Link Building Now: 5 Key Points You Need To Know

Great con­tent isn’t enough. Link build­ing helps make your site vis­i­ble to con­sumers who use search engines to find the prod­ucts you sell.

Kristine Schachinger By Kristine Schachinger. Join the discussion » 0 comments

Link build­ing helps make your site vis­i­ble to con­sumers who use search engines to find what­ev­er prod­uct you offer. This means more traf­fic (if done cor­rect­ly). And more traf­fic means you will hit your con­ver­sion goal (what­ev­er that might be) hard­er and bet­ter than your com­peti­tors that aren’t doing link build­ing, or aren’t doing it well.


You may have read a few arti­cles or heard about the “evils” or “dan­gers” of link build­ing. Even this week, a Google rep­re­sen­ta­tive came for­ward and warned peo­ple against link build­ing, say­ing it could “cause more prob­lems … than it actu­al­ly helps.”

But is this real­ly true? Let’s look at what link build­ing means now, and why it’s impor­tant.

1. What is Link Building Now?

Link build­ing is the art of cre­at­ing links to a site that appear to be nat­ur­al, but are not.

Natural Links

A nat­ur­al link is one that is earned sim­ply by pub­lish­ing con­tent. For exam­ple, your brand pub­lish­es an arti­cle. Peo­ple see it, like it, and link to it from their own web­site. This link says to the dig­i­tal world, “Hey, this is some­thing you need to know about!”

Over time, as more and more web­sites link to your brand’s web­site, Google takes notice and decides it is a pop­u­lar, author­i­ta­tive, or infor­ma­tive site. If you gar­ner enough of these links, your site will receive more vis­i­bil­i­ty in Google’s search results and earn more traf­fic, and because you rank well, more peo­ple will find you and link to you, fur­ther strength­en­ing your web­site’s vis­i­bil­i­ty.

For new­er or small­er brands, the prob­lem is you like­ly won’t earn enough prop­er links nat­u­ral­ly posi­tion for much of any­thing – espe­cial­ly not real­ly impor­tant traf­fic-dri­ving, site-con­vert­ing, mon­ey-pro­duc­ing search terms (key­words).

Types of Link Building

First let’s talk about what link build­ing is not. Link build­ing is not hir­ing a com­pa­ny, agency, or con­sul­tant to buy links to your site with secret meth­ods they won’t tell you about.

Google loud­ly dis­cour­ages link buy­ing. Though some can do it well, few get it right. When link buy­ing goes wrong, your site can suf­fer extreme penal­ties that bury you so deep in the search results that peo­ple won’t be able to find you when they’re search­ing for you. Peo­ple lose jobs.

Link cre­ation typ­i­cal­ly falls into the fol­low­ing cat­e­gories:

  • Edi­to­r­i­al Links (nat­ur­al): Cre­ate great con­tent and peo­ple link to you. These are most­ly nat­ur­al and acquired through con­tent devel­op­ment, mar­ket­ing, and pro­mo­tion.
  • Man­u­al Links (link build­ing): These are added by reach­ing out to oth­er web­sites, edi­tors, or rela­tion­ships your SEO has with oth­er con­tent providers. You pro­vide val­ue to them, though you don’t do a link exchange. Think viral mar­ket­ing, con­tent cre­ation on oth­er sites in top­ic nich­es, and influ­encer mar­ket­ing.
  • Self-Cre­at­ed (spam­my link cre­ation or link buy­ing): This is the cat­e­go­ry you must be extreme­ly care­ful about. In the past, you could use this method to cre­ate pro­files in blogs with links to your site, add to direc­to­ries, sub­mit to arti­cle sites, or add a paid blog post on some­one else’s domain. Buy­er beware: these tac­tics aren’t 100 per­cent dead. When not done well, these links will hurt your site.

2. How Does Link Building Work Now?

Search engine algo­rithms, and the role links play in those algo­rithms, are quite com­plex. Think of it this way:

You go to a net­work­ing event. When you arrive, you see a large group of peo­ple sur­round­ing a man in the mid­dle of the room. The peo­ple are hang­ing on his every word.

Mean­while, at the far end of the room you see a man alone. Qui­et. Nobody seems to know who he is.

Which per­son are you most like­ly to want to talk to?

From a pure­ly busi­ness per­spec­tive, you want to find out why every­one is so enam­ored with the man sur­round­ed by so many inter­est­ed peo­ple.

That is the essence of how a search engine sees links to your site. Web­sites link to your site because they like your brand, what you have to say, or what your site offers. It is a sort of pop­u­lar­i­ty vote, so Google sees this and says that must be a qual­i­ty site.

Now, what if you go over to the mid­dle of the room and start ask­ing peo­ple why they are so engaged with this indi­vid­ual. The first per­son tells you, “Oh, I don’t actu­al­ly care. He just want­ed peo­ple to think he was impor­tant, so he paid me.”

What is your per­cep­tion of that individual’s val­ue now? It’s prob­a­bly low­er now, right? Then you ask more and more peo­ple and you find out every­one there is paid. So now you real­ize this per­son does­n’t have the busi­ness val­ue you thought he did and you will like­ly seek out oth­er, more trust­wor­thy peo­ple.

