Advanced Link Building: Hosted Content, The Quest for the Perfect LinkAdvanced Link Building
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by Frederick Townes April 23, 2007
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| Frederick Townes |
| Frederick Townes in the owner of W3-EDGE. W3-EDGE is a Boston-based web design company specializing in W3C
compliant and search engine friendly web design. Whether your needs fall into the Web
2.0 category or if you just need an attractive design that will convert
your visitors into buyer, we have the solution for you. |
| Frederick Townes
has written 5 articles for HostReview. |
| View all articles by Frederick Townes... |
Ask Google,
search engines love links. Of course, they love some links more than others.
For example, a simple link exchange (reciprocal link) doesn’t have as much
value to search engines and so, it doesn’t receive the same weight as a
non-reciprocal (one-way) link – the theory being that a one-way, in-bound link
is a recommendation from a site owner to visit this linked site. The link,
itself, is testament to the quality of the site being referred.
Article Syndication
In recent years, many sites have employed article
syndication to develop links. These site owners write (or have written)
articles of interest to a particular audience. The site owners then offer these
articles to other relevant sites free in exchange for a link back to the originator
of the content in the “about the author” section of the article. In this way, a
single site owner can submit dozens of articles for syndication receiving an
inbound link from each article in return for the free use of content. They can
also watch other sites post the content virally to keep their sites fresh, as
well.
Sites need fresh content so many will happily display your
article and provide a link to your site. It’s a tried and true link building
tactic. However, search engines are programmed to seek out the most natural,
and therefore valuable, links they can find.
The way articles are syndicated is through sites like
goarticles.com and ezinearticles.com. The standard format for the display of
the article is: headline, article body followed by a small blurb about the
author with a link back to the author’s site. Since those links appear in the
body of the page, they appear to be more valuable in comparison to most
purchased or reciprocal links which often appear at the bottom of a page
column, or in the footer surrounded by lots of other links – somewhat effective,
but not necessarily the best way to acquire inbound links.
In addition, syndication leads to duplication when a single
article appears on 10 sites all at the same time. This diminishes the
quality of the text and the back link to the author’s site. It’s still more
valuable than a plain link exchange but search engines are placing less
emphasis on syndicated content. So, what’s a site owner to do?
Hosted Web Content
It goes by many different names: content swapping,
advertorials, pre-sell pages and hosted content – all basically the same idea.
The way hosted content works is that you, the author, pay
a site owner to display your article. However, now, instead of the back links
to your site coming at the end of the article, you embed those links in the
body of the text surrounded by your target keywords and actually useful content
for the reader. In the “eyes” of a search engine, this is among the highest
valued back link.
Hosted content is basically renting a page on another site
with links to your site embedded in the main body of the article. The web site
that hosts the content receives payment from the author plus fresh content, the
author gets a valuable back link and visitors to the hosting site get
useful content.
This strategy isn’t new. It’s simply doing what search
engines want us to do – produce content that’s useful, beneficial and appears
on quality sites. Not only does a quality piece of content receive more visibility
when hosted on an authoritative site, it also delivers increased benefit to the
author, and the page may even rank itself for target key phrases. When a major
site hosts your content, you gain from its page rank in strong testimonials and
referrals. Whether or not the site owners want to monetize their site by allowing
approved authors to post content is the same debate as whether or not links
should be bought and sold. However, publishing high quality, unique and useful
content, rather than just creating inflated link popularity with diminishing
returns, is, in comparison, a tested SEO tactic.
Designing a Hosted
Content Page
You’re paying for the placement of this content so you want
it to be good. In the eternal quest for successful link bait, you also want the
content to be ranked by search engines because it provides real value to the
reader and is hosted on an authoritative site.
Design the hosted content page using standard SEO
conventions: a keyword savvy title, header
h1 , subheads h2 and a keyword
density of less than 5%. Any higher and search engines may consider the content
to be “spamish” regardless of where the content appears.
Now comes the most important part. As you write the article,
carefully place links to topically relevant pages on your own site within
the body of the article’s text. These are high value links that will
improve your SEO. However, it’s also important to place your articles on sites
that are topically related to your piece (and probably already rank for related
topics). The authority of the site hosting your content, the relevance of the
site (topically speaking) and that back link make your site look stronger as
far as search engines are concerned. Also, remember that the quality of the
content to which you link also matters. Link to strong pages (those with
quality back links) on your site, as well. Your article should reference other authoritative,
relevant articles so that search engines see that your piece was written to
offer real value to readers.
It’s Not Quantity,
It’s Quality
It’s no longer simply a matter of how many links point to a
site. There are many cases of sites in which 50 quality links outrank sites
with hundreds of links. It’s not quantity, it’s the quality of the links that
improve ranking in the SERPs.
Editorial links (links in hosted content) are more “natural”
from a search engine’s perspective and, therefore, more valuable because the
article has, at most, two or three targeted links pointing to your site’s pages.
Just like quality link bait, which is unique, original and useful content,
quality hosted content on respected sites will also naturally develop its own
back links - the ultimate validation and the desired outcome of placing quality
content. Finally, because these links are found on pages optimized with your
keywords, search engines will consider them extremely relevant to the subject
at hand.
Start Your Hosted
Content Campaign Today
It’s being done everyday, successfully building small sites
into larger sites, providing free advertising for the thought-leader/author, delivering
less duplicate content to search engines and more new content (plus revenue) to
the hosting site and, perhaps most importantly, hosted content actually
delivers useful, relevant information to readers – exactly what search engines
rank in the first place. As with any link-building technique, hosted content
can be abused, but topically authoritative sites are not going to accept
content that does not meet their high standards – so everyone wins when the
goals are white hat.
Start searching for websites that might be interested in
hosting your next article, or start looking for a site owner interested in
content swapping. Create content that’s unique, useful and well-written and you
may find that you won’t even have to pay a site owner to share your content
with their readers – exactly how it should be. |