Posts Tagged ‘ nofollow

Link Building Techniques & Tips 28 October 2009 at 6:33 am by admin

Ever since I arrived here at Bronco (Britain’s brightest search engine marketing company – sign up today!)  it’s been bugging the hell out of me that this post on Dave’s blog  ranks for ‘link building’. Not that it’s atrocious or anything, but it’s titled as “top 20 tips” and stops after 4 and for that reason alone it itches like a phantom limb. And despite that it has attracted 60 comments, lots of whom look like they were hoping to get a link out of it. If I wasn’t balding, I’d be tearing out my hair.

Anyway, because the world is just crying out for yet another link building guide, here’s my own updated take so it’s off my chest and I can go make a cuppa in peace.

  1. Say something interesting.
    You’d think this was a no-brainer in 2009, but I still see lots of people thinking that hiring a new sales person is interesting enough to warrant a press release. It isn’t. The real key is being prepared to go off-brand. If your marketing/brand guys throw their hands up in horror at the thought of not using the right “corporate tone”, then you can probably discount this. Your loss.
  2. Subtly draw attention to the interesting things you’re saying.
    You can do this chicken/egg or egg/chicken. Up to you. But if something’s happening in your market, make a point of finding someone else’s content and disagreeing with it. Leave a comment about how you disagree. Chances are you get a nofollowed link from the comments but what you’re actually after is people reblogging the “dispute,” quoting and linking to you as they do so. If you’d prefer to drive the debate, land the first blow with something humourous or unconventional in its take on things. Some unkind souls have suggested that Powazek’s hissy fit a couple of weeks back was nothing more than this principle made flesh. So his name carries bad vibes in the SEO community? Big deal. He’s still got those links – and remember, that’s what we’re after here.
  3. Tangential markets.
    You sell guttering. There is no great demand for content about guttering. Guttering’s dull. But people are very much into DIY. It’s an old lesson, but find out what people are asking and use your site to answer it. Yahoo Answers, forums and even Facebook are good starting points.
  4. Directories.
    It’s pretty bad that the directory model is still with us and very, very few directories offer equity but there’s still a couple of reasons to do it. Firstly, you can throw some sand in the eyes of other people looking at your backlinks but also it’s really the only “legitimate” way to build volume outside train scripts and all that horrible crap we’ve all been trying to get away from for the last few years.
  5. Buy links.
    Yeah. I know. Google says ‘no’ – I’m just putting it out there as an option. Sites sell advertising, which is a legitimate way for them to monetise their properties. Buying that advertising in an SEO friendly format is a win-win all round. Just don’t send a crappy, ungrammatical email reading “Hi! I’d like to buy a links from your great budgerigar websites.” Tertiary stuff, but you and I both know its happening right now in your market and you can fight it within ‘the rules’.
  6. Content networks.
    Mass content building is an expensive game for the long haul – but if you want niche content that your competitors can’t get at, it’s still a good proposition.You can use all kinds of strategies to linkbuild to these sites, knowing that they’ll act to protect your target sites in case anything goes bad. But proper content and domains – with all the management and quality control that entails – isn’t the cheap option. Don’t scrape. Don’t copy. Don’t cheat.
  7. Think demographics.
    If you are buying advertising on other sites, chances are there’s not too much available in your market. Frankly, you’ll probably find it stuffed with affiliates, splogs, bloody articles and so-so press releases. So step back, consider who might use your product and think about where else you might find them. Whole new vistas of opportunity should open up when you realise that, for example, people who go to psychics are also prone to cat ownership (I’m just saying).
  8. Don’t discount the nofollow links.
    Which sounds more “natural” to you? A site with 3000 followed links or a site with 2400 nofollowed links and 600 followed? Well, duh.The infrastructure of the web is being subtly changed by the nofollow attribute. If your links don’t include a proportion of nofollows you could easily end up on Google’s radar. Just a thought. Also, nofollows can mean traffic, traffic can mean links. Don’t think everything has to be a clean, anchor text link all you’ll burn your options inside a month. If you’re building links, you need to reach people – and mostly they couldn’t give a fig whether your blog comment was nofollowed. They’ve probably got a life, for one thing.
  9. Competitor backlinks
    Chasing your competitors is often a zero-sum game. They got there first, and ‘me too’ doesn’t count for anything. But who knows – maybe they’ve had some smart ideas. Even if emulating them is a dull idea, researching what they’ve done should spark new – and hopefully better – ideas for you. You’ve probably also got out of date data. If they had a link 4 months ago, they might not have renewed and its an opening for you.
  10. Niche sites
    Quite often a hobbyist website, personal blog or similar exists that touches on your niche. To find them, look for ideas around what you’re selling. Stay away from obvious keywords when you’re looking for these sites. If you’re in the cruise market,  searching for “cruise blog” is just going to bring up 9 million competitor splogs. Search for “my disastrous honeymoon” and you might, if you get lucky, find a woman who spent her honeymoon on the notorious Poseidon cruise of 1977. Actually getting the link might be a trickier proposition. That’s something you can’t cover in a ‘one size fits all’ guide, so you’re on your own there ;)
  11. Trackbacks and pings
    Found some great related content on a blog? Have a look through previous posts and see if trackbacks are enabled. If they are, dob them a link in a post and get one straight back.
  12. Satellite sites
    If you’re pumping out the content, there’s nothing wrong with putting it on Squidoo, Hubpages etc. In terms of link equity, it’s worth diddly, but it does add relevancy and volume. Also, AdSense and Kontera for the hard up.
  13. Pagerank can mean nothing
    Ask for demographic information, traffic numbers and look for low-quality danger signals such as heavy sitewide anchor text links
  14. Look before you leap
    Contacting a belligerent site owner with a track record for outing advertisers is a PR disaster waiting to happen. It takes five minutes to judge the kind of site owner you’re dealing with – and those five minutes could be the difference between you getting outed as a linkbuyer or stepping up a notch in the SERPs.
  15. Share some good resources
    Another oldie-but-a-goldie is to bring together a tonne of useful info on a subject into once place. There’ll be an industry ombudsman… a BBC page… something on Wikipedia and some humourous stuff in almost any field you care to name. Pull it together with some added-value commentary and people will link to you as an easy way to avoid writing the piece themselves.
  16. Use social media to spread the word
    Twitter, Facebook and everywhere else might use the nofollow attribute like a crazy kind of anti-link condom, but if you’re looking to get the word out on your great content or unique proposition, use them as much as you can. The end game isn’t a redirected, nofollowed, 301d piece of link junk from Twitter, but a nice clean link from a follower or two.

