T
Monitoring Links for Link Building
The author's views are entirely their own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.
Happy New Year, Mozzers!
I hope you all had a good break. I was going to write a 2009 predictions post but then I realised that I have no idea what's going to happen this year. Facebook will go offline? Brazil will go on sale for 13p and Twitter will buy them? God knows. Anyway, instead of doing that I decided to write a post with something useful in it.
This post is all about monitoring your site for fresh links and reaching out to those people linking to you to ask them to amend the link for maximum SEO benefit.
One of the biggest problems that we see over and over again with organic link building and link baiting is that the links that you attract are often poorly formatted from an SEO perspective. Either they link to the wrong page or they link using poor anchor text. While these links are definitely worth having since they're strong organic links, they would be even more effective with a little bit of tweaking.
So why not ask for the links to be changed? Here's a quick list of things you could ask (politely) for them to change:
Of course, if you're reputation monitoring then you will already be monitoring for all posts that mention your brand/site/products, so why not simply take that data and use it for link building purposes too? I'm not going to be biased and link to Distilled's reputation monitoring tool. No, wait - yes I am :-)
An added benefit of having your SEO team also monitoring your reputation is that you can monitor for mentions of your brand or product from sites that don't link to you. Asking them for a link is becoming more and more effective these days as we see mainstream media starting to link out more and more. It still depends on which niche you're in and what kinds of sites are linking to you, but I think it's something that is becoming more effective, especially as services like Twitter let you find contacts at large organisations quickly and easily through your network.
I hope you all had a good break. I was going to write a 2009 predictions post but then I realised that I have no idea what's going to happen this year. Facebook will go offline? Brazil will go on sale for 13p and Twitter will buy them? God knows. Anyway, instead of doing that I decided to write a post with something useful in it.
This post is all about monitoring your site for fresh links and reaching out to those people linking to you to ask them to amend the link for maximum SEO benefit.
One of the biggest problems that we see over and over again with organic link building and link baiting is that the links that you attract are often poorly formatted from an SEO perspective. Either they link to the wrong page or they link using poor anchor text. While these links are definitely worth having since they're strong organic links, they would be even more effective with a little bit of tweaking.
So why not ask for the links to be changed? Here's a quick list of things you could ask (politely) for them to change:
- Better anchor text for the link
- Linking to a better page/clean URL without query strings
- Adding multiple links to different pages on your site
Of course, if you're reputation monitoring then you will already be monitoring for all posts that mention your brand/site/products, so why not simply take that data and use it for link building purposes too? I'm not going to be biased and link to Distilled's reputation monitoring tool. No, wait - yes I am :-)
An added benefit of having your SEO team also monitoring your reputation is that you can monitor for mentions of your brand or product from sites that don't link to you. Asking them for a link is becoming more and more effective these days as we see mainstream media starting to link out more and more. It still depends on which niche you're in and what kinds of sites are linking to you, but I think it's something that is becoming more effective, especially as services like Twitter let you find contacts at large organisations quickly and easily through your network.
Comments
Please keep your comments TAGFEE by following the community etiquette
Comments are closed. Got a burning question? Head to our Q&A section to start a new conversation.