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Web Site Promotion Tips! Newsletter:Developing a Reciprocal Link StrategySometimes a client tells me that they dont want to be bothered with compiling a page of links. Big mistake. Why?
Links as Valuable Content Your target audience will visit your Links page time after time (and often stay to visit other pages in your site) if you provide them with a list of categorized sites, along with a few lines about why you like the site and what it has to offer. Theyll pass the URL of your Links page along to others, too, because the information is so valuable. For example, a rock band could have categories like this: Music Pros (links to music business industry sites); Indies (links for independent musicians); Fans (links to personal sites or favorite sites of band members); Music Lovers (links to other musicians who appeal to the same audience). A writer might include links in these categories: Writers Groups & Associations; Writers Retreats & Conferences; Research (links to online libraries etc); Publishers of the writer's own work; Favorite Writers; Marketing & PR for Writers. You can see how useful these links would be to writers who are looking for a publisher, or information on how to break into the field, or on how to become a more successful writer. Take the Time to Write a Blurb If you take the time to write a few sentences about why you recommend each site, you make your list of links even more valuable. You move it into the category of a mini-review. Don't be bland write an informed, opinionated review and you'll develop a reputation and a following. Of course, adding new links on a regular basis is always a good idea! Exchange Links with Targeted Sites in Your Field Beyond providing links as valuable content, you want other sites in your field of interest to link to *you*. Preferably, you want sites with high traffic who are in your field but are not direct competitors. First you find them; then you link to them; then you write to them and ask for a reciprocal link. How to Find Popular Sites in Your Field: If you already have a site thats up and running, check your statistics log. Look for the most popular keywords or phrases that people are using to find your site in search engines. Also make a list of search terms that you want to be found for. Search on those terms to check out your competition. Review the sites that show up on the first 1-3 pages of search results those are the ones that are most likely receiving the highest traffic for those search terms. Then go to Google, and type in "link:www.competitors-sitename.com". Youll turn up a list of all the pages that are linking to that site. Now you have a list of your competitors, and a list of sites who have linked to them. Those are the sites you want linked to yours! (This method is also the perfect way to find out what sites are already linking to you. Just insert your own domain name "link:www.mysizzlingsite.com". You can also visit MarketLeap.com to find out how many sites link to yours, and how your site compares to other sites on the web.) Now That You've Found em, Link to em! Visit as many of the sites that link to your competitors as you can. Review each site and decide which ones you want to add to your own Links page. Write an insightful mini-review. Then . . . Ask for a Reciprocal Link Find the right email link for the site you may have to go to an "About" page or a Contact page. Make sure you find the most appropriate person possible to write to. Make your link request as easy as possible for someone to deal with. Make sure you include the title of your web site, your URL and a suggested description that includes your target search terms (and dont include marketing hype in your description). Everyones busy, and not everyone will take the time to review your site and write their own blurb (even though you, of course, will always do that!). You might briefly want to mention why you think the link will benefit their site's visitors they are not necessarily going to link to you just because you want them to. Also tell them that you've already added them to your Links page, and provide them with the URL so they can read what you wrote about them. If you don't hear back from them within a month or so, send a polite follow-up request, including all the information in your original request. If you still don't hear in another month, ask again. Then let it go. The Web Was Built on Links! Sharing information through links is one of the core concepts of the World Wide Web. Have I convinced you to create that dynamite Links page? If you take the time to do it well, you'll be rewarded with increased traffic, an expanding community for your site, and good karma! Sources include:
Danny Sullivan, SearchEngineWatch.com ©2002 Joanna P. Colbert, May 2002 Web Site Promotion Tips Newsletter
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