Help with a Link Building Audit
-
A customer wants to have a better position with a keyword (he has already a great position, but he wants more...). So he need a bit of extra link building to have better position in serp(this niche is very competitive so on page is not sufficient).
He asked me to do a Link Building Analysis to find good link opportunities.
How can i structure a good report? I need something like a Seo Audit for link building.That's my idea:
Identify what are the business objectives
Identify the brand strenghts and weakness
Find the strongest competitors and understand their tactics
See what are the top links that they have
Copy their best strategies
Find new strategies not used by the competitors
What else i can do for my link building audit? -
Thank you Calin! Great answer!
-
Great stuff Calin!!!
-
Hi Maximillian21,
I am going to echo much of what Patrick has already shared, I believe he provided excellent resources for you to follow. However, I wanted to address the three points in your second message.
-
I think any SEO consultant can attest to the fact that a large part of our job is education. If your client believes building a bunch of links is the only solution to building better rankings I would suggest taking a moment to educate him/her. Believe me when I say this will save you the headache down the road if the singular link building strategy doesn't have the desired result.
-
Earning links in any niche is difficult, especially today. As a service provider, it's a challenge to tie your services directly to the quantity of links you acquire. It's also, in my opinion, not the best long term strategy for you or the client. Link building is fickle. In some cases, a few directory submissions can have a positive impact on your rankings. In other case, even the most authoritative links seemingly do very little.
As Patrick alluded to, by layering other services, such as content marketing and social, you provide additional exposure for the business, traffic to the website and value in the services you provide. It's a challenge to be sure, however, I would be hesitant to initiate an SEO campaign that is focused purely on rankings, without at least considering content and social.
In this day and age, most people on the Q & A forum will recommend a holistic approach to an SEO campaign.
- I believe your original list and the additional details provided by Patrick will serve you well.
A few additional questions I would include:
- What differentiates your business from your competitors (you may find a few gold nuggets you can use in content)
- Do you have resources, media, graphics, etc (can you quickly build resources from existing content).
- What are your customer's main pain points (can you build something to solve this problem).
- Do you have any partnerships, sponsorships or memberships that could provide a backlink (this tends to be low hanging fruit)?
- Where do your customers hang out online? (are there popular forums where you could distribute your content).
These are just a few additional ideas. Best of luck with your project.
-
-
Thank you Patrick! Your advice is very helpful! I need some explanations, if you can help me you will have my eternal gratitude
My issues with that strategy is this:
-
My customer know very little about Seo, he thinks that having a bunch of extra link is sufficient to boost the rankings...the strategy that you proposed need other persons (a social media manager, a content marketer etc.) and i'm sure that he are mentally ready to pay so much
-
My niche is particular (=is a niche of automotive). It's not easy to earn natural links for this niche. Because the majority of blogs of rental in my country is owned by competitors, and i suspect that many customers pay also to have their brand mentioned on the autoritative sites of our indutry to pay to have your brand mentioned in automotive blogs...so you can image that is not easy to create a link earning strategy.
-
So i need to interview my customer to gain information. What information i have to know from him?
-
-
Hi there
I only say this because I don't want you banking on acquiring links as the only way to boost ratings - there is SO much more that goes into increasing rankings than acquiring links - ultimately those tactics acquire links themselves. I put my thoughts below.
Your process should be:
-
Identify business goals and objectives
-
Align with customer and target audience goals (build a Venn Diagram)
-
What unique value do you provide?
-
Now, how do you best relay that value?
-
Identify industry trends
-
News
-
Seasonalities
-
Conferences
-
etc.
-
Identify content / content types that get the most traction
-
Topics & variations
-
Videos
-
Images
-
Guides
-
How tos
-
Blog
-
etc.
-
Create an online experience that caters to your target audience needs & goals
-
Create an online experience that is dconsistent with your business voice and tone
-
Distribute content where your audience is
-
Social
-
Partnership opportunities
-
Business listings
-
Email
-
Blogs
-
Set benchmarks to track progress
-
Landing pages
-
Time on site
-
Bounce rates
-
CTR
-
Rankings
-
Impressions
-
Conversion rates
-
Check OSE, GWT, and Majestic to track links acquired
-
Use Moz Analytics and GWT to track rankings
-
Rinse and repeat
I understand the desire to acquire links and boost your rankings, but you have to acquire links in a natural and organic process. You also have to remember that your website is completely different than your competitors. If you copy their strategies and links, are you really separating your yourself from them and offering unique value? Remember, you don't want to be the best, you want to be the ONLY. Everyone can claim to be the "best", but copying strategies don't get you there.
The only way you can find new strategies is by learning who you are as a company, who your audience is, building & distributing content that speaks to your targets, and measuring & tweaking your process to more fully fulfil needs and goals.
I would read the following resources as well**:**
- Content Audit - https://moz.com/blog/content-audit-tutorial
- Link Audit - http://searchenginewatch.com/sew/how-to/2207168/how-to-conduct-a-link-audit
- Link Removals & Risk Mitigation - https://moz.com/blog/link-audit-guide-for-effective-link-removals-risk-mitigation
- Competitive Analysis - https://moz.com/blog/illustrated-seo-competitive-analysis-workflow
Find where the industry and competitors are missing the mark and hit it yourself. Fill the gaps and the links will come to you!
