engines aim to build an index of all web pages via crawlers. These bots follow links (href and src) and index the files they encounter. When you enter a search query, search engines retrieve the most relevant web pages from their index and sort them based on several ranking factors.
What is black-hat / white-hat SEO?
White-hat SEO refers to techniques which search engines recommend as part of good design. They produce long-term results. Black-hat SEO involves techniques that are disapproved of by search engines. These can get your site penalized or ultimately banned from the index.

Which SEO tactics are considered black-hat?
There are several techniques that are considered black-hat, such as:
  • Keyword stuffing: packing long lists of keywords on your site. The content usually has little or no value.
  • Cloaking: serving different content to crawlers and visitors.
  • Hidden text: hiding keyword-rich text in the background or off-screen.
  • Doorway pages: pages created specifically for crawlers.
Which factors affect the ranking of my pages?
There are more than 200 factors which are used to determine the relevancy of your pages. We don’t know all of them, but research has identified several important elements:
  • Backlinks: a link to a site is seen as a vote for that site. The more links a page gets, the better. Links from domains with a high authority are more valuable.
  • On-page factors: such as the title of the page, formatting, content, images and so on.
  • Domain age: as a rule of thumb; older is better.
  • Update frequency: frequently posting new articles or updating pages generally has a positive effect.
What is Google Panda / Penguin?
Google Panda and Penguin are updates to Google’s search engine ranking algorithm. The Panda update was first released in 2011 to improve the visibility of high-quality sites. Google Penguin was announced in April 2012 and penalized websites which used Black-hat SEO techniques.


Search Engine Result Pages

Why isn’t my site showing up in the search results?
This is probably one of the most common SEO-related questions. There are several causes which might prevent your site from showing up in the search results.
First of all you should perform a site: search in Google (e.g.: site:webdesign.tutsplus.com) to see if it has been indexed yet. If you see a list of pages, your site has been crawled and indexed by Google. If you see the following message it has not yet been indexed or it might have been removed from the index by violating Google’s Guidelines.

If your site did show up, you probably need to work on your site authority. Publish unique content that solves visitors’ needs and try to earn links from relevant, authoritative domains.

How can I remove a page from Google’s index?
You can prevent a page from being indexed by Google with the help of the robots.txt file or robots meta tag. If you want to remove a page that has already been indexed, you can do this via Webmaster Tools > Optimization > Remove URLs.

Can password protected pages get indexed?
No, search engines can not crawl the content on password protected pages, hence they can not be indexed.

Can search engines index pages that are served via an https-connection?
Google can index https-pages (PayPal’s homepage is indexed as a https-version for example).
Warning: this can sometimes be the cause of duplicate content if both http and https versions are indexed.

Does traffic affect my ranking?
Short answer: no.
Why not? Because the amount of traffic a page receives is not a ranking factor. Yes, high traffic websites are usually correlated with high rankings, but the high ranking is not a direct consequence of traffic. Search engines don’t know how much traffic a website gets. They know how much they sent to a website, but they don’t know how much direct or referral traffic it may get, so they have incomplete data. And if you’re using Google Analytics on your site, Google can’t use this data due to privacy concerns.
So traffic doesn’t affect your ranking. Your link profile, content, domain authority, etc. affect your ranking. This will in turn improve the amount of visitors you get.

Why do my search results differ from my friend/colleague/wife/husband…?
Sometimes you might see different search results than someone else. This is due to search personalization. Search personalization is based on your search history and is tracked via your Google+ profile or cookies. For this reason SERPs might sometimes look a little bit different.
Don’t worry though, search personalization can be disabled.

How do I get my new site indexed?
It’s impossible to appear in the search results if search engines don’t know your site exists, hence why a lot of people ask how they can get their new site crawled and indexed. There are several things you can do:
  • Create an XML Sitemap and submit it via Google / Bing Webmaster Tools. This is an easy way of informing search engines about the pages you have already published.
  • Create some backlinks to your site. Crawlers discover new pages by following links. Doing some basic link building can help your new site get indexed.
  • You can submit your site to Google. Some people argue that this method has become obsolete, but it can’t harm your site and only takes a few seconds. So wouldn’t you do that? Use Google’s webmaster tools to submit your new site.
When should I begin seeing improvements in my rankings?
This is a rather tough question to answer. Improvements can be seen after a few days, weeks or even months. There are several factors to consider, such as the previous state of the website, the amount and type of changes, crawl rate, keyword competitiveness and so on. SEO is usually a long term strategy that can take several months.

How do I get my profile picture in search results?
You need to implement authorship information to display your profile image (via Google+). This article details you how to do this.

On a related note: how do I get star ratings and thumbnails in search results?
These are called rich snippets. They are automatically generated by search engines when you implement structured data, such as Microdata, Microformats or RFDa. More info can be found in a previous article.

Does a Google +1 affect rankings?
Yes, but only marginally. Because +1 is a relative new ranking signal, Google is still learning how it affects search quality.


