Get Lots of links quickly?
-
Hey everyone,
I have some questions about links. First off, I only do things that are very white hat, so I don't want to do any sort of spammy or paid links. I have been doing SEO for a year and a half and have been researching and following SEOmoz for that amount of time as well. I still am having a hard time getting links.
I have a low budget and am not sure what to do. I have two pro webinars in mind as some background for my questions. First of all, the webinar Rand did on link building during the summer was great and really motivated me - http://www.seomoz.org/webinars/future-of-link-building. I realized that there were things we could do to get links, but that they would just take time.
Secondly, in Dr.Pete's recent webinar on the future of SEO, (http://www.seomoz.org/webinars/future-proofing-your-seo-2012-edition) he threw out a number like 10 as far as referring to how many links someone could get per day. Maybe I misunderstood but this seems crazy to me. I've tried the tactic of emailing for links, no dice (they were personalized emails and done properly). I am now planning on moving towards producing great content to draw in links, but the kind that would work would take a lot more time and money than what I am allotted. I feel a little overwhelmed and concerned. I would appreciate any insights.
Thanks!
Holly
-
I really wanted to push the content marketing aspect in those slides, but I just want to add that it is a balancing act. Some manual link-building is fine - just make sure you mix in low-quality with high-quality AND make time to create solid content. In other words, just do everything simultaneously. As long as you don't need to eat or sleep, you'll be fine
Seriously, carve out the content time, even if it's 20 minutes/day and it's the first thing you do in the morning. That investment will pay off. Waiting until you need content to create it is like only networking after you lose your job. It'll work, eventually, but you'll lose months.
-
Dr. Pete,
Thanks for responding to me. I appreciate the explanation. I had always thought that it could take a long time to get those high quality links (the ones worth going after), so I was confused when I misunderstood what you said. Anyway, thanks for clarifying. I am a big proponent of content as well. Luckily for me, I have a degree in English. Now I guess I just have to come up with something brilliant that everyone will love. No problem right. haha. anyway. Thanks.
Holly
-
Thanks for responding. I appreciate your thoughts and insight, I hadn't thought of Guest blogging. I know content is a biggie and I will certainly be putting a lot of effort into creating content to get links, whether it be on my own blog, website or wherever. I appreciate your time and help.
Holly
-
Sorry, I think my statement may have been unclear. I was throwing out some numbers to try to illustrate what $1,000 could buy someone in low-quality link-building (number of hours, etc.). My broader point, though, was actually AGAINST that kind of approach. I'd rather see people invest in content than cheap links.
What's a "reasonable" number really depends a lot on quality vs. quantity. Someone could get you 100 links/day, but they'd be mostly junk. Some links could take months to build (if they involve building relationships with people and organization), but they might be well worth the investment. It's a balancing act. I think it's fine to get some blog comment links, guest-blog, do article marketing, etc., as long as the quality is reasonable AND you diversify that with hard-to-get links with higher authority.
I'll also make another pitch for content marketing, because it's the only way to put link-building on autopilot, so to speak. Once you invest in content and start to get the word out, that content can naturally attract links. You could get 10/day some days without lifting a finger, once the content is in motion. I think some manual link-building is fine, and probably necessary, but if you can put both in motion, you'll be in much better long-term shape.
-
Hi Holly,
I'll share my perspective on this and I hope it's helpful to you. I've been doing SEO part or full-time since 2008.
The most successful way that I've found to generate repeatable high-quality new links to our website has been to do a lot of aggressive linkbuilding via guest blogging with other blogs or websites in our field. It's been very successful but it is time consuming. My personal goal is to try and get one new targeted link with good anchor text every day. Some days are better than others - I've had days where I get five or more links in a day, and days where I don't get any.
Guest blogging can be time consuming (it's a lot of writing!) but you can get great, targeted links from it, and Google usually recognizes them quickly since they tend to crawl and index blogs very aggressively. I'm not always shooting for A-list blogs in our field either, but a variety. I generally looking for websites that have a mozRank of 4.0 or higher for this. People in the middle of our field are usually much more responsive and helpful (they're hungry for content, like that we offer to co-promote our blog posts, etc.) and work with me more often. If their mR is under 4, the link may not be worth the effort and I'll only consider it if I really think there's some other reason its worthwhile.
