Building
links is an incredibly common request of agencies and consultants, and some
ways to go about it are far more advisable than others. Whether you're likely
to be asked for this work or you're looking to hire someone for it, it's a good
idea to have a few rules of thumb. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Russ Jones
breaks things down.
1. Never build a link you can't remove!
So we're going to
touch on a couple of maxims or truisms. The first one is never build a link you
can't remove. I didn't come upon this one until after Penguin, but it just
occurred to me it is such a nightmare to get rid of links. Even with disavow,
often it feels better that you can just get the link pulled from the web. Now,
with negative SEO as being potentially an issue, admittedly Google is trying to
devalue links as opposed to penalize, but still the rule holds strong. Never
build a link that you can't remove.
But how do you do
that? I mean you don't have necessarily control over it. Well, first off,
there's a difference between earnings links and building links. So if you get a
link out there that you didn't do anything for, you just got it because you
wrote great content, don't worry about it. But if you're actually going to
actively link build, you need to follow this rule, and there are actually some
interesting ways that we can go about it.
Canonical "burn" pages
The first one is the
methodology that I call canonical burn pages. I'm sure that sounds a little
dark. But it actually is essentially just an insurance policy on your links.
The idea is don't put all of your content value and link value into the same
bucket. It works like this. Let's say this article or this Whiteboard Friday
goes up at the URL risk-averse-links and Moz decided to do some outreach-based
link building. Well, then I might make another version, risk-averse-linkbuilding,
and then in my out linking actually request that people link to that version of
the page. That page will be identical, and it will have a canonical tag so that
all of the link value should pass back to the original.
Now, I'm not asking
you to build a thousand doorway pages or anything of that sort, but here's the
reason for the separation. Let's say you reach out to one of these webmasters
and they're like, "This is great," and they throw it up on a blog
post, and what they don't tell you is, "Oh yeah, I've got 100 other blogs
in my link farm, and I'm just going to syndicate this out." Now you've got
a ton of link spam pointing to the page. Well, you don't want that pointing to
your site. The chances this guy is going to go remove his link from those
hundreds if not thousands of pages are very low. Well, the worst case scenario
here is that you've lost this page, the link page, and you drop it and you
create a new one of these burn pages and keep going.
Or what if the
opposite happens? When you actually start ranking because of this great content
that you've produced and you've done great link building and somebody gets
upset and decides to spam the page that's ranking with a ton of links, we saw
this all the time in the legal sector, which was shocking to me. You would
think you would never spam a lawyer, but apparently lawyers aren't afraid of
another lawyer.
But regardless, what
we could do in those situations is simply get rid of the original page and
leave the canonical page that has all the links. So what you've done is sort of
divided your eggs into different baskets without actually losing the ranking
potential. So we call these canonical burn pages.
Know thy link provider
The other thing that's
just stupidly obvious is you should know thy link provider. If you are getting
your links from a website that says pay $50 for so and so package and you'll
get x-links from these sources on Tier 2, you're never going to be able to
remove those links once you get them unless you're using something like a
canonical burn page. But in those cases where you're trying to get good links,
actually build a relationship where the person understands that you might need
to remove this link in the future. It's going to mean you lose some links, but
in the long run, it's going to protect you and your customers.
That's where the
selling point becomes really strong. Imagine you're on a client call, sales
call and someone comes to you and they say they want link building. They've
been burned before. They know what it's like to get a penalty. They know what
it's like to have somebody tell them, "I just don't know how to do
it."
Well, what if you can
tell them, hey, we can link build for you and we are so confident in the
quality of our offering that we can promise you, guarantee that we can remove
the links we build for you within 7 days, 14 days, whatever number it ends up
taking your team to actually do? That kind of insurance policy that you just
put on top of your product is priceless to a customer who's worried about the
potential harm that links might bring.
2. You can't trade anything for a link (except user value)!
Now this leads me to
number two. This is the simplest way to describe following Google's guidelines,
which is you can't trade anything for a link except user value. Now, I'm going
to admit something here. A lot of folks who are watching this who know me know
this, but my old company years and years and years ago did a lot of link
buying. At the time, I justified it because I frankly thought that was the only
way to do it. We had a fantastic link builder who worked for us, and he wanted
to move up in the company. We just didn't have the space for him. We said to
him, "Look, it's probably better for you to just go on your own."
Within a year of
leaving, he had made over a million dollars selling a site that he ranked only
using white hat link building tactics because he was a master of outreach. From
that day on, just everything changed. You don't have to cheat to get good
links. It's just true. You have to work, but you don't have to cheat. So just
do it already. There are tons of ways to justify outreach to a website to say
it's worth getting a link.
So, for example, you
could
·
Build
some tools and reach out to websites that might want to
link to those tools.
·
You
can offer data or images.
·
Accessibility.
Find great content out there that's inaccessible or isn't useful for
individuals who might need screen readers. Just recreate the content and follow
the guidelines for accessibility and reach out to everybody who links to that
site. Now you've got a reason to say, "Look, it's a great web page, but
unfortunately a certain percentage of the population can't use it. Why don't
you offer, as well as the existing link, one to your accessible version?"
·
Broken
link replacement.
·
Skyscraper
content, which is where you just create fantastic
content. Brian Dean over at Backlinko has a fantastic guide to that.
There are just so many
ways to get good links.
Let me put it just a
different way. You should be embarrassed if you cannot create content that is
worth outreach. In fact, that word "embarrassment," if you are
embarrassed to email someone about your content, then it means you haven't
created good enough content. As an SEO, that's your responsibility. So just sit
down and spend some more time thinking about this. You can do it. I've seen it
happen thousands of times, and you can end up building much better links than
you ever would otherwise.
3. Tool up!
The last thing I would
say is tool up. Look, better metrics and better workflows come from tools.
There are lots of different ways to do this.
First off, you need a
good backlink tool. While, frankly, Moz wasn't doing a good job for many years,
but our new Link Explorer is 29 trillion links strong and it's fantastic.
There's also Fresh Web Explorer for doing mentions. So you can find websites
that talk about you but don't link. You're also going to want some tools that
might do more specific link prospecting, like LinkProspector.com or Ontolo or
BrokenLinkBuilding.com, and then some outreach tools like Pitchbox and
BuzzStream.
But once you figure
out those stacks, your link building stack, you're going to be able to produce
links reliably for customers. I'm going to tell you, there is nothing that will
improve your street cred and your brand reputation than link building. Link
building is street cred in our industry. There is nothing more powerful than
saying, "Yeah, we built a couple thousand links last year for our
customers," and you don't have to say, "Oh, we bought," or,
"We outsourced." It's just, "We just do link building, and we're
good at it."
So I guess my takeaway
from all of this is that it's really not as terrible as you think it is. At the
end of the day, if you can master this process of link building, your agency
will be going from a dime a dozen, where there are 100 in an averaged-sized
city in the United States, to being a leading provider in the country just by
simply mastering link building. If you follow the first two rules and properly
tool up, you're well on your way.
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