Hitting a brick wall with link building!
-
I am working on a new home furnishing e-commerce site, and started a couple of link building campaigns. Specifically, I have started a scholarship campaign with outreach going to schools, and a broken link building/content outreach campaign.
With both of these campaigns, I am targeting .edu domains first, and some high value blogs in that niche. I am hitting a brick wall with both!
These are both the types of campaigns I have tried before, with some degree of success. It seems that the webmasters have been getting so inundated with spam that they simply ignore emails. Does anyone have recent successful experience with these link building methods?
I would appreciate any advice on current link building methods if anyone is willing to share.
TIA
-
@Kevin_Hatanian There are different link-building strategies for different websites. But I can give you one working strategy that fits any website ( I did that with my vg tool 3.6 download website 1 aze bypass icloud activation lock tool
add tag and gb whatsapp from meta website2Find/buy drop domains on your topic or related topics
Explore the links coming to the drops. MOZ is the best tool to do this.
Establish 301 redirects to your most relevant pages
Enjoy... -
There are different link building strategies for different websites. But I can give you one working strategy that fits any website ( I did that with my website 1 and website2
- Find/buy drop domains on your topic or related topics
- Explore the links coming to the drops. MOZ is the best tool to do this.
- Establish 301 redirect to your most relevant pages
- Enjoy...
-
In contemporary link building, prioritize personalized outreach, emphasizing value for target websites. Build relationships through social media engagement, contribute valuable content, and participate in industry discussions. Create shareable, high-quality content that naturally attracts links. Foster genuine connections for sustainable and effective link-building strategies.
-
Yes, the Guest post is still working for link building to do website SEO. I have done it on my Impressions Kitchen project, you can see here website.
-
If you can write or if you have someone on staff who can write you might try sprinkling in some guest blogging. If it is a brand new site, you are going to need a lot of links from a lot of different places to get much traction.
I am sure you can find 8 or 10 magazines, blogs or industry trade publications specific to your industry. If you reach out to them with some well written blog posts from your site they may allow you to guest blog on their site with a link back to your site in the text or the bio section of the article. Once you have a few examples within your industry, you may be able to craft a better pitch to some other high authority blogs/websites not in your industry.
-
Thank you for the feedback.
We are creating content on a regular basis, and we also have a blog section. That is not enough to garner links on a new domain. Especially, when you are competing with sites that have thousands of linking domains.
-
Hatan,
First of all good luck with your new store. I believe it goes a long way.
I would say creating just backlinks isn't going to make this project a success. Create quality content on your website so people can attract. Make a blog section on your website and post blogs as per your niche integrate co-citation in your blogs so Google thinks that your content is legit and might have more relevant information than others. However, if you are you up for Edu links try Offering student discounts might get you a link on the student/faculty/staff discount page. Offering internships might get you on the university’s career services page. Relevancy with the content is more than just to create a bunch of links. man gotta know his limitations.” Likewise, a website has got to know its limitations — it must stop trying to be that which it is not, and reach out for links from those who know and respect that which it is.Create content and syndicate your content for better links and business opportunity.
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
-
Link Juice
Do you guys think having a guest post close to the root domain has more link juice that being in subfolders? example.com/123 vs example.com/nov/123 Both pages have the same amount of internal links and both pages don't have external links
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | arango201 -
INTERNAL LINKS strategy on our website
Hi Moz-ers, Currently doing an audit of our website. I have two questions on links. How can I see the current state of my internal links? Also, how can I improve our internal links on the website? what is a good framework to follow what should I avoid Thanks, looking forward to learning more on Moz!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Eric_S
Eric0 -
Client is paranoid about Google penguin penalty from getting links from a new website they are building
We have a client that is creating a new promotional website that consists of videos, brands and product reviews (SITE B). After a visitor watches a video on SITE B they will be given a "click to purchase" option that will lead them to the original website (SITE A). Our client is paranoid that since all the outgoing links on the new SITE B are going to the original SITE A there might be algorithm penalty (for one website or both). I find this very unlikely and even recommend "no follow" coding for a peace of mind. However are there any resources/links out there that can back up my argument that they will be alright? Thanks
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | VanguardCommunications0 -
Disadvantages of linking to uncompressed images?
Images are compressed and resized to fit into an article, but each image in the article links to the original file - which in some cases is around 5Mb. The large versions of the images are indexed in Google. Does this decrease the website's crawl budget due to the time spent downloading the large files? Does link equity disappear through the image links? Either way I don't think it's a very good user experience if people click on the article images to see the large images - there's no reason for the images to be so large. Any other thoughts? Thanks. 🙂
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Alex-Harford0 -
Indirect SEO boost from links
I have 2 ecommerce sites, each with a blog. I am increasing my linkbuilding efforts, but I don't want to build too many links directly to my 2 sites over a short period of time. I have decided that I will add a certain number of links to sites/pages that are already linking to my main sites (for example, a blog post on my blog, guest post on another blog, article submission, etc.). How much of a benefit can I expect in terms of rankings? Has anyone tested this out or experimented with something like this? What are the pros and cons? I appreciate thoughtful comments.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | inhouseseo0 -
Client participated in Link farm.
Our client participated in link exchange activity between 2008-2009. The service they used was http://link2me.com/ Its an obvious link farm scheme and their drop in traffic/rankings correlates to panda release early this year. The site does have tons of unique content, their are no technical SEO issues. They DO have great inbound links from some very authoritative sites (ie: peta.org) They do not rank even for unique strings taken directly from their content. Rankings for some very n long tail terms are virtually non existant. So the question were trying to figure out is, did the domain get hit with a penalty bc of past link farm participation, if so how can we correct? -- killing the account with link2me has already been done Could the domain NOT be penalized, and since all those external links were penalized did our site lose authority?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | vectormedia0 -
First Link Priority question - image/logo in header links to homepage
I have not found a clear answer to this particular aspect of the "first link priority" discussion, so wanted to ask here. Noble Samurai (makers of Market Samurai seo software) just posted a video discussing this topic and referencing specifically a use case example where when you disable all the css and view the page the way google sees it, many times companies use an image/logo in their header which links to their homepage. In my case, if you visit our site you can see the logo linking back to the homepage, which is present on every page within the site. When you disable the styling and view the site in a linear path, the logo is the first link. I'd love for our first link to our homepage include a primary keyword phrase anchor text. Noble Samurai (presumably seo experts) posted a video explaining this specifically http://www.noblesamurai.com/blog/market-samurai/website-optimization-first-link-priority-2306 and their suggested code implementations to "fix" it http://www.noblesamurai.com/first-link-priority-templates which use CSS and/or javascript to alter the way it is presented to the spiders. My web developer referred me to google's webmaster central: http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=66353 where they seem to indicate that this would be attempting to hide text / links. Is this a good or bad thing to do?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | dcutt0 -
Is there any SEO benefit for links shared in Facebook feeds or wall posts?
Is there any SEO benefit for links shared in Facebook feeds or wall posts?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | NinjaTEL30