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Linking Stew
Since I began writing for ClickZ
nearly six months ago, I have received almost 300 emails
from readers, most of them asking questions or alerting
me to some cool tidbit related to linking.
That said, today's column will be a helpful hodgepodge
of linking news, odds and ends, and fact versus fiction.
So, here we go.
- Search-result links from Inktomi can vary from partner
to partner. In other words, obtaining a high ranking through
Inktomi will become harder over time since the partner
site can tweak Inktomi results.
- Some sites have more than the standard two links at Yahoo!,
but this does not mean you can have more than two links.
Yahoo! definitely shows favored-nation status to certain
sites, and it's annoying.
- The Netscape Open Directory, which started as NewHoo several
years ago and then became DMOZ, wasn't taken seriously at
first by most folks. Fast-forward a few years: It now is
as powerful as Yahoo! and LookSmart, distributes listings
to more than 300 other sites, and offers multiple link opportunities
to your site (if your content truly justifies it). (Full
disclosure: I'm an editor there.)
- New listings at the Netscape Open Directory appear first
at the mother ship, DMOZ.org, and about a month later appear
at the Netscape.com version at http://directory.netscape.com.
- Paying for a GoTo.com link that is not in the top three
in the search results is, in most cases, a waste. Results
of four and lower are not made available to the GoTo partner
sites, which collectively have millions more users than
GoTo does alone. Like AOL, for example. If the cost increase
is just a few cents, get in the top three, and your site
could be found across all of GoTo's partner sites rather
than only at GoTo.
- If you want a cheap way to track visits to your site that
are generated via links embedded in email messages, just
create a duplicate page/URL that is marketed only via email.
Any visits to it would have to come via email clicks on
it.
- At AltaVista, there are at least 15 ways a link could end
up being seen by a searcher that has nothing to do with
the rankings of the site itself. Do a search and look at
all those options; it's scary.
- In some cases, you can purge a dead link by submitting that
same link/URL to the engine where it's appearing.
- About.com has its own link-auction service that is similar
to GoTo's. It's called Sprinks, and I like it.
- Both the Netscape and Internet Explorer Web browsers have
"Recommended Sites" buttons that will examine
the site you are on and recommend others like it. Alexa
powers this. So go get your site linked/indexed by Alexa.
It's free. See it here.
- Spend $10 for your main page link to be indexed by Inktomi.
It is the best $10 you'll ever spend. In fact, spend $100
and have it index 10 pages. No engine has more reach.
- Want to scare yourself? Read "The Link Controversy
Page."
- How long will it be until someone takes what LinkPopularity.com
does and makes a business out of it? How long will it be
until search engines charge for this info? And when they
do, I hope they'll be able to answer questions such as,
"What sites are linked to my competitors' sites but
not to mine?" or "What links to my site and my
competitors' sites have appeared within the last week?"
I'd pay to subscribe to such a service.
- There is a battle going on concerning dead dot-com site
links. Good sites that were around for a few years had built
up a nice collection of links pointing to them. Then the
crash happened, and content couldn't pay for itself. But
they do have one remaining asset: link equity.
- Seven years ago, I opined that automated submission tools
were not friendly to search engines and shouldn't be used.
People called me silly. Last week, AltaVista made a change
to its submission format so that autosubmission tools can
never be used to submit to AltaVista. (Yes, I am, in fact,
going to say it: I told you so.)
- A new service that privately introduces newly launched sites
to crucial but hard-to-contact professional site reviewers
is about to be launched.
Keep those emails coming.
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| An Article By
Writing |
Eric Ward founded the Web's first service for announcing and linking Web sites back in 1994, and he still offers those services today. His client list is a who's who of online brands. Ward is best known as the person behind the original linking campaigns for Amazon.com Books, The Link Exchange, Microsoft, Rodney Dangerfield, Warner Bros, The Discovery Channel, the AMA, and The Weather Channel. His services won the 1995 Tenagra Award For Internet Marketing Excellence, and he was selected as one of the Web's 100 most influential people by Websight magazine. Eric also writes columns for ClickZ and Ad Age magazine, and is the editor of LinkAlert!
Web Site : http://www.ericward.com/
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