Finding reciprocal links for your site
Author: Dianne Reuby
Article:
Links help your popularity with the search engines. They should also bring you more visitors, if the sites that link to you are
relevant, and have high traffic themselves.
The key word here is "relevant". Link farms and fr'ee-for- all
link sites will probably reduce your ranking and visitor
popularity if anything. After all, if you visit a fishing site,
you probably won't be interested in links to baby food recipes,
car maintenance, or knitting. That's the view the search engines
take too - it's not the quantity, it's the quality that counts.
Visitors from those links won't be buying much either. People
prefer to buy from specialists or experts, rather than a
jack-of-all-trades.
So what's a good link?
Take a good look round the site. Is the navigation easy? Is the
content useful, and relevant to your visitors? Are you happy to
recommend it to them?
If the answer to those questions is "Yes", then delve further.
If you're selling a product or service, will they be in direct
competition? If so, you won't want to link to them. Check the
site with the IE Google toolbar (a free download from
http://toolbar.google.com ) and see how high it ranks with
Google. If it's the same as, or higher than, your own site, then
it's worth considering for a link.
Is the link page easy to find? It's no good having a link on a
high-ranked site, if their visitors never see it. Ideally, they
should link to it from every page of their site, and the link
should be part of the main navigation - not down at the bottom
of the page in the "small print".
So how to find those links?
Some you'll come across yourself, while surfing, if your website
is related to an interest that you have. I've even found good
links when helping my children with their homework! Keep a
"jotter" program available while you surf, so that you can make
a record of these sites. Or use a real jotter if you prefer!
But the tool I use most, and which has made finding and
maintaining my link pages much easier, is Arelis - Axandra's
Reciprocal Links Solution,
http://www.firstwebbuilder.co.uk/info/arelis.html
You can search for links by keyword, by using a website that has
a similar topic, or by checking for sites that aready link back
to you.
Once you've deleted any sites that you aren't interested in, you
can then use the built-in browser to visit the sites and decide
if they should be included in your links directory.
Arelis stores these in a database. You can email the webmaster
(Arelis will search out the email addresses while it finds
possible link sites.) You can categorise the sites however it
suits you. You also have a host of options on how far your
reciprocal link with each site has got, from "Not contacted yet"
to "Links back", with a range of other options to cover all
eventualities.
Once you've agreed a reciprocal link, enter the URL of both your
link page and theirs into the database, and then Arelis will
check your links whenever you tell it to. It will check incoming
and outgoing links, so you'll quickly see if one of the links on
your site is broken, or if the link-back to your site no longer
works.
The paid versions allow you to email and to create link pages
direct from the program, as well as creating databases for more
than one site.
You can try Arelis at no charge - the help file will soon have
you finding links for your site, though you'll need to use your
email program to contact webmasters.
Here's the link:
http://www.firstwebbuilder.co.uk/info/arelis.html
Linking etiquette
If you want to exchange links, it's courtesy to add their link
to your site first. That way they know you're serious.
Make sure your link page can be accessed from all the pages of
your site, and that the link isn't hidden in tiny print at the
bottom of the page. Include it in your main navigation if
possible.
You may offer special status to sites that link back - a logo or
icon by their name, or being listed at the top of your link page.
Don't overload your link pages with graphics. If you use an
individual button for every link, your page will load much more
slowly.
Be polite when you email webmasters - it's easy to forget that
they're people just like you! Don't be offended if they don't
want to link back. If the link is useful (and it should be - or
why ask for an exchange?) then I leave it on my site anyway.
When you send out a reciprocal link request, include the exact
URL where their link can be found - don't expect them to search
your link pages until they find their link.
When emailing webmasters, give details of your site title, URL,
and a brief description - no more than two lines. Make it
meaningful. Avoid descriptions like "The World's Greatest Web
Site". This doesn't tell anything about your site content - just
that the webmaster has a big head!
Happy linking!
About the author:
Dianne Reuby is co-author of the e-book "First Website Builder".
Dianne created and runs the First Web Builder site, dedicated to
providing ebooks and tips for new webmasters.
Visit FWB at
http://firstwebbuilder.co.uk/
Finding Reciprocal Linking
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