Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Option A - Linking out to 200 relevant sites from your own "Resource" section and then contacting them to say;
"Hi, We've linked to your site. Can you link back to us?"
(We'll keep your link live for a week if we don't hear back from you)
Option B - Contact 200 relevant sites and say;
"Hi, We'd like to swop links. If you're interested, please enter your website description on <this page> and your URL which links to us.
Once we'ce checked it, we'll link back to you within 72 hours"
Which works best for you? Any tips / hints you care to share?
TIA
J
Getting links is largely about wasting time. Success ratio is low, but you can increase your success ratio by making human contact.
I always check out their site to see if my link is buried somewhere with 1000's of others or if it is a good link. I only reciprocate the good links.
Do most webmasters actually know what PageRank is?
Last month I received an offer for a reciprocal link with a PR7 site, of course I jumped on it right away, especially because they were not requiring any minimum PR in exchange. Well, the site I was asked to link to had a very few backlinks last month, I checked today, and it shows close to 28000 - so I would say, lots of people took that PR7 offer immediately.
Last month I received an offer for a reciprocal link with a PR7 site, of course I jumped on it right away, especially because they were not requiring any minimum PR in exchange. Well, the site I was asked to link to had a very few backlinks last month, I checked today, and it shows close to 28000
28,000 links in a month - now that's a good link building campaign.
Something else is going on there... A huge number of internal links, some kind of link farm or related site arrangement, etc. I'd be kind of worried if a site of mine showed that kind of jump in a month - seems like a major red flag.
Back to the original topic, I look at most link requests, regardless of subject line. I respond most often to those from sites that are related and of decent quality (PR helps, but I'd avoid linking to a high PR site that looked spammy). It's most effective if the e-mail shows that the writer actually visited the site in question and understands why a link would be mutually beneficial. Seeing a link to my site in place is a plus, as I can evaluate the page and text and consummate the deal immediately if I like it.
The subject line shouldn't be cute, just something simple that mentions linkage and, perhaps, the site topic.
Which works best for you? Any tips / hints you care to share?
Personally I've found what works best for me is not to ask for a link. I just point them to the new website and let them decide what to do with that information.
An approach that has worked very well so far. I do personalise each and every e-mail though. And I refer in the email to a lot of things about their website, so it does take time. I do get a link 9/10 times though.
TJ
Approx how many emails like this would you expect to send out in an 8 hour period?
That's really difficult to answer, as each one is completely unique. I look through their website first, then write around what I saw. I compliment them on the parts they did well, and I criticise the parts that I thought were not so good (in a positive way). Some are short, some are long.
Averaging it out, I would say if I were working a solid 8 hours doing that I guess I could push out maybe 60, including research time (finding the sites I want to link to me).
Out of that, 40 to 50 of them will usually link to me. I did have one run where I sent out 30 e-mails and every one had linked to me within a week. It varies a lot.
Some of them want to engage in email chat sometimes of course, but that's down to the nature of the way I do it.
I find it a much more interesting and rewarding experience than sending out 1,000 with a 5% hit rate.
I build niche sites, that's my market and I'm good at it. No doubt this wouldn't work for a gambling site.
TJ
1) "greater boost from page rank 3 links done properly" - - -
Please define: links done properly?
2) "do most webmasters know what page rank is?" - - -if you are using backlink checks from competitors and you see that these are recipricol than yes -- if it is just a resource / directory of industry links that I would say no they don't know what page rank is
3) "I just point them to the new website and let them decide what to do with that information." - - - If you don't ask / direct them for a link - and you are saying 9 out of 10 are posting a link --- how? if someone sent me an email I would say "nice site" but would not think to link to them unless asked?
So when I find a site which I feel is of interest to my visitors, I add it as a recommended resource with a little blurb as to what it's all about. I may (or may not) send an email to the webmaster informing him of the link. He can (and often does) add a link back, but I never even ask. It's simply not important. I am adding value for MY visitors by linking to the other resource.
To answer the original question: my email filters have been set to automaically delete link exchange requests. I simply don't care and get way too many of them to deal with (over a hundred a week). I don't even want to know, I don't care that you have a (gasp) pr2 page, I already know that linking helps search engine ranking, and I really don't want to link to 99% of the silly affiliate junk that comes in this way anyway. And, most of all, I don't want your stupid canned email message that you sent from that piece of c*p product zeus or link master or whatever.
Richard
That's really difficult to answer, as each one is completely unique. I look through their website first, then write around what I saw. I compliment them on the parts they did well, and I criticise the parts that I thought were not so good (in a positive way). Some are short, some are long.
Now, this I would welcome and it might even get a link if it were valuable for my visitors.
if someone sent me an email I would say "nice site" but would not think to link to them unless asked?
I would hazzard a guess that I wouldn't have emailed you in the first place.
RichLowe above, would have got an e-mail from me.
The attitude of the webmaster is always apparent from their product.
TJ
[edited by: trillianjedi at 5:15 pm (utc) on April 8, 2004]