Outreach Approach
-
When you contact a blogger or website owner about guest posting, who do you say is contacting them?
For example, do you say that you are an SEO for the company or do you simply sign off as the company you are doing work for.
I tend to introduce myself as 'a PR/SEO representative for company X'. What about you?
-
lol.... Good story, Steve. Thanks for sharing it.
I got a message from a professor who asked why we didn't have an article on Subject XYZ because it was so important, etc. etc. etc. (just reading his rant I could tell that he knew his stuff...... So I asked him to write one and got a great piece of content.
-
I got a guest post purely from ripping into someone elses in the comments once. Some business guru lady was recommending people "stick to larger companies for SEO... like BT SearchSmart"
Infuriated I went on a rant about how no-one should ever advise such a thing (I hate BT SearchSmart... they're rubbish and they just rip people off), and blah, blah, blah. Then the blog owner emailed me and said I could write a post on what to look out for to avoid getting stung by dodgy SEO companies
So yeah I'm with EGOL about the enthusiasm thing, I was certainly enthusiastic about tearing BT services a new one
-
Busy websites attract a lot of link hunters, publicity seekers, crackpot promoters, etc.
So if you use language like "reaching out to you" or other marketer speak your message will be deleted. Everyone is trying to use us.
If the message is from a PR group or an SEO group we know that you are trying to use us.
What gets our attention? A message from an enthusiastic author.
-
Yes that would work much better. I am always worried about giving my name out too freely when associated with other companies, but I think it is fine when tagged to a title like 'Content Editor' or 'PR Consultant'.
-
well yeah, that's right, sorry didn't explain its like:
Andrés G. Montero, Company Name Editor
you got the idea
-
Good point - I ignore all link exchange requests too. I think it's important to make sure you're contacting site owners that are actually relevant to your company's niche. Otherwise, what authority could you provide the guest post with?
-
I get what you mean, but when we do outreach, we never target people interested in doing link farm BS and we never do it ourselves. Instead, we focus on providing content that is relevant to the website but is also authoritative and worthwhile. For example, offering a property news website an opinion post from a housing company.
So, what would get your attention and not lead you to send a message straight to the trash?
-
Company name editor is good but sometimes they like to have a name to be able to address - especially if the blogger wants to develop a proper relationship.
-
Yes exactly- I sometimes even get the client to set up an email for me.
I'll also agree with your point about the word 'link'. I try to avoid all 'link' conversations as it often scares the webmaster off, which sometimes involves us having to provide a post without getting the link back.
-
(Please don't read this and think that my tone is shouting at you.... I am just saying what happens when these messages arrive here. OK? Also, I am not an SEO, I am a publisher. So that puts a little different perspective on my thinking. )
When an SEO or a PR company contacts me about "guest posting" on my blog I report that message as spam and block their email address or entire domain from my inbox.
I don't want posts that are done to connive links. I don't need content that badly and if the post is being done to gain a link I bet that they didn't put their best work into it. What else are they doing for links? Will I be linking to a bad neighborhood? Forget it.
I do publish a lot of content contributed by others. But every one of those authors contacted me personally. Sometimes I accept their first article and pay them for future articles.
When I publish that content from a guest author there is an area on the page with a short author bio and a link to his/her blog or website. I don't mind linking to his/her site. Maybe my visitors want to read more from that author. Good!
However, when an author contacts me personally if he/she starts talking about getting anchor text links in the content my interest in that content falls through the floor. Now I know why he wants to have an article on my site. He simply wants the links. FT! I am not running a website to be JoeSchmoe's personal advertising portal or his personal linkfarm - those articles submitted for links are usually crap content. I don't want them. Sorry, we can't use the article.. thanks for offering it to us.
-
Hi Sebastian, I sometimes like to use " Company Name Editor" and talk a bit about how our content will be helpful for their site, which is not really a lie, I am the SEO but also do content Editing .
Sometimes I don't even include a title, just me from Company name, and on some markets like sports, believe it or not, when I get some help from a friend who is a woman, we get a better response rate from the blog owners. Interesting ah?
-
I'm new to this so I'm interested in the responses as well. But I can tell you an experience I had from a webmaster's point of view.
I constantly get emails requesting links. Most of these are asking for a link exchange. And it's really rare that I pay any attention to them. But, I was recently contacted by the SEO of a company that sells a product in my niche asking if I would be willing to write a blog post about their product. I was quite happy to do so because it was a good product and I felt the content would benefit my site. I think in this instance, having an SEO contact me seemed to make the request more legit.
