Sunday, February 26, 2006

GETTING Inbound Links for Your Web Site

We discussed what inbound links are and why your web site needs them. Now, we move on to how to get good quality inbound links.

First, I'd like to address what is meant by a GOOD QUALITY inbound link.

What it is NOT:
1. Quality links are NOT found only through the URL that the web site with the link gives you. If you can't easily find a link to your web site on their web site, how is anyone else going to find it? Example: If you get an email from a webmaster or web site owner that says "I have already put your link on my links page. You may find your link at www.theirsite.com/linkspage.html", the first thing to do is visit the home page of their site: www.theirsite.com and see if you can find a link to the so-called "links page". Many times you can not. There is no link on any of their pages to their "links page". In fact their "links page" can only be found by knowing the correct URL to type in the address bar. How often do you think anyone is going to find that page? Answer: ALMOST NEVER! An inbound link of this type is absolutely worthless.

2. Quality links are NOT found through the purchase of them from a "link farm" web site. A "link farm" is kind of like a puppy mill. They exist only to supply pages and pages of links to other web site, but with no real value to the link because they are only listed alphabetically at best. Most of the time, the newest links are at the top of the pages, but as more links are added to the page, down the list yours goes. There is no organization to the list of links, so even if visitors searched their site for links to a subject their interested in, they won't probably find it.

3. Quality links are NOT found in link directories. Putting your link on a link exchange page containing hundreds of services similar to yours is not likely to generate very many clicks. This is why exchanging links with link directories is such a questionable waste of time. Web visitors rarely look at these directories.

So how DO you get good quality inbound links for your web site?

Links from sites that share your target audience will be an important source of traffic to your site. A visitor to the other web site sees the link to yours, clicks on it, and becomes your visitor. You should get as many links as possible on pages your target audience is likely to be visiting. The more people see your links, the more traffic you are likely to get. Your anchor text (the words that are linked) should be intriguing. It should be short and sweet, and descriptive - a reason for people to click on it. For instance, the words Award-winning Web Designer that link to my web site at www.cdwebmaker.com is a much better link for my website than the name of my business as a link like this CD WebMaker. Why? Mainly because the first one is a good description of what my web site is about. If a visitor has an idea of where a link will take them, they are more likely to click it.

Web sites that share you target audience are ones like your suppliers if you're in the construction business, complimentary businesses such as mortgage and real estate companies, and those businesses you partner with to supply a service like fly fishing shops who use a local rafting company for their guided fishing trips, or lodges near the destinations included in the fishing trip you are selling.

Finding good pages where you can place your link is not always easy. One method is to systematically do searches for your most important keywords -- the search phrases people are likely to use when looking for your kind of product or service. Many of the results will be competitors of yours. But one or two may be secondary sources such reference pages. Getting your link on some of these secondary sources is almost guaranteed to result in traffic, so it is worth the effort -- and sometimes the cost -- of getting listed in the resources that score high for your keywords. If a site does well for "fly fishing" and they service a different area than your fly fishing shop, why not exhange links - and traffic - with the shop who does what you do without actually competing with you?

Use articles to get traffic and impress the search engines while you're at it. Write about what you know, and embed a link to your web site in the article. This is one of the best methods of rapidly increasing your inbound links. Many times a well-written article will show up in hundreds of places on the web. And if it has your link embedded in it, that will obviously increase your inbound links. Webmasters pick up these articles because they want content to enhance the value of their sites.

The articles themselves will also generate direct traffic because people who read them are already interested in your subject matter, and are therefore more likely to click on your link. So the most valuable place to publish your article is in a themed or categorized article resource. For instance, if your product is "health" related, having it published on health-oriented sites will be more valuable than having it published on generic sites.

You can even take this a step further. If your article is about something more specific like breast cancer, then getting it published on sites that focus on that specific informmation will get more "reads", and have a greater influence on the search engines.

It is important to remember when embedding your link to try to use anchor text that contains one of your important keywords, not just your URL or web address. Remember that search engines are dumb. One of your objectives is to have them relate your website to specific search terms (keywords or key phrases). And the best way to do that is to use them as your anchor text: again, Award-winning Web Designer is much better than CD WebMaker and a hundred times better than www.cdwebmaker.com.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Google Maps (Made) EZ

I know, I know! One post a week seems to be my limit, right?

Well, I just tried (and succeeded!) to implement Chris Houser's "Google Maps EZ" and am SOOOO impressed with not only how EZ it is, but how he came up with the whole thing AND is sharing it with the rest of us. 3 cheers for Chouser!

Be sure to check out some of the other sites that have implemented his little slice of webmaster heaven on his gallery page.

If you use his script, be sure and donate to encourage him to keep up the wonderful work. It's well worth it!
Link

New Website Launch


Santa Fe Realty struggled getting traffic to their old web site, and had to duplicate their listings input to get them on the old site.

They came to CD WebMaker for an attractive, interactive site and got all the bells and whistles, including automatic listings display from the MLS, updateable areas and a real estate blog.

I also turned them on to a third-party vendor who supplies 150 pages of real estate related content and articles which even includes a newsletter to stay in touch with customers.

