link building – the good, bad & the ugly | joel hughes : websites, wordpress, online strategy...

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Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly This post talk about some misconceptions with regards to the practice known as “link building” and how it (supposedly) aects where your website appears in search result listings. *note: this post rst appeared on the old Jojet blog – I’m importing some of the more interesting arti- cles and comments* First o, a quick re-cap about Google In order for Google (or any decent search engine for that matter) to respond to our search queries (e.g. south wales business networking“, “overseas property insurance” etc) they need some method of “ranking” web- sites in relation to such search requests…otherwise search results would be completely random! The intricacies Google uses to rank websites is obviously top-secret (otherwise spammers would try to gain unfair advantage) but Google are pretty open with what they consider to be important factors (more on that later). With Google though, relevancy is the watch word. Spiders – not creepy but denitely crawly! Google use special computer programs called ‘spiders’ to frequently analyse your website. These spiders exam- ine, amongst many other factors, the text on your website pages to determine which search phrases they are relevant to; this is why using the right “keywords” is important. Links – the two main dierent types These spiders are also very interested in the links which they nd in your web pages. These links are the bits

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Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly | Joel Hughes : websites, WordPress, online strategy & training

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Page 1: Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly | Joel Hughes : websites, WordPress, online strategy & training

Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly

This post talk about some misconceptions with regards to the practice known as “link building” and how

it (supposedly) affects where your website appears in search result listings.

*note: this post first appeared on the old Jojet blog – I’m importing some of the more interesting arti-

cles and comments*

First off, a quick re-cap about Google

In order for Google (or any decent search engine for that matter) to respond to our search queries (e.g.

“south wales business networking“, “overseas property insurance” etc) they need some method of “ranking” web-

sites in relation to such search requests…otherwise search results would be completely random! The intricacies

Google uses to rank websites is obviously top-secret (otherwise spammers would try to gain unfair advantage)

but Google are pretty open with what they consider to be important factors (more on that later). With Google

though, relevancy is the watch word.

Spiders – not creepy but definitely crawly!

Google use special computer programs called ‘spiders’ to frequently analyse your website. These spiders exam-

ine, amongst many other factors, the text on your website pages to determine which search phrases they are

relevant to; this is why using the right “keywords” is important.

Links – the two main different types

These spiders are also very interested in the links which they find in your web pages. These links are the bits

Page 2: Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly | Joel Hughes : websites, WordPress, online strategy & training

which allow us to click from one page to another or one website to another.

“Back Links”

Back links are links which are on a different website but pointing back to your website. Google counts these “one

way” links as pretty important but only if they come from a relevant source. E.g. if you run an Insurance website

then relevant back links could come from insurance blogs, other financial websites etc. Simply trying to gain

more of these back links for Google’s sake is really not very useful. “Reciprocal Links” The other type of link is

called a reciprocal link – this is where “website A” has a link to “website B” and “website B” has a link back to

“website A“. Google generally deem such links to be less important than the one way back links discussed earli-

er. However, the key here again is relevancy – if it is relevant for “website A” to link to “website B” and vice versa

then do it! But do not do it for Google’s sake,. If you get an email from saying “if you link to me and I link to you

then it will be good for Google” then please be very wary. If it’s relevant and good for your users and you don’t

mind people potentially clicking off your site then great.

Google hire clever people

Google have some very, very, very smart people working for them and they are more than aware of people try-

ing to ‘game the system‘ and gain unfair advantage in their search engine results. They update their algorithms

up to 600 times a year to constantly stay abreast of people trying to take such unfair advantage. They take

the impartiality and relevancy of their search results VERY seriously. Google’s entire business model relies on

this relevancy.

So what should business do?

There’s nothing wrong with trying to get your website listed in more relevant directories etc. But simply trying

to gain extra “links” is a wasted effort – e..g some link building companies will blindly post onto random blogs

so that they can secure that elusive back link. What they forget is that this: 1) Google ignores many links from

blogs 2) If the comment added to the blog looks like spam it will be rejected anyway. Further more, do you real-

ly want third parties representing your company in this way? If anyone should be contributing to industry blogs

then surely it should be the specialist, you! A good link building strategy would involve either finding useful di-

rectories to be listed in, useful websites to set up links with (perhaps with a referral/commission scheme in

place ), perhaps using social media to also promote your website.

Closing Thoughts

Link building strategies need to be carefully thought out if they are to be successful. They can be useful but rel-

evancy is the key. Simply focussing on gaining extra links without looking at the bigger picture is foolish. To

close I’ll leave you with some words from Google: (http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/an-

Page 3: Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly | Joel Hughes : websites, WordPress, online strategy & training

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swer.py?answer=35769#3)

“Make pages primarily for users, not for search engines. Don’t deceive your users or present different content

to search engines than you display to users…”

“Avoid tricks intended to improve search engine rankings. A good rule of thumb is whether you’d feel comfort-

able explaining what you’ve done to a website that competes with you. Another useful test is to ask, “Does this

help my users? Would I do this if search engines didn’t exist?”

…..and this cracker!

“Don’t participate in link schemes designed to increase your site’s ranking or Page Rank. In particular, avoid

links to web spammers or “bad neighborhoods” on the web, as your own ranking may be affected adversely

by those links.”

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This entry was posted in Uncategorized on November 17, 2009 [http://joelhughes.com/2009/11/17/link-build-

ing-the-good-bad-the-ugly/] .

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Page 4: Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly | Joel Hughes : websites, WordPress, online strategy & training

3 thoughts on “Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly”

Comments are closed.

0 0 Rate This

Have to agree about relevancy but another way of looking at this is that it’s ‘quality not quantity’ that counts if

you are trying to link build. I also believe that Google likes to see website back links grow ‘organically’ through a

natural process rather than via a huge increase in links from some dodgy link building scheme.

Clive WalkerNovember 17, 2009 at 9:53 pm

0 0 Rate This

Sure Clive,If organic growth is relevant (and it probably would be if the client is not paying someone to do it!)

then that fits in perfectly with my theme.Thanks for taking the time to read Joel

JoelNovember 17, 2009 at 10:04 pm

0 0 Rate This

Orwellian as it may sound, the Big G is watching you. A cold, calculating soulless robot is watching and cata-

loging every link that goes to your site. Anything that appears unnatural will put up a red flag. A sudden inordi-

nate number of social bookmarks or backlinks from site with low page rank will seem unnatural. Don’t do it.

Andy HarcombeNovember 25, 2009 at 2:29 am

Page 5: Link Building – The Good, Bad & The Ugly | Joel Hughes : websites, WordPress, online strategy & training