Linkbuilding in Latin America
-
I've started a magazine in Latin America about creative ways of making money, working from home, learning technical skills from home. We are not that spammy like other "make money" magazines, but of course we want to sell information products in the future.
So far we are 3 people.
I already have years of SEO experience but I built blog networks of expired domains and ranked for specific keywords. In this case I need more Brand backlinks and get Domain Authority.
Unfortunately we failed pretty hard so far.
What we tried:
1.) We searched for 2 infographic linkbaits that were very successful in the US, redesigned them, used similar content and reached out to around 60 websites. We offered them that we write a guest post made for their website from a professional journalist and embedding our infographic. From the 60 websites and no deal. The graphics costed us around 400$ to create.
2.) We tried to interview people (in the hope that they will link back to us from their website after the interview). Unfortunately from around 120 e-mails only two responded - only one linked back to us. We contacted them through the contact forms of their websites.
3.) We offered money for a blog post. After 2 hours of reaching out, we got 6 backlinks for an average of 40$ per link + time.
Is the whole blogging culture only existing in Anglistic countries? It seems to me that people only link out to big brands (who started offline) or they charge money.
The websites that rank for terms like "make money" (ganar dinero) have only paid- and spam backlinks. A few exceptions by people who had contacts to journalists of big magazines.
What's my strategy?
-
Thank You Samuel.
I wished I had someone like you several years ago.
Do You think there are cultural differences in seeding content? And if so, how do I adapt to them?
For example, we found out that people are very responsive in Latin America if we contact them on Facebook. For me contacting people on Facebook in the US was worthless because they don't check their "other messages" and it's some kind of creepy.
I already found out that it's more about developing relationships to people than creating good content (in compare to the US/Germany).
-
I built blog networks of expired domains and ranked for specific keywords... Unfortunately we failed pretty hard so far.
It's probably because blog networks are quickly found by Google and penalized. See here. Today, after Penguin and more, the goal is not to build links but to earn links.
You're falling into the old trap of thinking that "SEO" is a "bag of tricks" to get you to #1 for a set of keywords. Those tricks worked years ago, but thankfully, they no longer do. "SEO" is not something you do; "SEO" is what happens as the result of good web development and good marketing. "SEO" is a collection of best practices that help you to build an online brand that deserves to rank highly.
Take the search phrase "best London restaurants." Google does not want to list results based on keywords, content, or links. Google wants to list results based what the people living in London actually think are the best restaurants.
Today, the key to "SEO" success is to build an online brand through the following process:
1. Build a great website on a technical SEO level (fast-loading, optimized for mobile, etc.) with a wonderful user experience (UX).
2. Publish original, authoritative content on the topics that would interest your audience.
3. Use public relations and social media to promote both your website as a whole and the content on the website
4. Repeat steps two and three indefinitely, and traffic, links, rankings, and more will grow naturally over time.
It's not easy, and it takes time. But nothing good ever comes quickly.
What I guess I am saying: To be successful today, think less like an "SEO" and more like a "marketer." What makes you special and differentiates you from other similar websites? What is your brand? How will you position the website? What's your messaging? Those questions are more important to answer today than those about keywords and links.
Good luck!
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
-
A lot of blogs use wordpress or blogspot, are these blogs still useful for SEO in terms of linkbuilding, or should they be avoided?
I am very new to linkbuilding and SEO as a whole, so please forgive my ignorance. Reaching out to bloggers is a common tactic, but I've found a lot of people tend to blog with the assistance of wordpress or blogspot. I was wondering whether these blogs are still useful for SEO or if it is best to avoid them? Thanks in advance, Lewis
Link Building | | Samstore0 -
Root-Domain vs Subdomain Linkbuilding
Hello Mozzers! Couple of days ago I received a request to start optimizing a wordpress website, the domain itself has been around for around 10-12 years so it's it can be considered as one that has real history behind it. The page has been moved from HTML/FLASH to wordpress about 3 - 4 years ago and hasn't been any SEO maintenance on it. The site used to rank for first position with several keywords, but now understandably, it has greatly decreased. My main question would be, that when I've checked the root domain's and the subdomain's metrics with MOZ Open Site Explorer, the sub domain (with "www.") showed a PA 40 and 90 external links while the root domain (without "www.") only has 27 PA and 6 External links. I know that the 301 or server redirects only transfers about 90% of the link juice to the targeted URL but the difference between the 2 results seem way too big for me. What do you think? Is this normal?
