Another guest blogging question (sorry people)
-
So I use myblogguest to find blogs to exchange content for links with.
So a few things I need clearing up really,
If you cant write relevant content to the website you want to push, does this mean writing content on something you know something about lets say football and putting anchor text links in the byline to a electronic shop would not work and is not worth doing?
On the flip side lets say you get a copy writer to do it for you but the blogs wanting to use the content are not relevant to your website.
So your articles about football and your website sells football equipment but the blogs wanting to use the content are general blogs with 20 categories covering everything.
Cheers
-
Thanks James, this also helped me.
-
Thank you for the great reply, I will try and follow your advice on my next guest blog (although I do find it a little difficult to find those blogs which use ''write for us' but I will give it another go).
-
Ideally, you want a relevant blog and a relevant article and I would always try to get both of those when you're doing guest post based link building. If you can't, then I would favour an irrelevant article on a relevant blog, rather than the other way round, but you should always be able to find a way to make the article relevant if you think creatively.
Like James mentioned, if you can find an appropriate category page on a general blog, then this is better than putting it in on a generic archive page; but there are few "general blogs" which are really worth getting a link from.
I don't think the positioning of a link matters enormously to be honest. A text link in the body provides surrounding text which to some extent acts like anchor text in defining relevancy; but as long as the page isn't a mass of generic content and links; then it shouldn't really matter too much.
I do use guest blogging, yep, but I don't use myguestblogger or any similar services. I find targeted outreach to relevant blogs and sites tends to provide a much higher ROI and allows you to build relationships with quality sites where you can get repeat article placement in the future. The vast majority of sites looking for content on myguestblogger are relatively worthless.
-
So even if the blog is not relevant, making the article relevant to my site will help more with ranking.
Do you think having the anchor text link in the body of the article would work better then in the byline or this has equal benefit? I have read the further up the page the link the better.
Just wondering, do you use guest blogging for your link building? What do you find is the best type of link building?
-
Well if you target a general blog I guess they would have a sports section where you can add your football article. They should allow you to add one related link to the post if it fits the niche, I mean you can not write a football article and link to a debt funding site.
In my experience I do not use those blogger networks, I prefer to go direct to websites, as I see more value when I exchange content this way.
-
Essentially, a link is a link.
If you get a link from an unrelated site surrounded by irrelevant text; it's going to be a pretty low quality recommendation, but it's unlikely to do you any harm and may be worth doing if the linking site has good overall domain strength.
That said, having a link surrounded by relevant and related body text is much better, as the accompanying content can help to influence the perceived relevancy of the anchor text and may actually work to drive traffic to your site if referencing something of value.
I think the question you need to be asking, especially around myblogguest and similar resources for finding guest post targets is "what sort of site would link out to an irrelevant page?". Is that the kind of site you ultimately want links from? If the blog is aggressively seeking guest post content unscrupulously linking out to anyone, then your link will ultimately lose value over time, especially if that site gets smacked by Panda for poor auto-generated content.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
SEO question about lots of outbound links
I'm considering adding a directory page to one of my websites that lists local groups from all around the world. I haven't kept up with SEO in a long time, but I recall (many) years ago that having a lot of outgoing links and very few (if any) inbound connections was a terrible thing. Is this still the case, or have search engine algorithms figured out that this can be beneficial to site visitors? What effect will adding a page like this have on my SEO?
Link Building | | jordanchris0 -
Backlink from unrelated blogs
Hi I would like to ask Im doing SEO for gambling related website should I post articles only on the relevant blogs, websites related to gambling? I found website with pagerank 4 where you can submit artcile to blog. There is so many articles related to different topics (gambling, sport, finance, health, traveling ) If I submit article this kind of website how google handle with backlink? Does it has positive impact for seo?
Link Building | | centrum0 -
Beyond Guest Blogging, What Else Works Now?
Given the importance of editorial links & co-citation, beyond guest blogging what other high-value link-building tactics should I be looking at to boost organic search placings? Specifically, in Apr 2013 is there still mileage in directories (such as these on the SEOMoz list) or on this GetListed list; or in placing content on social sites such as Squidoo?
Link Building | | Jeepster0 -
Few questions regarding onsite content?
1. How important is having the keywords you are targeting on the page? Lets say you rank position 10 for 'Plumbing Services London' but you don't actually use the word 'London' at all in the page copy, what kind of effect could you expect if you added the word in the content? Bit of a silly question really, I know it would have some effect but how important is it really? 2. What kind of effect would adding a blog with lets say 500 words of great content twice a week have on rankings? If you anchor text linked out of the copy would this alone help with ranking or is the reason for adding a blog to just use it as link bait to pull in more links, thus rankings are only effected when the blog starts to gain links?
Link Building | | activitysuper0 -
Guest Blog Etiquette & Re-using "Expired" Content
Hi everyone, There's two parts to this Q, which is why the title's sort of split in half. We wrote a guest blog post that we were really proud of, which took a good few hours of work. It went live about a month ago, but I just happened to notice recently that it had disappeared off the person's website - I now get a 404 error and I can't find it either using a 'site:' search in Google or via the site's own search tool. I've tried getting in touch with the webmaster, but he's no longer responding to my emails. I really don't know if a) it disappeared by accident (for whatever reason), or b) they purposefully wanted to remove it and now they're avoiding me. My two Q's: Do you think it's cheeky to re-use the content, by giving it to someone else? Or would you say it goes against guest blogging etiquette? It seems a shame to waste it, for it to disappear. If I were to re-use it, would there be any implications regarding Panda, given the fact that it was content that was once live (i.e. effectively 'duplicate', once upon a time), even if the 'original' content is no longer indexed by Google? Would it even be considered a duplicate if published again now? Many thanks in advance!
Link Building | | Gmorgan0 -
Google and low quality guest posts
In the aftermath of the Penguin and Panda monsters a lot of blog networks seem to have been devalued by Google. It seems logical that spammers will flock to low quality guest posting next. How do you think Google will determine which guest post links to devalue? Thanks!
Link Building | | ProjectLabs0 -
Should I invite people to guest post?
I'm a little confused about the benefits of inviting people to guest post on my site. I've just read http://www.seomoz.org/blog/using-passive-link-building-to-build-links-with-no-budget which suggests that by inviting people to guest post on my site I can build a relationship with them and eventually ask them to post a guest post of mine on their site. If both posts have a link back to the owners site doesn't this amount to reciprocal linking? Or am I missing something? Is a reciprocal link only classed as such if the link points to the exact page where the article is or can a reciprocal link point to anywhere on the site and still be classed as reciprocal?
Link Building | | SamCUK1 -
Build links through blogging?
Although my site is a wordpress site it presently has about as many static pages as blog posts. The site has a lot of directory links and is doing pretty good with a PR3 after about a year. When I first put the site up I had a well known blogging expert help me with the permalinks and a couple of other things and he said that with a blog there is no need to build links, it can all be done through natural link acquisition off of the blog posts. I was skeptical at the time because it seemed that a lawyer's site was something not a lot of people would be interested enough in to link to it. Now I am thinking about trying his stragegy, as 1 of my blog posts that I put up on a very topical subject immediately got about 15 backlinks. My questions are: Is it reasonable to try to build links just by posting frequent topical blog posts? If yes, should I have links in the blog posts to my home page, to internal pages, or both? \ Paul
Link Building | | diogenes0