Domains

Do domain extensions matter?
Country-specific domain extensions (.de, .fr, .it…) can help you rank for local searches in your country. There is no ranking benefit of choosing a certain generic domain extensions (.com, .net, .org…).

Should I invest in exact-match domains?
Exact-match domains are, as the name suggests, domain names that match a certain keyword or phrase. For example: if you want to rank for the term ‘rare baseball cards’, you could buy the domain rarebaseballcards.com (exact match domain).
This type of domain used to be really powerful in the past. However, in September last year an algorithm update was released that reduces low-quality exact-match domains in search results. I suggest choosing a short domain name which is easy to remember.

I just migrated my site to a new domain. When it comes to SEO, what should I pay attention to?
The most important aspect of a site migration is URL redirection. Use a 301-redirect to send visitors from the old pages to the new. You can notify Google of a site migration via Webmaster Tools (Configuration > Change of address)

Content
Should I optimize my page for the singular or plural of my keyword?

When you write naturally, you automatically use both forms in your text. Remember that it’s important to provide your readers with quality content. Text that has been over-optimized for a single keyword (without variations, synonyms, etc), will not be pleasant to read. Visitors come first, search engines second!

What is long tail traffic?
Long tail traffic comes from very specific keywords. So instead of ‘photoshop tutorial’ (short tail keyword), you get traffic from ‘photoshop tutorial for photo manipulation’ (long tail). Long tail traffic has less competition than traffic from short tail keywords.

Which meta tags should I use?
The meta keywords tag has become redundant, so you don’t have to add it. The meta-description tag on the other hand, is still be useful to convince people to visit a page.

What is search engine friendly design?
Search engines have trouble reading certain content types (images, video’s, flash…). A search engine friendly design is a website that can easily be crawled and indexed.

Does content length matter?
Search engines prefer longer pieces of content (usually +300 words). But that doesn’t mean shorter articles can’t perform well. It’s better to focus on the quality of your content than on content length

How can I optimize images?
There are three ways to optimize an image:
File-name: choose a descriptive file name instead of a random string of words and numbers.
Alt-tag: add an alt-tag with a short description to your image.
File size: find a balance between file size and quality for improved loading times.

What is duplicate content?
Duplicate content is exactly what you think it is: two pages which have identical content. In this case Google rarely shows both pages in the search results, so duplicate content can be problematic.Duplicate content can be created intentionally (for example the print version of a page) or accidentally (because of URL parameters, inconsistent linking, etc.).

URLs
Should I use absolute or relative URLs for internal linking?
For example:
Absolute URL: http://website.com/blog/page.html
Relative URL: /blog/page.html
Relative URLs exclude the root domain of the site. When it comes to SEO, it’s best to use absolute URLs.

How should I split words in a URL?
It’s best to use hyphens (-). Using other punctuation marks, such as underscores (_) and plus signs (+) might confuse search engines. Using no separators at all should also be avoided.

Should I use subdomains or subfolders?
It’s best to use subfolders. This can facilitate the correct indexation of your pages by search engines. If you have several, non-related products, you can use subdomains.

Can Google index dynamic URLs?
Google has come a long way when it comes to handling dynamic URLs. Most of the time they will interpret the various parameters correctly. However, you can help Google with this task via Google Webmaster Tools.
For more information on creating SEO friendly URLs, take a look at our article on the subject.

Links
Are reciprocal links bad?
No, reciprocal links aren’t bad. However, one-way incoming links seem to be more valuable.

What is a link farm?
A link farm is a massive network of sites with a single purpose: linking to other websites. These types of links are considered to be a form of spam.

What is a nofollow link?
Nofollow is a link attribute that tells search engines not to pass any PageRank to the linked page. This means that a nofollow link will not improve your ranking.Nofollow is a link attribute that tells search engines not to pass any PageRank to the linked page. This means that a nofollow link will not improve your ranking.

Someone wants to pay me to place a link to his site on my site. Should I do this?
The practice of buying links to improve the ranking of a page goes against Google’s Webmaster Guidelines. This is no surprise because you’re basically manipulating Google’s algorithm. That’s why these tactics are considered black-hat. Worst case scenario is a penalty for your site. But in reality it’s pretty hard for Google to discover paid links. Nevertheless it’s best to be careful.

What is link bait?
Link bait is content that is created to naturally attract links. These are usually controversial pieces of content that automatically generate a viral effect. For example ‘The Inconvenient Truth About SEO’ by Paul Boag, where he argues that SEO is redundant. The article attracted a high number links from popular websites.

Can other websites damage my site?

In theory, competitors can harm your website by building a high volume of low quality links to it, or links from malicious websites. Google developed a tool to counter these practices, called the Disavow Tool. The Disavow Tool allows you to tell Google which links to ‘ignore’.

What is negative SEO?
Same answer as above: low-quality links to a site that damage a site’s ranking. These links have a detrimental effect and have therefore earned the name “negative SEO”.