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Link Building Techniques & Tips

+ Revisiting PageRank Sculpting & Siloing By admin 05 October 2009 at 9:09 am and have No Comments

Welcome to SMX East! We’re kicking it off and holding no punches, starting the liveblog marathon with this session in the SMX Advanced Track. Quick line up of our distinguished panel:

Moderator: Danny Sullivan, Editor-in-Chief, Search Engine Land

Speakers:
Adam Audette, President, AudetteMedia, Inc
Eric Enge, President, Stone Temple Consulting
Rand Fishkin, CEO & Co-Founder, SEOmoz
Brent Payne, Director of Search Engine Optimization, Tribune Company
Leslie Rohde, Founder and CEO, LeftSideSystems, LLC
Shari Thurow, Founder and SEO Director, Omni Marketing Interactive

Revisiting PageRank Sculpting at SMX East

Danny starts off the convo asking if anyone doesn’t know about the PageRank sculpting debate that grew out of SMX Advanced earlier this year. No one raises their hand and Danny’s glad to know it.

Eric Enge is our first speaker and will introduce the topic. Implementing the nofollow attribute requires a simple syntax and stops the flow of PageRank to the page being linked to. PageRank sculpting died because of spammy comments. PageRank sculpting used the nofollow attribute to stop link juice being flowed to certain pages and to redistribute the link juice to the other links on the page.

