Historically, link building was critical for companies to appear in search results, as links have long been an important signal to search engines. However, the new link building is about mentions, social visibility, and building your company’s presence, says Alison Groves, Product Coordinator at Raven Internet Marketing Tools.
Groves
presented her three simple steps to link building for businesses in a
presentation this morning at NMX Las Vegas. Her process, she says,
revolves around relationship building and nurturing in order to earn
mentions from relevant websites. We need to focus less on the
technical and more on attracting targeted traffic by getting our
sites in front of the people most likely to be interested in our
product or service, she said.
With
those goals in mind, here are Groves’ three simple steps for link
building:
Step
One: Research
What
is a relevant website and how do I find it? Look for relevant
websites for your business, locally, in your industry, etc.
Start
with a simple Google search and query descriptive, long-tail
keywords. Take it a step further and add a site operator
(keyword-site:domain.com) to weed out the site you already know about
and discover new sources.
Don’t
forget that Facebook also has an internal search. Not only do you
find relevant websites, but you can see the social aspects of it as
well and begin to build relationships.
Use
the web catalog to find out which websites link to the site that you
are examining. Start building out your list of relevant, trusted
sites.
Step
Two: Outreach
You’ve
curated a list of really good, high quality, relevant websites. Now
how do you get a mention from them to bring awareness to your
business?
Stay
on point with your story. There are a few simple rules to remember
when doing outreach:
- Be genuine. Tell your story, be compelling and let people know you’re passionate about what you do and not just hitting them up for something.
- Don’t immediately go in for the kill. Build relationships first, no one wants to write about you the first time they’ve ever heard from you.
Start
at Social
Mention, where you can type in your keyword and see real-time
mentions across a variety of social sites. This helps you identify
people for outreach and you can actually start building a
relationship within the platform, as it is connected to social sites.
Create
Twitter
lists to curate people around relevant topics and begin to
contact people to start relationship building.
Try
out Rapportive
to find contact information on people you’re interested in
contacting. You might already have the person’s email, but this
gives you access to their social presences, where you might choose to
connect or follow up.
Step
Three: Keep Relationships Going
As
Alison said, there’s no “wham bam thank you maam” in link
building or online relationship building. Nurturing relationships is
incredibly important and pays dividends over time. Always reciprocate
and share the love you’ve received from website owners.
In
link building, it’s critical to stay organized and hang on to as
much data as you can. Even in a simple Excel sheet, keep track of the
date of your first outreach, dates of follow ups, the types of links
you’re working on or have acquired, the site domain, the website
owner’s contact information and any other information you may need
to track your link building efforts.
Conversation
notes are a handy tool, according to Groves. It’s helpful to have a
reminder of a conversation you might have had months ago, to avoid an
embarrassing situation where you forget how you are connected with
someone.
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