Posts Tagged ‘anchor text’

Race For the Best Link

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

 

Every month here at Vertical Measures our team competes for a few things: employee of the month, atta-person awards (an employee to employee card given for exemplary work), and the best client link. Employee of the month is determined by votes, atta-person cards are accumulated and drawn out of a hat, but the best client link is the hardest to award. What makes a link ‘the best’? Is it the client link placed on a high page rank site without anchor text, or a link placed on a lower page rank site with anchor text? Of course relevance is a large factor, but when it comes down to it the determination of a final winner isn’t clear.

At this week’s Monday meeting (when the awards were given out) two of our employees, Michael and James, were up for the award. A debate ensued, and it was determined there is only one real way to determine a winner: a race off! In the red shirt we have Michael Schwartz: 5’7 1/2″, and in the blue shirt we have: James Constable: 6’5″. Wanna know who won the title of “Top Link Builder”? Check out the video below!

Kaila Strong

Kaila is a Sr. Account Manager at Vertical Measures. She works directly with clients to evaluate and analyze their overall Internet Marketing needs, creates sales proposals and recommendations. In addition she regularly reports on client rankings, gives SEO advice to brands in a variety of industries and manages client expectations.

Kaila has a background in social media marketing, link building, SEO and content marketing. She’s an active blogger on SearchEngineWatch.com, and an avid social media user (@cliquekaila on Twitter). She brings her experience to the table with new clients and enjoys writing about her experiences as well here on the VM blog and throughout the web.

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Reciprocal Linking The Right Way

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

There seems to be a lot of negativity surrounding reciprocal linking by SEO "gurus" and amateurs alike, most notably in the various internet forums. Reciprocal links, according to the naysayers, are virtually worthless because they supposedly do not help your search rankings or pass Google PageRanks to your site.

Reciprocal linking is a perfectly natural and legitimate traffic-building technique that predates the search engines themselves.  From years of internet marketing experience, reciprocal links are an invaluable source of highly targeted direct traffic. Some of our sites are receiving hundreds of visitors a month through our link partners.

The keyword here is relevant. You’ll get clicks to your site only if your link is displayed prominently on your partners’ sites and that they are related to yours in some way. By the same token, you must be prepared to trade links with your partners in good faith, which includes devoting premium space to your link partners and limiting the number of outbound links on your site.

Here are some important points to keep in mind when swapping links with another site:

  • Is the site in question relevant to yours in some way? Traffic is one thing, but high-quality, targeted traffic traffic is another. While you can get clicks by swapping links with an unrelated site, you can get more relevant traffic at higher click-through rates from sites are related to yours. 
  • Is the site complementary to yours, or is it a direct competitor? It’s not always true that linking to a direct competitor will be detrimental to your business. No two sites are exactly identical. There must be something different that the other site offers that yours doesn’t. Ask yourself whether or not the benefits from exchanging links with a competitor will outweigh the potential harms. 
  • Get an idea of your potential link partner’s traffic before trading links with them. Ideally, you’d want to trade links with sites that have comparable or higher traffic than yours. Don’t trade links with low-traffic sites as you could gain more by exchanging links with high-traffic ones. One exception to this rule is if the site under consideration is new and looks promising, in which case, the immediate liability in linking to the site is outweighed by the potential future benefits.  You could look at various analytical parameters, such as PageRank, Alexa ranking, link popularity, search ranking, to gauge a potential linking partner’s traffic. But none of these measurements are definitive, so there is an art to deciding whether or not a site is worth swapping links with.
  • Where will your link appear on your partner’s site? Will your link appear in a highly visible spot or in the footer? Footer links will not get you many direct clicks and may not even help you in the search engine rankings. 
  • How many outbound links does your potential linking partner have? The fewer the number of competing links, the greater the chance that your link will be clicked on. 
  • Will your link be placed on only a single page or site-wide on your partner’s site? Site-wide links provide the greatest exposure as visitors may exit from any page on your partner’s site to your site. If your link partner does not do site-wides for any reason, make sure they link to your site from a prominent place on their home page. Links from "Links" or "Resources" pages will not get you much traffic.
  • Make sure that your anchor text (link title) is descriptive and keyword-rich. Descriptive, keyword-rich link titles not only will not only get more people to click on your site, but also will help more in the search engine rankings — to the extent that reciprocal links provide any SEO benefits at all. But we’re not concerned about search engines, are we? Bear in mind that your main focus is the people who visit your partner’s site, not the search engine bots.

Special thanks to Oudam Em of http://www.unlimitedtraffic.net/ who provided much of the content in this article.

[tags] reciprocal links, anchor text, link building, site wide links, link partner [/tags]