Link Building | | adamdankhazi
During future link building is it more beneficial to target the root domain so the page won't lose that "10%" by redirecting the new link from sub-domain to root domain?
Is it possible to get more juice transferred? Thank you very much,
Adam0 -
Questions About LinkBuilding
HI, I am about to start link building for my website. I have made a 5 month plan. Can anyone have a look on my linkbuilding plan ? Any suggestions ? Thanks Web2. Submission (Monthly 10 Submission ) (( Squdoo, Hubpage , Tumblr , Blogspot , WordPress )) Blog Commenting (Very Related and Related Comment ) ( Monthly 15 Comments Maximum) Guest Posting ( Must be no-follow links ) (Monthly 10 submission ) Press Release (Weekly Distribution ) (( Distributing 1 Press release the whole month ,15 Submission maximum High PR and Related Only )) Directory Submission (Related Directory Submission Only ) N.B:: Don’t get confused with article directory submission. ( Monthly 10 Submission ) Rss Syndication Submit Infographics (Monthly 10 Submission )
Link Building | | businessowner1 -
Started linkbuilding, traffic drops
So I have a couple 3 year old projects I left intact for the last 2 years. Lately I tried to revigorate them. I started to build links to pages that used to be in Google top ten, but the more links I build, the more I lose out on traffic. The main keywords stay around the same position, I suppose the loss in appearances and traffic that can be seen in webmaster tools is mainly due to long tails I do not check the rankings for. I want to ask you guys if anybody have experienced similar data? I suppose it might be due to the exact anchor tags that I have used 3 years ago, so I already started removing those to see if it has a positive effect. I wanted to ask you, maybe somebody has experienced the same and already knows the reason and a solution for this phenomenon?
Link Building | | snetface0 -
Help with blog for linkbuilding location.
I work for a company that has www.widget.com. This is the site we do all our business under. Right now there is no linkbuilding so I would like to create a blog to start linkbuilding. We also own www.widget.info. Can I run the blog under .info and still get the credit on the .com or are they considered completely separate entities that have nothing to do with one another? The reason I would prefer it on the .info is it gives me complete control. By putting it on out .com I have to talk to the developers to install wordpress and mysql, when I would much rather just be able to do it on my own. Any ideas?
Link Building | | EcommerceSite0 -
Linkbuilding - Which is best?
Okay so we all know that: 1 Link on 10 Sites > 10 Links on 1 Site (potentially untrue with spammy links on 1 site than 10 links on high authority but that's not the point of this discussion) I've had some discussions at work I seem to be fighting a losing battle... So the questions is... which is better? 1 Link on 1 Site vs 5 Links on 1 Site (same site) We seem to operate on the form of - once we have a link from the site (in most cases blogs for product reviews / guest posts) - that's it , we move on and never talk to them again. For continued growth of links, would it be beneficial if we guest posted on some sites once a month? Then we get a steady stream of links each month.
Link Building | | FreddieChatt1 -
Which of example gives more link juice in linkbuilding?
Which of following examples will give more juice for page in link buiding? 1. Quality phones <a href="">nokia</a>, low price.
Link Building | | ATCnik
Simple text around anchor 2. Online shop of nokia phones. Also free service for <a href="">nokia</a> phones.
Relevant text around the anchor 3. Online shop of nokia phones. Where to buy <a href="">nokia</a> phone?
Relevant text around the anchor + Interrogative form 4. Online shop of nokia phones. How much is the <a href="">nokia</a> 5230 in USA?
Relevant text around the anchor + Interrogative form + Regional binding1 -
Linkbuilding URL Problem
Hi, I work for Perfectly Engraved. A lot of our links point to http://www.perfectlyengraved.co.uk/. However that address forwards to - http://www.perfectlyengraved.co.uk/ecommerce/scripts/default.htm. Should we ensure our links point to http://www.perfectlyengraved.co.uk/ecommerce/scripts/default.htm or does it not make difference? I've put our forwarding code below. <%@ Language=VBScript %> <% Option explicit Response.Buffer = true Response.Redirect "http://www.perfectlyengraved.co.uk/ecommerce/scripts/default.htm" %> Also, would it help if we did a 301 redirect from http://perfectlyengraved.co.uk/ecommerce/scripts/default.htm to http://www.perfectlyengraved.co.uk/ecommerce/scripts/default.htm? As both addresses for every page on our site return the page with or without www Thanks
Link Building | | Aardvark0