Link Development in 2006

Links make the web go round.


Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Link Development for a New Site

Here's a basic five-step strategy to follow for link development on a new site during its first week or so of existance.

1. Submit the site to the appropriate category in DMOZ. Then forget about it for six months as it will probably take them about that long to find your submission.
2. Submit to other major free general directories: Skaffe, Zeal, Yahoo!, etc.
3. Submit to a few smaller directories that exclusively deal with your topic.
4. Exchange links with related sites in your niche.
5. Post regularly in a couple related forums - add a link to your site in your signature or occasionally post a link to it (when it seems fitting to do so). Note that some forums may not allow links to outside pages - make sure you understand the rules of the forum before doing so!

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Are your link exchange partners playing games with you?

Recently, while setting up a link exchange with another webmaster, I noticed that he was trying to create a "false" link to my page. While the link still works for human surfers, it wouldn't for search engine spiders. Spiders would not be able to see the link to my site, which obviously hurts me, while the spiders would interpret the link on my site to his as one-way, benefitting him. Needless to say, I yanked his link from my site and do not plan on any future interaction.

Here are three tips to determine if you are getting ripped off in a link exchange or not:
1 - Check their link code for a 'rel="nofollow"' tag. The nofollow tag basically tells spiders to not follow the link or count it in any page ranking algorithms. Whether all spiders obey this tag or not is a different story, but there is no reason why someone would include this tag in a link exchange unless they were trying to deceive you. An example of the nofollow tag in action would look like this:

<a href="http://www.google.com" rel="nofollow">Google Link</a>


2 - Check their link destination for PHP redirects. There is a good deal of debate as to whether spiders can follow PHP redirects or not, but its probably a good idea to assume the latter. PHP redirects would look something like this:

<a href="http://www.theirsite.com/link.php?id=141">Your Site</a>

Some webmasters say they use these type of link schemes to monitor outbound traffic - which may be honestly true. However, there are other (and better) methods that they could use to monitor outbound traffic instead.

3 - Check the language the link is encoded in. If its not a standard HTML link, chances are spiders won't be able to read it. Of the common web languages, spiders cannot see Javascript or Flash links, so any link encoded with either of those technologies is basically useless to spiders.


The bottom line : insist on good old <a href="http://www.yoursite.com"> links whenever possible. All webmasters are capable of doing it - they may just need some convincing.

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Blog marketing

Does your blog need traffic? I found this site that lists 55 places to which you can submit your blog to, for free, in an attempt to increase traffic:

http://www.masternewmedia.org/rss/top55/