Great Dell Offers for Startup Businesses
Dell Vostro 3500 - thin, light, and optimized for small
businesses. Only £399 excl. VAT. Includes FREE delivery.
Find out more

Link Popularity Guide - How to build up links to your website - Part 1

print  e-mail 

As most small business website owners will know only too well, the days when you could turn up to Altavista and the other leading search engines at the time and hope to get a Top 10 ranking with ease are well and truly over. It is no longer sufficient to upload a good quality website, exchange a few links, and expect visitors to flood in. As more and more sites go live each day, the harder it is to achieve the Top 10 rankings every small business would like to see.

We have covered many aspects of web marketing in past Bytestart articles. For your website to gain visitors, you will need to construct a good quality website, upload timely and relevant content, and take care when putting together the meta information which describes what each web page is about.

These are all important building blocks in the quest for search engine success. However, the art of building good quality links between your site and other web pages is now possibly the most important single aspect of a successful web marketing campaign.

Why is Link Popularity Important?

As web marketing techniques become more and more sophisticated, in an ongoing cat and mouse game with the ever-changing search engine algorithms, many search engines look at the links pointing towards websites to help determine the relevance of that site. Whereas it is relatively easy to stuff web pages with meta tags (whether relevant to the page content or not), it is much harder to secure good quality, relevant links from other sites to yours.

Google, in particular, uses link popularity a great deal in determining the relevance of web pages to any given search. As Google completely dominates the search engine market currently, it is vital that small business site owners take notice and dedicate time to building up their site backlinks. We also discuss the Google Pagerank system, and its relevance to successful link building, later in this article.

How to Build Links

The best links you can get are those from good quality, high traffic sites in a similar line of business to your own. For example, if you sell PC speakers on your site, a link from a competitor who specialises in PC audio goods will be far more valuable than several from an unrelated area, such as a credit card affiliate site.

Every day at Bytestart, we receive dozens of link exchange requests, but we probably only ever take up around 1% of all offers, as the majority are of no use to us. A whole link building industry exists on the web, with link exchange sites responsible for a vast number of "Link Exchange Request" emails. So, it is not necessarily a good thing to exchange links with everyone who asks.

As a starting point, we'd suggest you make a list of all the competitors in your industry and email the site owners to suggest exchanging links. Some may well reject your offer (or not even reply) - this is very normal, and should not put you off. If you contact 30 sites in your business area and just 10 take up your offer, you will have gained 10 useful backlinks. Clearly, a one way link back to your site would be fantastic, but in reality, most site owners will only provide a link if it is reciprocated.

Take care when composing your link request emails. Generic requests for link exchanges are far less likely to be acted upon than a well written email from someone who has clearly taken the time to look at the publisher's web site. This may seem like a tedious process, but over time, as links are added organically and your site gets more and more established, you should see your search engine traffic increase.

You should also aim to get your site listed on the some of the goliaths of web directories - Yahoo and the Open Directory. Both can be quite hard to get into, but a listing in either is thought by many to be of particular benefit when search engines looks at the links back to your site.

In all cases, make sure you know where your link is going to be placed. A deep-buried links page containing hundreds of other links is pretty useless. Ideally, links pages should only contain a dozen or so links, preferably sensibly categorised to a single subject or business area. The same applies to your own links pages - try to break up your resource pages into categorised sections, and don't cram them full of links. Create several pages if necessary - Bytestart has over 10 resource pages for example.

This article continues in Part 2

Posted July 10, 2008

Latest articles in Web Marketing
 
How to find good keywords for your small business website
Finding good keywords and phrases is an important area of web marketing, but how on earth do you find out which phrases are suitable for your business website, and which are too competitive to bother with? [May 26, 2010]
 
Why site owners should think about getting links than obsessing over 'keywords'
A decade ago, site owners were obsessed by 'keywords' when seeking to propel their sites up the search engine rankings. Given that Google doesn't even recognise the keyword tag in webpages, we explain why site owners would be better off concentrating on acquiring relevant links to their sites. [April 21, 2010]
 
Online marketing - getting the basics right
The growth in the use of the Internet in recent years has led to a huge shift in marketing activities to the online space. This article explains some of the key things for you to focus on to help you market effectively online. [December 15, 2009]
 
Free tools to help promote your brand online
A useful list of free tools that can help small companies establish a stronger online presence for their brands. [October 8, 2009]
 
10 reasons why search engines hate your website
You’ve got a great website, so it’s only a matter of time before the visitors start pouring in, right? Wrong. Without search engines ‘liking’ the look of your site, it won’t be listed and nobody will be able to find it. Tips to make your business website appeal to the search engines. [June 12, 2009]
 
How do I get people to visit my small business website?
This is probably the most asked question by small business owners who have an online presence. They may well have created a wonderful, insightful site, full of information... but no one is visiting. How to build traffic to your small business site, and plenty of useful resources. [May 28, 2009]
 
30 Google marketing tips for small businesses - Part One
Some essential tips to help small business website owners achieve healthy rankings in Google. How to build up relevant links to your site, what measures to avoid, and how you can tell how well your web marketing effort is going. [April 27, 2009]
 
30 Google marketing tips for small businesses - Part Two
Continuning on from Part One, here are 15 further web marketing tips to help small business owners gain good search engine rankings on Google. [April 27, 2009]
 
Link Popularity Guide - How to build up links to your website - Part 2
Second part of our complete guide to link popularity - the importance of Google's site ranking algorithms, and how to structure both external and internal links. [July 10, 2008]
 
Link Popularity Guide - How to build up links to your website - Part 1
First part of our complete guide to link popularity - why are backlinks to your website important and how to go about building up your links. [July 10, 2008]
 
4 free web marketing tools for small businesses
We've compiled a list of completely free resources which will help measure the success of your ongoing effort to propel your website up the search engine rankings. [July 8, 2008]
 
Web Marketing - don't forget the user experience
When small companies set up their search marketing (SEO) goals, many overlook an important aspects of conversion rates and providing a good user experience. We look at bounce rates and exit points in this article. [June 13, 2008]
 
Turn your website into a deadly selling tool
Every business needs a website. And not just for the sake of having one. With a little investment of time and energy you can turn your website into a deadly selling tool, no matter what kind of business you have. [May 6, 2008]
 
Keyword Density - Why Keyword Frequency Matters
How search engines use keyword density algorithms to determine website rankings. How often should you repeat your chosen keyword phrases? [January 26, 2008]
 
Top 50 small business web marketing tips - part one
50 essential web marketing tips from the Bytestart team. How to get your small busines website up the search engine rankings and attract new customers. [November 19, 2007]
 

Click Here



Our Partners
Key Services
Key Services
Technology Guides
Click Here