-
I always get permission from a client to represent them as a product specialist or marketing consultant, but I usually open the discussion with site owners with: "I'm Kevin from XXX." I also have a shpeel down pretty well, always communicating the same major points of the business to each site owner I approach. I'm not the overzealous type who promises some sort of grand partnership; instead I speak sincerely about my client, the business, and how they can help us. I have about 60-70% success with that.
As a note, something that fails more often than not is mentioning the word "link." You want your business shining inside well-written content, not just links. Focus on the business aspect rather than the SEO part. This SEO buzz is really out of control, and I found that more people with popular sites tend to hoard their link juice. It's a risky approach, so I recommend promoting content over link building. It's just what works for me.
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
-
What outreach tools do you use?
I was wondering what an SEO with years of experience used to perform outreach campaigns? What software (Buzzstream, Inkybee), what email service (MailChimp), what prospecting tools (Buzzsumo)? What's the ultimate pairing of software and tools for maximum results (with the best client-facing KPIs)?
Link Building | | TinaMumm0 -
Example of outreach emails?
Can anyone give me an example of an outreach email to a blogger? I have a blog post on my site called "How To Clean An Entire House In 60 Minutes" and I'm outreaching this content to home decor bloggers. What would be an example of a good outreach email?
Link Building | | The_Kiwi_Man0 -
Should I be taking a gradual approach to link removals?
Quick background: My parents run a travel company and have seen their google ranks drop dramatically in the last few years (usual story: they employed an SEO agency, saw good results to begin with, and then a massive decline in their rankings post-Penguin). Over the last few months I've been working to remove as many of the spam links pointing to their site as I can. However, as I've been doing so, our keyword rankings have been declining even further, not improving. This time last year we were bottom of page 1 for one keyword, then we suddenly dropped to page 5 around Nov with the Penguin update, and now, since I started cleaning up our backlinks, we're no longer in the first 20 pages - we've vanished. Similar situation for other keywords (though not as dramatic) I've been pretty careful to only delete links that are clearly spam (article directories, forum signatures, spam comments on blogs with a keyword-rich username linking to our domain etc). It may be that some of these links were still helping us, but I'd be surprised - they were pretty obvious cases of spam. My question: Is it normal to see this sort of decline at the start of a clean-up campaign? Does google see a sudden decline in the number of links, spam or otherwise, as suspicious? I've devoted weeks already to trying to work on the problems affecting my parent's website, and the situation just seems to be getting worse and worse! Do websites ever recover from a severe Penguin hit?
Link Building | | mgane0 -
Hiring for SEO Outreach
Hope everyone is having a nice Labor Day! We're a family owned wine club startup and have been handling SEO in house since things didn't go well with a previous SEO company (and sure we've done plenty of bad stuff along the way as well). In any case, we're writing a blog, including video entries etc. I've been handling basic email outreach about posts (ie if I write a winery profile, asking the winery to link to it) but don't really have time to handle more significant outreach than that. Can anyone make some suggestions about where to hire someone for an outreach job like this? It would undoubtedly be part time and Elance didn't give us anyone we were comfortable with. Thanks in advance!
Link Building | | MarkAse0 -
Help with outreach emails for content marketing
Hello, Could I get some feedback on how to make a good outreach email? I'm using buzzstream and Rand's awesome whiteboard friday. Here's what I've put together: Hi [first name] have you seen this [our niche] article? Paragraph 1 (short paragraph) comments on what the person is involved in, and ask them how these things are going Paragraph 2 (short paragraph) talks about how I've shared and retweeted their recent important posts. Paragraph 3 (short paragraph) Asks if they would link to our article. This niche article is really useful and needed to these people. Paragraph 4 (short paragraph) I'm not sure how to reasearch and put something interesting here. [my name] co-owner [our website]
Link Building | | BobGW0 -
Giveaway outreach - duplicate content?
I'm thinking of hosting a giveaway, and promoting this to bloggers. Thinking of how to go about this, I've run into a sort of a road block. I'm thinking the best way would be to attach a flyer detailing the giveaway so that bloggers have easy access to the information. However, I fear that a lot of them will just copy + paste from the flyer straight to a blog post - which will create a lot of duplicate content. Anybody in the community willing to share their experiences and how they were able to go around the duplicate content issue?
Link Building | | ALLee1 -
Blogger Outreach Tools
I am currently working on a few campaigns and initiatives which would be really good for blogger outreach.. Anyone used any of these services? http://www.grouphigh.com http://www.blogdash.com/ What's your thoughts?
Link Building | | EwanFisher0 -
What is the best wording you have seen in an outreach email?
We all get them and most of them are rubbish, very few of them have taken the effort to find out who they are emailing. So making it personal and doing some research first is essential but what about the wording of the email... can you share examples you like & that have had more success for you than others?
Link Building | | tonyatfat0