Hope this all makes sense and helps. Let me know if you have any questions or need any help. 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
-
Should a business requestion nofollow links from businesses it has commercial relationships with?
I am working for a motor homes company that works with a network of dealers. Having just analysed the site I notice that dealers are sending links to the site - lots of them. They are all follow links and are freely given. ADDED: There are upwards of a million new affiliate backlinks and then a load of pretty normal freely given backlinks with dealers who have commission arrangements, etc., with the company on motorhome sales. Now this doesn't feel right to me because even if it isn't purposefully manipulative, it may appear so because of clear commercial relationships between my client company and the dealer businesses. So I will recommend nofollow althought the site will lose a huge number of backlinks as a result. What are your thoughts on this?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | McTaggart0 -
Disappearing Links Black Hat ?
I have seen reports of Black hat spamming with dodgy links but we have another issue with a clients site. The site had a small number of solid following links about 60 which had been in place for years and in the past few weeks all but those directly under their control have ceased to link. At the same time a very aggressive competitor has entered their market which is owned by the officers of an SEO company. Could it be that they have somehow disavowed the links to the site to damage it how do we find out? there are now just 10 following links?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | Eff-Commerce0 -
Should I disavow this Link?
I am trying to clean up my link profile to get rid of a partial penalty and am not sure to do with one of the links to my site http://www.seoco.co.uk The link is 100% organic and has come from a foreign language site that published an infographic that I did: http://www.clasesdeperiodismo.com/2012/12/23/la-evolucion-de-las-redes-sociales-este-ano-en-una-infografia/ The thing is that in the link to my homepage they have used the anchor text SEO as opposed to my company name. I have already sent them an email and asked them to change the anchor text but they haven't responded so I am guessing they probably wouldn't respond to a removal request either. Should I disavow it?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | Eavesy0 -
Unnatural inbound links message from Google Webmaster Tools!
Hi Everyone, I just got this message from GWT(image below) This is probably a penguin Penalty. What is clear is I have to find the best and most efficient way to tackle this issue. We will probably lose tons of traffic in the next couple of weeks so I would like to get the best suggestions and maybe a guideline on how to do this in the most effective way! Thank you! 1a0X2M2a1h0A
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | Ideas-Money-Art0 -
Potential spam issue - back links
Hi - we have a client whom we work with for SEO. During a review we noticed in Webmaster Tools, there was an IP address with over 30,000 links to our clients site. The IP address is 92.60.0.123. From looking up the IP address details, it looks like it is based in Europe - but we are unable to establish what it is, where the links are and who created it. We are concerned it could be a potential spammer trying to cause an issue with the SEO campaign. Is there any way of finding out any more details apart from the basic information about the location of the IP address? Also - if we submit a disavow via webmaster tools, we are unsure what issue it will have on the clients site if we do not know what it is and the type of links it is creating. Any ideas? Thanks for your help! Phil.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | Globalgraphics0 -
People buying links to their profiles on my site
As we have a major Penguin update looming in the background, I am looking for expert advice on how to deal with professionals buying into link programs whether they are doing it deliberately or not. Our site provides detailed profile information on hundreds of 1000's of professionals and some professionals apparently believed that buying into link program will lift their profile in the SERPS. About 10 professionals have paid shady link building companies to buy links to their profiles on our site. The biggest offender bought over 1,500 links to his profile. Aside from adding the known toxic links to our disavow file, what else can we do to avoid any link penalties? I can think of three distinct options and would love to hear feedback especially based on actual experience. Option 1. 404 the existing profile - "http://www.anysite.com/jones_smith" and create a new URL "http://www.anysite.com/jones_smith_1". Option 2. Keep the existing URL and fully rely on the disavow file. Contact the professionals and kindly ask them to stop buying links and to contact their link building companies to remove the links. Any other ideas?
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | irvingw0 -
Internal Link Structure
Hello Everyone, I'd be grateful for a little feedback please; This is my site, the home page
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | TwoPints
of which is targeting the phrase jobs in **** (I'm sure you can fill i the gap
:)) I've made a few changes recently which has included having the
Contract jobs in **** | Permanent Jobs in **** | Temporary Jobs in **** & Today’s
jobs in **** links added to the homepage... Perhaps foolishly and impatiently, I did all of these at the
same time, whilst also changing the sites internal link structure, specifically
for all links to the homepage, which previously were like <a<br>href="/">Home and have now been changed to <a<br>href="/">jobs in ****</a<br></a<br> Meaning that I have 4500 internal links with the anchor text
'jobs in ****' But rather than seeing an improvement n my SERPs ranking, I have
gone from page 2 of Google to page 6, and falling...... Apart from being inpatient, what have I done wrong? Many thanks0 -
Does SEOMOZ provide any help regarding to Link Buildiing and directory submission?
Hi Everybody, I am trying to work out how off-site SEO works and I am facing some troubles when it comes to link building. Does SEOMOZ provide any solution to this? Regards, Guido.
White Hat / Black Hat SEO | | SilbertAd0