The search engines, espe­cial­ly Google, are the same way. If you’re nat­u­ral­ly pop­u­lar, they see you as hav­ing val­ue. If they found out you bought your friends (links) then they are like­ly to ques­tion your val­ue or even pun­ish you for fak­ing it.

3. Link Building – Why Content Isn’t Enough

You may have heard or been told that all you need is great con­tent. This is a myth. Yes, you need great con­tent, but you can’t rely com­plete­ly on great con­tent to reach con­sumers.

Great, link­able, sharable con­tent is nec­es­sary. But with­out the links to sup­port your site’s vis­i­bil­i­ty, you’ll be alone in a dark cor­ner of a par­ty, and no one will say hel­lo because they can’t see you.

For Google to see your con­tent as valu­able, oth­ers have to “tell” Google that it is valu­able. One of the most impor­tant ways Google under­stands val­ue is by look­ing at and eval­u­at­ing links.

Now, con­sid­er that 90 per­cent of the peo­ple who use Google search nev­er go past Page 1 when look­ing for some­thing online, who will know you are there? And if no one can see you because Google has not seen peo­ple link to you, then how will you get peo­ple to link to you?

If a tree falls in the for­est and no one is there, does it make a sound? Google is a mighty big for­est.

4. Link Builders: The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly

One of the most impor­tant aspects of link build­ing is mak­ing sure you hire some­one who knows all the ins and outs of acquir­ing links that appear to be nat­ur­al. This is not just in terms of link type, but how fast you acquire the links, the anchor text, and the quan­ti­ty. Don’t over­step in any of those areas because Google aggres­sive­ly penal­izes those that break their rules.

There are some quick ways to fig­ure out what your link per­son has in the works for you. Note: None of these are 100 per­cent true, but they can help you sep­a­rate a skilled, pro­fes­sion­al link builder from snake oil ped­dlers.

The Good

A link builder who is edu­cat­ed on how to prop­er­ly acquire links to your site won’t be cheap. This is one of the most impor­tant lessons for any­one pur­chas­ing these ser­vices to learn. Expen­sive does­n’t always mean good, but cheap will almost always mean bad.

Why? If you are prop­er­ly link build­ing, it means you have estab­lished rela­tion­ships, sought out sites where you can place a link and not trig­ger the Google algo­rithm or a man­u­al penal­ty. It means you don’t use blog net­works, arti­cle direc­to­ries, and guest post­ing (unless that guest post is on a qual­i­ty site, such as The Huff­in­g­ton Post or Time).

While there are excep­tions to every rule, if some­one tells you their plan is only to place links in mul­ti­ple paid direc­to­ries, forum post­ings, and pur­chased guest posts – run. These tac­tics may have worked two years ago, they are only suit­ed for sites where the goal is to make mon­ey for as long as they can. It is nev­er appro­pri­ate for your brand domain.

The Bad

Here’s a sam­ple list of some tech­niques to stay away from.

  • Forum post­ings.
  • Arti­cle direc­to­ries.
  • PR sites (PR is OK, but using their site for links is not).
  • Paid guest blog posts.
  • Place­ment on sites that are not rel­e­vant to your industry/topic(s).
  • Direc­to­ries in gen­er­al (unless they are reviewed and hand edit­ed).

The Ugly

The ugly side of link acqui­si­tion is the spam­my link buy. These links are often cheap, maybe even a few hun­dred dol­lars.

You prob­a­bly won’t notice any issues at first. All the new links will prob­a­bly give you a nice boost to start. But once Google fig­ures out that you bought bad links, your organ­ic traf­fic will most like­ly fall off a cliff.

Recov­ery is always expen­sive and there are some who nev­er recov­er. Nev­er pur­chase quan­ti­ty over qual­i­ty. Google knows about every wide­ly-used short­cut. Don’t be pen­ny wise and pound-fool­ish.

5. What Link Building Can’t Do For Your Brand

As pow­er­ful as link build­ing is, it can’t be your entire SEO plan. A full SEO strat­e­gy also must address tech­ni­cal SEO as well as on-page and off-page opti­miza­tion.

Even a site that has more nat­ur­al links than you could hope for won’t be eas­i­ly found in Google search if, for exam­ple, the site is slow, the meta tags aren’t opti­mized, or their page design keeps Google from index­ing them prop­er­ly.

Even if your link strat­e­gy is per­fect, there are many rea­sons you site won’t achieve its full poten­tial, so do not over­look this. How­ev­er, one thing is sure: no mat­ter how good those oth­er com­po­nents are han­dled, if you don’t have links, it’s like­ly that you’ll be nowhere to be found at those crit­i­cal moments when peo­ple are look­ing for you.

Kristine Schachinger

Written by Kristine Schachinger

CEO

Kristine has worked for 18 years in the creation, development, implementation and maintenance of websites in all sectors including government, academia, entertainment and e-commerce with a focus on usability, architecture, human factors, W3C, Section 508 and WCAG accessibility compliance as well additional specializations in SEO, ORM and social media. Currently focusing on monthly SEO Support, Site Audits and Penalty Recovery working with small business to Fortune 500 companies on increasing their website visibility and online presence.

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