5 Principles for Buying Effective Links

October 7, 2008 by Jack · 2 Comments 

Are you looking to grow your blog or website? If so, you probably realize the key to rankings and traffic are links – but which links, and how do you get them?

There are many techniques people use to get links these days, such as being popular, building relationships and link-baiting. Unfortunately most of these are either difficult, time consuming or both.

Ahh link building, perhaps the hardest, most frustrating and unavoidable part of SEO. Why? Because ultimately, it’s still the trump card for higher rankings.

For the smaller players and those starting out, that doesn’t leave many options. Most people are worried about purchasing links, and rightly so. Buying links without the REL=NOFOLLOW attribute is against Google’s terms of service and can technically be considered Blackhat SEO. But does this stop people doing it? No of course not, it just forces people to be more creative and use techniques that are considered legitimate.

Why are links so important?

Targeted Traffic

Links from your industry or websites with similar subject matter as yours drive relevant traffic likely to be interested in your website and products you offer. Targeted traffic is going to have a higher chance at conversion and thus, is more valuable to your website.

Higher Rankings

The major search engines are continually changing and updating their algorithms but one thing that hasn’t changed for a long time – and doesn’t look like it will change anytime soon – is the fact that link popularity is the top factor in search engine rankings.

In crude terms, when returning search results Google considers three major factors:

  1. The number of links to your website
  2. The authority and relevance of the linking websites
  3. The anchor text used to link to you

Ok, so you don’t have to be an SEO Guru to know that links are required to rank, but how then, do you acquire quality one-way links to your website?

Natural Links Versus Paid

Buying links is tricky business, under Google’s terms of service paid links should have a nofollow attribute and thus, not increase your rankings. Google wants search results to be a natural indication of popularity on the internet. The argument being, if you have quality content then people will naturally link to it.

But what if you want a bit of a head start? As a webmaster many factors – such as domain age – are out of your control, that is where SEO and link building comes in.

Disclaimer

It is important to understand that buying links without the nofollow attribute can end with you losing trust with search engines or you being removed from Google’s index. If you do wish to purchase links it’s advisable to err on the side of caution or do so with the help of an experienced SEO consultant.

The 5 Principles

Principle #1 – Relevancy Over PageRank

Buying links exclusively from high PR sites is note recommended. Yes they will have a greater affect on your PR but you should consider these factors:

  • Having a disproportionate amount of high PR links without as many links from lower ranking sites looks unnatural and may raise flags with Google
  • Relevant links are more likely to reach your target market, bringing you targeted traffic
  • Relevant links are becoming more valuable as new search algorithms are giving them more importance

Avoid sites that sell off-topic links as they are most likely to have their site removed from the Google index, rendering your link useless.

Principle #2 - Link Consistently To Your Main Homepage

A good ranking strategy is to ensure all your links point to the same location, usually your homepage.

When linking back to your site use a consistent URL. Check if your site features WWW in the URL i.e. http://www.mysite.com or http://mysite.com . If your site does not have WWW in the URL it doesn’t matter in terms of SEO but make sure that you consistently link back to your URL.

By mixing your URLs you run the risks of the links not counting towards your ranking.

Principle #3 - Vary Your Anchor Text

Anchor text is the words used to link to your site. By linking with your targeted keywords you will be increasing your rank for those particular keywords, which is why you should never use text such as “click here” but rather “cheap online furniture” or words relating to your site.

A common mistake SEOs make is after doing their keyword research, finding a very effective longtail keyword such as “connoisseur oak furniture” and using this for all incoming links. This is ineffective because search engines will see this as unnatural and reduce ranking accordingly.

A much better strategy is to mix incoming links with your core and longtail keywords. Having natural appearing links will yield the best long-term results.

Principle #4 – Buy from different networks

Back when people first figured out that links were the key to ranking some SEOs started hosting many websites on the one server or using one domain to make many sub domains and build link-farms.

Search engines soon figured this out and discounted the value of these links. As a general rule of thumb aim for one quality link from a site and look for further links from sites hosted on different IP ranges.

Principle #5 – Avoid Paid Link Sites

Not only do most search engines not count links from link-farms but some will even reduce trust for having too many incoming links from “bad neighborhood” sites.

By having too many links from unrelated websites you run the risk of being flagged for buying links or worse, being reported by one of your competitors for spamming. A better strategy would be sounding out small to medium blogs and approaching them on an individual basis.

These are just 5 of the many principles for effective link building strategies. Don’t forget that links are probably the single most important factor in determining your natural ranking success. A well implemented will help position you at the top of search engine results and link reputation is likely to continue being the primary factor for top rankings in the foreseeable future.

Photo by DarwinBell

Magento Install Guide and Case Study

September 27, 2008 by Jack · 2 Comments 

Ahh Magento, released on the 31st of March it is already widely considered by many to be the new rising star of Ecommerce. Developed by Varien, Magento is open source and boasts many powerful features as well as a slick and modern design.

Some of the general features include:
• An excellent backend (see demo site admin/123123)
• SEO and keyword options
• Checkout and shipping
• Analytics and reporting
• Customer accounts
• Order management
• Shipping
• Coupons
• Catalog and product browsing
• Newsletter and email management

This post is a walk through of an installation for a live and functioning UK-based online furniture site. With no coding skills the process was a bit of a learning curve but manageable, with almost 400 products the most time consuming aspect was definitely building the catalogue.

Install Guide

  1. Download the zip or tar file, upload it to your host and decompress. Decompressing can be done via the file manager in your hosts Cpanel or within your FTP client. Do not decompress the files locally on your computer before uploading as there are about 8000 files
  2. Create a MYSQL database with a user/pass that you will need to input to Magento later
  3. Make the following writable (777) by your web server: magento/var/.htaccess – single file magento/app/etc – directory
    magento/var – directory
    magento/media – directory and all the directories under
  4. Browse to the location that you uploaded the files. http://www.yoursite.com/magento/install/ If you do not want the Magento folder in your URL path simply upload the files to your root directory. You can change the access in your FTP program, usually right clicking on the desired file/folder and selecting ‘change permission’; ensure these are set to 777 which is basically full permission
  5. Follow the install wizard – this process is relatively straightforward, you will need to enter your MYSQL details and change some file permissions. There are options for custom installation but most default settings should be guessed for you
  6. Finished! Now goto http://www.example.com/magento/admin to access the backend and start uploading your products

Conclusion

In the end, the person I set this site up for was very happy with the finished product and now has a fully functional open source Ecommerce website. For me, the most challenging aspect was the lack of a WYSIWYG editor, though this is rumored to be added in a future release.

In case you plan on giving it a blast, some of the major lessons I learnt during the process were:

  • Install the sample data – this helps so much to learn how static-pages are created and gives you a great head start on a sexy front page
  • Resize all product pictures – pics with a high resolution (2000 x 2000) will not display properly
  • Decide on your shipping price and if you are going to have different shipping prices BEFORE uploading and creating all your products
  • Make sure you spend enough time learning the product creation process and understand the implications of all the different features
  • Decide what products you want to be ‘related products’ or ‘upsells’

The next step for Furniture Depo is a Google Adwords PPC campaign in order to bring some instant traffic to the site before investing in expensive and long-term organic SEO. If there is enough interest I will post a follow up of the progress and success of the site.

Overall I found Magento to be a powerful and feature-rich software suite. For those wishing to sell only a couple of products it might be overkill as it can take a while to learn and configure. However if you’re willing to invest the time, Magento has many features to help you stay ahead of the game and the polished feel really goes a long way to reassuring your customers that you are indeed a genuine Ecommerce business.

This post was by Jack, creator and author of Nubtub

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