Don't be Afraid of URL Links

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By: Gareth Owen | Aug 24, 2010

Search engine optimizers know what makes a good link. It looks like this -- cheap Viagra -- and it links through to your client's page selling Viagra.

But half the job of good SEO is also keeping on top of what the search engines look for when deciding what's important. The rules are always changing.

How Many Contextual Links Really Look 'Natural'?

There's a slight problem with doubting the importance of quality links with clear anchor text: they work. Without a doubt, the most important element of improving your natural search ranking is to get quality inbound links with anchor text that reflects your target keywords. SEO is still a numbers game at its heart -- do enough of the right things and you'll rank number one.

But this is where SEOs need to think about what the search engines see when they manually check what results are being served and decide if the best suppliers are ranking well, or if it's just the biggest spammers.

What Makes a Link Relevant, Important, and Contextual?

There are plenty of examples of links created by SEOs with great anchor text. But if a gas and electricity link near the bottom of an article on cooking is actually "contextual," then I'm the Pope.

The dictionary definition of "contextual" just to labor the point, means "relating to, dependent on, or using context."

Clearly, anchor text doesn't always make a link contextual. We've all seen examples of irrelevant articles with links at the bottom. This is bad practice, bad for the user, and ultimately bad for SEO.

A truly quality contextual link in real life may not even have specific anchor text. What's more important: a PR4 link with "laptops" as anchor text from a blog about cats, or a URL link from a PR4 website about laptops and the best places to buy them from?

You can certainly make the case that links with relevant anchor text are all that matters -- that "Google isn't actually as clever as you think" -- and the SERPs will back up that view in the vast majority of cases. But staying ahead of the curve is just as important as finding ways to enhance your ranking in the first place. If Google is planning an update to reduce the power of spammers, then this is where they should start.

My Recommendation

Monitor and manage the spread of URL versus keyword-rich links across your client's profile and don't be afraid of getting really high quality links that only use your client's URL.

At a broader level, it's also important to try and build a database of the most important and relevant sites, and even individuals in each sector you target. Try to genuinely engage with them, through direct contact, through affiliate and display deals, and by using other more creative methods (where appropriate) to build strong business relationships online that add value to users and provide SEO value for the engines.

See the full story at: www.searchenginewatch.com

For more information about S.E.O, e-commerce web site design, e-mail marketing, web site design service and website development, just visit us at www.7strategy.com 


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This page contains a single entry by Website Marketing published on August 27, 2010 5:04 PM.

Your Blog... Your Best Friend, Or Your Worst Enemy was the previous entry in this blog.

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