Today.Az » SEO & E-Marketing » Define your objective before you build links
07 November 2011 [14:41] - Today.Az
Better rankings? More traffic? More conversions? Stability? What exactly do you hope to achieve by building links? Without a clear objective, it’s impossible to accurately measure your progress. As always, defining your goals and strategies helps a lot, especially if you're flying blind.
Improved Rankings
Let’s say that you want better rankings. (Doesn’t everyone?) You first need to define what spot will make you happy for your targeted keywords. Moving someone from page 4 to page 2 is pretty simple usually, but moving someone from number 3 to number 2 takes a lot of effort if the niche is quite competitive. If you’re going to buy your way to the top, prepare to spend more for moving up spots once you’re on the first page unless your keyword of choice is a massively uncompetitive longtail.
Getting consistent ranking results is extremely difficult due to personalized search of course, and this throws off this metric completely.
When it comes to accurately measuring rankings, if that is indeed your concern, you’re going to find that using a general trend of spots is better than insisting upon number 5 and freaking out when you’re showing up as number 6 one day. If you’ve been in the top 3 for a year and you suddenly fall to page 5, that should definitely concern you of course, but if you’re seeing a bit of fluctuation, that isn’t usually a sign that things are about to collapse.
Increased Traffic
This should theoretically improve with an improvement in rankings but
that isn’t always what happens. You need to first make sure that your
SERP listing does encourage people to click on it so that you’ll get
results from a rankings increase, of course.
Off page though, if you’re actively seeking links in order to build
traffic (asking for links whether they’re
paid or not) you need to carefully evaluate the potential site’s
metrics in order to determine whether it will help you or not. A link
placed on a high-traffic page that gets good social love and ranks well
for certain relevant keywords could be an amazing source of traffic for
you. A link placed on a giant link list on a site that gets lots of
traffic but is totally irrelevant to your niche probably isn’t something
that you want to pursue though. If someone’s giving you a link, then
hey, you’re lucky and don’t complain about, but if you’re going to
invest resources and cash into a link, better make sure that it’s going to
actually benefit you in some way. Relevancy is quite important here as
is link placement. If you’re getting a link at the end of a list of 500
resources, you may not see much traffic from it even if the niche is
extremely relevant. A link placed on a new blog post that is getting
tons of attention socially send tons of relevant traffic though.
(Traffic is pretty easy to measure if you’re using any sort of
analytics package and it’s quite easy to measure traffic generated by
the links in question. In a perfect world if you’re building links, you
should be seeing traffic increases across the board that you won’t be
able to track back to an exact link at all times, too. Just keep an eye
on it, no matter how exactly you decide to do so.) Increased Conversions
Just like with traffic considerations, relevancy is critical if your
goal is increased conversions, no matter what sort they are. You can get
better rankings and more traffic but conversion improvement won’t occur
automatically if your traffic isn’t relevant. While conversion isn’t
always something that link builders think about (due to that old adage
of us getting the horse to water and you making him drink) but careful
thought beforehand can definitely help ensure that conversions are
indeed more likely. Nothing we can do can make someone convert once
they’re on your site, though, so some internal digging around to figure
out what’s going on is usually a good idea if conversions aren’t
happening as you’d expect. …And Then Keep It Up!
See what everyone else is doing and keep doing what you’ve been
doing. You can’t just build links for a bit, get that coveted spot in
the SERPs, and quit, or someone else will come along and snap up your
spot. Unfortunately things happen. Budgets get slashed, clients come and
go, employees quit. However, you can’t really rest on your laurels in
the online marketing world so here are a few ideas to help you prevent
this kind of stagnation:
- Don’t rely solely on paid links. When the link terms and the money
run out, you’re screwed. In that same vein, don’t rely on any one method
of building links, period. Mix it up.
- Don’t rely on just one person to build links for you without knowing exactly how it’s being done.
- Think of ideas that will continue to generate links after that
initial push like great content that continues to
amuse/entertain/educate, guest post series, widgets, and linkbait of any
form possible.
- Don’t underestimate the power of using social media to continue to
keep your name out there when link building slows. Just don’t use it as
your only backup.
- Keep an eye on your existing link profile. If a great link that sent
you lots of relevant traffic is suddenly removed, contact the webmaster
and ask about it. Keep an eye on your competitors’ link profiles too,
if you can, and make use of the broken link building method.
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