At SMX Advanced Matt Cutts of Google explained that rather than redistributing PageRank, the nofollow attribute would evaporate PageRank. If you need more background, check out >Matt Cutts on Nofollowr and the Siloing Solution.

In one instance, a business redesigned their product menu and nofollowed 75 percent of the links. What happened is there was a huge downward spiral of indexed pages. So, when they took down the new product menu, their growth curve has been restored and their indexed pages came back up. The implementation of nofollow had a clear cut on-and-off effect.

Leslie Rohde steps to the podium and asks why we keep revisiting this topic. He thinks that there might be a conspiracy… Google went from saying it’s okay to recommending against it. He wants to know if F.U.D. is a profit making center for Google. Or, maybe SEOs are winning here because companies find they need lots of help to figure out the PageRank sculpting issue.

Does sculpting work? For what purpose? Do you have enough clay to sculpt? Sculpting is optimization by subtraction. An alternative is optimization by addition — adding content.

Degrees of sculpting
External bleeds
Don’t give links away
Hemorrhaging

Profit Shaping™

Leslie squeezed lots of slides into 7 minutes — which means I missed a lot and now he’s out of time. Brent Payne is next.

Here’s the scenario. At the Tribune Co., they created a tool that allowed producers to assign a value to every page created on the site, level 1-5. The highest level pages would be stripped of follow links. It worked well and they found they could easily rank for breaking news stories.

But as the first of this year came around, he feels like something had changed. It could have been a number of things that they don’t know about, but something was different.

After Matt Cutts announced the change of nofollow behavior, their approach changed as well. Followed links on breaking news pages are reduced by removing the links in full. The new tool is still new and saw its first major implementation during Chicago’s Olympic bid loss, but in that case it seems to have worked extremely well.

Adam Audette will discuss the e-commerce perspective and how nofollow sculpting as always sucked in his opinion. Primarily, it was never standardized across engines, and it was mostly all about Google. He’d never seen much evidence that it worked, either.

When Google came out and said it didn’t work anymore, the reason to use nofollow sculpting was even more uncertain. Instead of sculpting, work the site architecture, internal linking, and work the global and sub-navigations. Use your content, landing pages and internal linking to your PageRank advantage.

With testing they identify the topics that users care most about and emphasize them across the site. At Zappos they aren’t doing any sculpting and they did $1 billion in sales last year.

Next, Rand says that there’s lots that we do in the SEO world that we do just for engines. Since we can’t use nofollow anymore, SEOs are trying new and old methods of PageRank consolidation. He believes PageRank sculpting is useful for solving one issue: move your page from not indexed to a strong and steady position in the index.

Google crawls roughly in decreasing order of PageRank. Yahoo! and Bing said they treat nofollow in much the same way as Google does now, but without the evaporation. The engines have also implied that the number of pages indexed from a site is proportional to that site’s importance and popularity on the link graph. He’s calculated that about 3 percent of links use nofollow and that 3/4 of the time it’s used on internal links.

Shari Thurow steps up to the podium as the last speaker. She says she has a different opinion than most SEOs. She sees nofollow as a band-aid. As a specialist in search-friendly design and information architecture, she likes to have control over a site’s architecture early in the SEO process.

A mental model is an explanation of someone’s thought process. SEOs and searchers have different mental models of what the user wants and how they interact with a Web site. The closer the represented model comes to a searcher’s mental model, your brand and credibility will as well.

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Revisiting PageRank Sculpting & Siloing

+ SMX East 2009 Coverage By admin 05 October 2009 at 6:34 am and have No Comments

Virginia is in New York this week, liveblogging SMX East. To follow along, here’s her daily schedule which will be updated with links to each session as they’re posted.

