| You know you
should have more links pointing to your site, but you're
not sure what the best approach is to pursue them. One of
my favorite approaches is to use the search results for
terms that are important for my site.
I do a search at Google for a two or three word phrase
that I wish I was ranked first for. Then, instead of treating
all those other sites listed in the results like they were
competitors, I think of them as potential link partners.
Chances are not every site linked in those search results
is a true competitor of your business. Those sites are competing
with yours only for the search terms, not products and services.
Now, visit the sites with a link in the search results
above yours that are not
competitors for your products. Examine those sites for ways
you can get a link on them. Do they have links pages? Do
they offer a newsletter you could place an inexpensive text
ad/link in? Could you swap links with them?
Here's a more tangible example. Imagine a professional
fitness trainer who sells e-books via a Web site. The search
term "lower my body fat" would be important to
him. Rather than battle to be ranked first for such a phase
(which probably will never happen) , look at the other sites
listed among the search results. Most have nothing to do
with personal training or fitness e-books. There are weight
loss centers and vitamin stores, even liposuctiuon sites.
This technique is called "piggybacking". You
take advantage of the high rankings of other sites. They
have what you seek, a highly placed link for a specific
search phrase. So rather than try to unseat their ranking,
which could take you months and never happen anyway, do
the next best thing: Pursue a link on the sites with the
best rankings that don'tcompete with you.
Why do this? Imagine if you
had links on every site that had a top 10 search result
for phrases that you care about. You are building a network
of links on high-profile sites that get tons of search engine
traffic as a result of their high placement. The harder
part will be figuring out why these sites should give you
a link in the first place. If you sell products, you might
ask if they want to be an affiliate.
If you are fortunate enough to already have some high-ranking
pages, you could simply swap banner links: a you-scratch-my-back-I-
scratch-yours scenario. Or you might simply use this technique
as another method for identifying good targets you can advertise
on. In other words, the sites that have high rankings for
terms that are important to you are natural places for you
to buy banner or
button or even text links on. You might even get lucky and
find they have a reciprocal links page. Your only cost would
be a link back to them on your site.
Remember the key point of this approach: Identify sites
that do not sell what you sell but that do have a high ranking
for phrases that are important to you. Seek out win-win
partnerships with these sites. They've done the hard work
of securing highly ranked links. Reward them for it, and
you reward yourself in the process.
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