I also try to produce about one good infographic a month, and post it to our blog and offer embed code and everything else good with it. These are the days that I can usually get five or six new links from spending about $400-500 and about two hours of my own time providing data, guidance, etc. with a designer to create the graphic. It depends on your budget, but to me that feels worth it. Overall, this has been really effective for us and I've been meeting my goals.
I haven't seen Dr Pete's webinar, but 10 links in a day does seem a little high - That's quite a lot. You might be able to do that if you gave up on trying to get specific anchor text and went for volume, or if you have a uniquely dedicated following who write about and cover many of your activities on their own blogs or websites (like I suspect SEOmoz does). I would encourage you to try to concretely network with more blogs and websites in our field/niche and expand your relationship with them, and keep the goal in mind:
"What can I do to get a link today?" or whatever your goal is that will deliver SEO success to you. From my experience so far, this hustle has been more valuable than any other piece of specific advice I've had. I think I have to thank Justin Briggs for that one - I think his quote that inspired me to that was "Link building is hard. Just f-ing do it." or something like that. I re-interpreted into the above.
I hope this helps!
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Buy domain, redirect, get all the good links (+link juice) and disavow the spammy ones?
There is a domain for sale that has a quite nice profile and a lot of good backlinks, but also quite a few spammy ones. This domain has a Spam Score of 14% acc. to Moz Link explorer, ours has only 2%. My questions: 1. The domain and the good backlinks are related to or close to our content/keywords. But we are worried whether the "spammy" ones will hurt us. Does anyone has experience with this? 2. Would it help if we disavow the spammy backlinks afterwards? And if so, how do we do that? Add new domain to search console, disavow the bad links and then redirect the entire domain to our domain or redirect the domain first and then disavow from our property? Many thanks for your help!
Link Building | | pissuptours0 -
Why are bit.ly and ow.ly links showing up as Inbound Links?
Hello! I noticed this question was asked a while back (around 2013 i think), but I still don't quite understand why I'm seeing these shortened URLs come up as Inbound Links? Can someone please explain? Thanks,
Link Building | | txwildcard
Carlos0 -
Inbound Links not showing. Links are not no follow
Over the past several months I have definitely received inbound links to my website ( none of which are no follow). I have HubSpot as well s Moz and none of the links are showing. My competitors with the same link sources are showing though. I am completely dumbfounded. Why are my inbound links not showing and how much time does it take for them to show if they show at all? Thank you!
Link Building | | NPatt0 -
Link building during link removal
We were advised by out outsourced link removal vendor not to build any links while they are removing links pointing to our site. I am worried that our site will lose significant traffic if we dont build any new links while waiting for them to remove links that caused our site to be penalized. What are your thoughts?
Link Building | | WizardOfMoz0 -
Why does my site only have 4 internal followed links/internal links?
When using Open Site Explorer my site is winning in many categories but lacking in others as compared to competitors. I intend to improve on this but am a little confused by the extremely low number of "internal followed links" and "internal links" at just 4. My competitors have much more than that. Does this mean links to the root domain? Total internal links? I have many internal links so I'm having a hard time figuring this one out. What four internal links are getting noticed? I just went through and changed all the links that went to index.html to link to the root domain at www.njlimocarservice.com as I just found a Q&A that indicates this was better. So as of Wed at 5:45 PM all my links to the homepage went to index.html and not the root which is no longer the case. Not sure if this matters. At the same time I also just put a 301 from index.html to redirect to www.njlimocarservice.com. Any help appreciated! h9QuF.png
Link Building | | kabledesigns0 -
What are the new ways of Link Building which will get quality links?
Hi We are doing following kinds of Link Building: 1. Article marketing 2. Directory Submission 3. Guest Blogging 4. Press Release submission 5. Infographics (Viral Marketing) I know blog commenting and links from discussion forums are considered as greyhat / blackhat by google. So I want suggestions on some other ethical(Whitehat SEO) ways of Link Building to get quality Links. Also suggest me some Free article submission sites which give " dofollow-links" Thank You
Link Building | | Virrtuo0 -
What do you do to get a few quick lnks
When launching a site to google.com where can you submit it to get a few quick lnks to be enough for indexing and startup? As I saw directory pages are kinda slow you can wait months for your submission. How can you gain quick links? Can you name some sites?
Link Building | | sesertin0 -
Link Building
I've been hearing about going after niche directories, and my question is most of them have a ton of links on any given page. Is it even worth taking the time to approach these sites knowing they won't pass a lot of link juice?
Link Building | | azguy0