Monday, October 5

9:00 a.m. Revisiting PageRank Sculpting & Siloing - Liveblog Coverage
10:45 a.m. Mobile Search Apps & Opportunities - Liveblog Coverage
1:45 p.m. Amazing PPC Tactics
3:45 p.m. Increasing Conversions through Better Usability
5:15 p.m. Keynote by Ben Huh, CEO Cheezburger Network
9:00 p.m. IM Charity Party

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SMX East 2009 Coverage

+ Twitter adds Nofollow to API LINKS By admin 13 August 2009 at 2:12 am and have No Comments

twitter

Notice the the Nofollow on tweedeck !

DAven

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Twitter adds Nofollow to API LINKS

+ Nofollow on Your Site Will Not Cause It to Explode By admin 16 June 2009 at 5:27 pm and have No Comments


Photo from Matt Cutts’s blog

“Nofollow is dead!”

“Your PageRank can’t be directed and if you try you’ll be penalized!”

“Ceiling Matt is watching your site funnel PageRank!”

It started at SMX, when Matt Cutts said that nofollow wouldn’t pass PageRank like it used to. Then the plot thickened when Matt posted an update aimed at clarifying some of the questions that have been swirling for the last couple of weeks. Virginia’s got the facts over in this month’s feature article, Matt Cutts on Nofollow and the Siloing Solution. I’m not going to rehash them here so I recommend you read at least that before we go on.

Go on. I’ll wait.

Back now? Good. Now, I know that everything is really confusing right now and you’re desperate to do something, anything, before you lose your shirt in the horrible, devastating wake of this nofollow change. Maybe you have clients beating down your door and they’re out for blood because they’ve heard that if there are any nofollow links on their site, the seas will turn red with blood and apocalypse shall begin. Or maybe you’re the client and you’re worried that your SEO company has implemented things on your site that now are going to harm your bottom line. Okay, everyone just sit down for a minute and take a deep breath. It’s going to be okay.

There’s a lot of discussion going on over at Matt’s entry regarding this topic. I particularly liked this reminder from Rae Hoffman: “1. SEO tactics can always change regardless of who first endorses them and 2. Not everything Matt says is etched in stone.”

Keep-calm-and-carry-on

The conversation on this is by no means over and the smart marketer won’t jump to conclusions about it. I know this isn’t the sexy solution. I know the cool thing to do is rail at Google for making all our lives harder, for adding confusion with each attempt to clarify. If I were really part of the cool kids, I’d probably come up with a really awesome conspiracy theory, but alas, I’m not cool.

It’s fun to get all excited and fired up but if it’s not going to help our clients, well, in the end, what’s the point? So I get to be the stick in the mud who waves the caution and risk-avoidance flag again. What are you going to do about nofollow? Well, right now, you’re not going to do anything.

If you’re feeling a little weak in the knees and you’re having visions of rankings plummeting, don’t panic. Here’s what I want you to do. First, stock up on some Ben & Jerry’s. That part is key. Next, I want you to repeat after me:

Dear [Insert your client here. If you're the client, ensure that your SEO has this stance.],

I’m your SEO and you hired me because you trust me to stay on top of the search industry and to apply my brain to the information I find there. As a result, we’ve developed a strategy for your site that is focused on long-term goals and not knee-jerk reactions. Therefore, I’m not going to change anything about that strategy at the moment with regards to nofollow. I will monitor the forums, blogs and industry news sources in order to stay informed and once the message has stopped changing and the real effects of Google’s statements becomes clear, I will take the appropriate steps.

Yours sincerely,
[Your name here]

Now I want you to get out the ice cream and think calm thoughts. If you absolutely must do something right now about your SEO campaigns, go do some link building. Pound for pound, a good solid backlink will do a lot more for you than obsessing over leaked PageRank to your privacy page.