The finishing touch, a Google sitemap, should get them spidered and indexed for some healthy rankings, as well as a web site they can be proud of and their visitors will find useful.

Why Inbound Links are SO Important to Your Website

First, let's define an 'inbound, or incoming link'. An incoming link is a link on SOMEONE ELSE'S web site that directs visitors who click on it, to YOUR web site. Here's an example from text on the Cotopaxi Arkansas River KOA website on the page that talks about all the things to do while staying at their campground, under the 'Fishing' header:

"Brown and Rainbow Trout predominate, ranging from small fish, up to 22 inches long and maybe longer! You can catch-and-keep fish with bait here on the campground, and for miles up and down the river. There are catch-and-release, artificial waters nearby. Licenses are required for people 16 years of age and older. Check with the Colorado State Division of Wildlife for specific rules and regulations. For guided trips, supplies and information, we recommend Royal Gorge Anglers of Canon City."

The KOA site links directly to Royal Gorge Anglers' web site, so this is an 'inbound link' for Royal Gorge Anglers.

Why is that such a great thing for Royal Gorge Anglers? *TRAFFIC* is what it's all about. People visiting the KOA web site and interested in fishing while in the area will click on the Royal Gorge Anglers link there. Royal Gorge Anglers gets web traffic interested in the information and products their site has to offer. Interested traffic is always the best kind of traffic to get. Some estimates put the percentage of internet traffic resulting from this kind of link as high as 21% of total traffic.

Ok, so you now have an inbound link. Why would people click on it? One reason is they may see it as an endorsement. They're not from around here and don't know where to go for advice and services on fishing this area. By putting a link on its website, KOA has in effect told their visitors that "We know this company and think you'll find their web site helpful." Another reason is just plain old curiosity. If there is a link, especially in the text of the page, folks will click on it just to see what it's about - mainly because the site they're visiting put it there.

Inbound links are important in 3 ways:
1. They drive interested web traffic to your site, where you might not be found any other way. A link on a camping website is convenient for them to follow. Otherwise, they have to go to a search engine and take their chances on getting relevant results.

2. A link to your site from another tells the search engines that your site is relevant to the context. The Royal Gorge Anglers inbound link is in the KOA text about Fishing. That says to the search engines that Royal Gorge Anglers is about fishing, or an endorsement to the search engines about the relevance of your site to that keyword.

3. Once you get several inbound links, and I'm talking about 50-75 here, you'll get more traffic. If you get more traffice, the search engines make note of that as well, and rank you higher in their results for that key word or phrase. Their idea is "If so many real people are visiting this site for fishing information, it must be relevant to fishing."

Ok, now maybe I've convinced you that inbound links are important. You next question should be: What's the best way to GET inbound links? Stay tuned, the next article will go into detail on that....

Friday, February 10, 2006

Friday HaHa



My husband brought this in to me in my office this afternoon, and I just HAD to pass it along.

Have a great weekend everyone!

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Yet Another Google Shake-up

Word on the street is that another Google algorithm change is in the works for this month or next. This one's being called BigDaddy. Stupid name. Let's hope Google sticks to their guns against the government and doesn't become BigBrother.

What can you expect? Mainly another shifting and resettling of your web site search engine ranking on Google.

Google does several updates to their algorithms (the programming behind the search results) each year, and as far as I'm concerned, well-designed sites with fresh content always rise back to the top--eventually. So look for some shifting in your rankings again over the next couple months.

What interested me most about this article was the explanation of the Google Data Centers and different search results displayed simultaneously to different viewers.

While most of us probably think of Google as this giant data bank somewhere under the California sun with thousands of techies working feverishly to feed the machines that hold the entire Internet search results in their bellies, it's not an accurate visualization.

Google has several Data Centers around the country (the world?) that run and produce search results simultaneously. Like any network, updating them is not synchronous. If you've ever installed a new computer network, you know how it goes. First the server is brought online, then each work station is added in turn.

What this can mean is that during the update the results you see on your machine at your place of work may not be the results I see on my machine in my office, even though we are only a few miles apart. The article predicts which set of rankings will reflect the final outcome of the BigDaddy update, but I have to disagree. Who but Google knows which results set is the latest?

So if you check, and I hope you do, you may see some differences in the Search Engine Ranking report you receive from CD WebMaker and your own search results. I'd love to hear from you if that's the case, but don't worry, I think the Google dust will once again settle long enough to bring the results in line across the board.

At least until the next update...
Link

Thursday, February 02, 2006

New Web Site Launch


Lasting Impressions has been putting artists to work for over 25 years in Cañon City. They decided it was time to go global and expand their market.

I integrated the Zen Cart with their site, allowing them to offer retail pricing to the general public, and set up wholesale customers with discount pricing. The cart lets cusomters log in and check on orders, and see what the best-selling items are.

Payment modules span everyone's preferences to facilitate the sale: PayPal, check or money order, even purchase orders.

This cart is my favorite and definitely a CD WebMaker recommendation. Oh yeah, it's FREE with your hosting account offered by CD WebMaker too!