How To Filter Out Potential Backlink Recipients In A Well Planned Link Building Campaign

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While looking to build some quality back links it crossed my mind I should try to pinpoint what exactly makes up a good back link source. 1. Who links to that domain name? In general well founded websites are listed in topnotch directories like DMOZ and Yahoo Dir.. Their information is constantly back linked throughout the market they operate in, not to mention the buzz (followed by additional backlinks) they generate in the social environment associated to that niche. However, there's another breed of websites, those that collect links on every niche market imaginable. Their webmasters totally discard the demand for relevancy. These sites should be filtered out first hand. seo service 's for link structures are obtained fairly cheap with different SEO instruments available today. 2. Does their articles/videos/podcasts incite you to further explore the site? Evaluate their content quality, its ability to drive traffic, and the way it relates to your website from the visitor's perspective. If there is a natural match between both of your personal approaches and also a potential for improving the traffic stats, you should definitely negotiate a link. Remember that your faithful visitors expect quality info from you. Take care of this requirement and then handle the technical SEO formula. 3. Does your prospect webpage has any link authority or PageRank? Always take into account the page's level of link equity and the likelihood (depending greatly on the site's overall value) that the page will consolidate overtime time its own inbound backlink stock. This consideration applies often to blogs where posts are rapidly disappearing from the homepage along with the privileged situation of having a back link from a website with PageRank, say, of 5 (dictated by its homepage). Of course blogs are well dealt with by the search engines and this authority isn't passed and taken away so easily, but this is a general presentation to give you an idea of how PageRank flows. Think long term; if the whole website meats the criteria presented on this article, get the link even if the targeted webpage has, momentarily, low authority. 4. With whom do these sites entertain SEO and social relationships? Prestigious sites are members of well known web communities. They're simultaneously referred by and referring trusted websites. See if your prospect website has a hybrid collection of unrelated websites that it refers with backlinks. If so, know that it carries little to no trust both from the SE and visitor's standpoint. If those outbound links don't remain in the same niche market that sites probably has little if any authority at all, so it's useless investing effort to get a backlink from it. In addition to these, Google totally disapproves PageRank sculpting as a SEO strategy when used to refer other content sources (using the nofollow tag). 5. Are they cultivating back links to other sites? Because if they do, they're probably selling them. These sites have a bad reputation with Google and other SEs. When periodical so-called cleaning programs are conducted, Google demotes to zero any link equity these sites might have gained over time. So your link becomes absolutely worthless. 6. Are they indexed and present in the SERPs? Take note if that website ranks for (uncompetitive) keywords in your niche market. If it's nowhere to be found in the first two search result pages, then look for other link source. Even the second page isn't that good but there is room for future improvements. 7. Are they popular throughout community? If the answer to this one is yes, then you stand a good chance of increasing the readership you currently have. Although they have their own shortcomings, popular sites and platforms are literally referral traffic gold mines. Use Google reader to find out the exact number of feed readers they currently have.