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Nofollow on Your Site Will Not Cause It to Explode

+ Nofollow Makes News at SMX Advanced By admin 02 June 2009 at 4:42 pm and have No Comments

With SMX Advanced taking place today and tomorrow, SEOs could expect that more than one announcement by a search engine might potentially change the search marketing game. Before the first day has concluded, at least one such revelation has already occurred. Those who attended Duplicate Content Solutions & The Canonical Tag listened to Google webspam czar Matt Cutts explain that, in time, it would become less effective to use the nofollow link attribute for sculpting a site’s PageRank.

Duplicate Content Solutions & The Canonical Tag - SMX Advanced

Witnesses have dutifully shared the news on Twitter and in blog posts, but there has been no official word from Google yet. Until then, the facts remain fuzzy about what was actually said and implied by the Google team regarding the use of nofollow. Was the recommendation about internal links only? Will a flag be raised if the number of nofollow attributes on a single page exceed a recommended limit? PageRank sculpting is “less effective” than it used to be — by what margin? Some accounts suggest that webmasters have six months to clean up nofollow on their site, so what happens after that? And what does Matt mean by PageRank sculpting anyway? The questions just keep coming.

We can expect to receive some clarification from Google or a representative in the coming days, but Internet marketers who’ve been dedicated to a long-term strategy aren’t holding their breath. That’s because a sophisticated, long-term, organic search marketing strategy doesn’t rely on quick fixes like PageRank sculpting using nofollow to drive traffic and conversions. Instead, it relies on siloed site architecture and link-worthy content, and abides by the best practice recommendations of the search engines.

Duplicate Content Solutions & The Canonical Tag - SMX Advanced

The nofollow attribute was first introduced with a specific role in mind: to help dilute the effectiveness of comment spam. Any use that perverts the original intent — especially one designed to manipulate ranking factors — was destined to be snuffed down the line. Nofollow is not and has never been the silver bullet. More importantly, a strategy that depends only on nofollow PageRank sculpting risks forgetting what’s really important — strong, theme-supported site architecture.

[Editor's note: Bruce Clay, Inc. has recommended the use of the nofollow attribute in appropriate instances. Please see the update below.]

Today’s announcement is another much-needed reminder for SEOs to stop chasing the algorithm. That path only leads to ulcers and extra work. If you got tangled up thinking that nofollow is the end-all and be-all of PageRank sculpting, don’t beat yourself up; nofollow sculpting had a pretty popular cult for a while there. Now, use this lesson to remind yourself that a work ethic based on fundamentals and smart SEO will take you farther in the long run. What looks like today’s speedy workaround is really next month’s time-consuming correction. By relying on nofollow to do all your siloing, you may have to go back and reorganize your site when Google changes in the way Matt suggests they might. Do it right the first time and achieve the same victory without the side of heartache.

Update on June 3, 2009: During the last session of the first day of SMX Advanced, Matt Cutts partially clarified Google’s position on nofollow-based PageRank sculpting. There is some excellent liveblog coverage of the informative You&A with Matt Cutts by Outspoken Media, Beanstalk SEO and SEOgadget. Here’s a snippet from Lisa Barone’s post:

If you’re using nofollow to change how PageRank flows, it’s like a band-aid. It’s better to build your site how you want PageRank to flow from the beginning.

Long before the days of nofollow, Bruce Clay, Inc. has advocated a site architecture practice known as siloing. Siloing relies on two things to create sections of a site that are highly relevant to the targeted keyword: linking and theming. By linking pages with the same theme (virtual siloing) and by including those pages within the same directory (physical siloing), you can create a section of your site that will be considered pertinent to targeted keywords.

With the advent of the nofollow attribute, we recommended nofollow use to eliminate superfluous links to pages that were off-theme. However, we considered PageRank sculpting using nofollow to be a marginal support for siloing. If a forthcoming Google guideline were to discourage nofollow-based PageRank sculpting, it would not affect the core principles of siloing, a powerful site architecture technique that improves site structure and the related relevancy signals. If Matt is suggesting that webmasters build a site with PageRank flow in mind from the beginning, siloing is an ideal solution still deserving of attention and implementation.

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Nofollow Makes News at SMX Advanced