Stop Getting Links – Part 2

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Note: This is Part 2 of a series – click here to see Part 1.

So, last time we talked about how you need to rethink your linking strategy to focus on building real connections rather than just plastering links all over creation.

Here's a summary of how I think we can ethically and profitably build connections in our niches:

1. Identify "tribes" of people with common interests
that we want to target with our messaging.

2. Find the bloggers in those tribes who have
readership and influence, and who regularly write about
your niche topics.

3. Of those tribal blogs, identify the ones that will
also give you SEO benefit through linking (primarily,
blogs that don't add rel=nofollow to links in their
comments).

4. Comment on these bloggers' posts and REALLY
contribute and add value. Link not only to your own
resources on the subject, but help strengthen the tribe
itself by cross-linking these bloggers to each other.

That's it. By practicing this kind of linking, you not only get the SEO benefit of keyword-rich links in your comments, but you visibly serve a community of active web users.

You strengthen tribal communities in your niche by connecting people to information they really want, whether you're the source of that information or not.

On top of that, you will trigger really strong reciprocity and goodwill in the bloggers whose sites you contribute to regularly. You add value to THEIR sites with your comments, and you send THEM traffic by recommending their sites to other readers.

Pretty soon, the most visible and influential members of your target tribes are going to jump at the chance to work with you.

Here's where we'll take your new CONNECTION-building strategy to the next level.

We're going to talk about Article Marketing. Now, I know most of you are already familiar with article marketing to some degree. But this (just like last time) will put a new and different spin on what you may have tried.

The most common article marketing practice involves placing articles up on major article directories like EzineArticles, GoArticles, and ArticleCity. And that's great. If you're already placing your niche articles there, keep doing it. If you're not, you should start.

The main reason you want articles in those directories is because the search engines love them, and it's quite likely your articles will rank for your keywords if you wrote them well. If those pages rank high, and they link back to you, it's an instant SEO boost. It's because of that SEO benefit that posting articles to directories is still a worthwhile and vital part of an SEO link-building strategy.

Now, some folks proclaim that by putting your stuff in these article directories, webmasters who need content will pick your stuff and publish it on their site or in an email newsletter, with your link intact. You get instant traffic! Hooray!

Well, the sad fact is that most of the time, your content WILL get picked up from article directories, but it'll be unscrupulous webmasters who scrape out all your links and use their own. You may get an occasional ethical webmaster who really does use those directories according to the terms and conditions, but in my experience – it's becoming rarer and rarer.

So, that being the case – YES – put articles on the directories – all the articles you have EXCEPT your very best ones.

Put the lower-end keyword-targeting stuff up on the directories, but reserve the long, feature-style human interest ones for your new allies.

That's right – we're going to take your best articles and approach your tribal bloggers (especially the ones with blogs that have some authority). If they're active members of their tribes, and they're active posters, they know it can get tough to come up with
good content to keep their readers happy.

If you're already a solid contributor to their sites, now is the time to offer them a UNIQUE and UNPUBLISHED article for their site. They get free, high-quality material that their readers will value, and you get a byline with links back to your own site.

This is one of the most powerful traffic generation methods I know. Of course you get the machine-benefits of SEO in this case, because you're getting your links on niche authority sites.

But the real benefit is that you are putting your best content in front of your most qualified audience, and while you're at it, you're building powerful alliances with influential members of your niche.

Do you think this sounds hard?

"How will I get all these guys to want to post my articles?"

You know what? You only need ONE to post for you. Then, you contact the other possible targets and either send an email to say,

"Hey – I wrote an article about blue widgets that your readers might like and John Doe over at the Widgets Blog was kind enough to publish it for me. I just thought I'd let you know so you can hook your readers up. If you're interested in publishing any of my future articles about blue widgets, I'd love to speak to you about a unique, unpublished article I'm working on right now. Thanks!"

After you get the first one, the rest should be happy to line up to share in the f'ree quality content you want to provide to their readers.

So where can you go from here?

If you're already regularly having your content published on different niche blogs, why not try to leverage for more prominent placement? Maybe work out a deal for a permanent homepage link? Why not seal a deal for a regular recurring spot so you can start to REALLY engage that blog's audience?

Are you more worried about your bottom line rather than exposure?

If you have an affiliate program, do you think it would be hard to sign these publishers up? You're already giving them great content – do you think they'd be opposed to getting paid to publish it? Some might, sure. But most of the time, you'll have a much more friendship-based relationship with these guys rather than a business one.

And if they see they get paid for something they were already doing, I can almost guarantee that they'll be more willing to mail for you or post for you every single time you ask.

Remember, you've been a long-time contributor by this point. You started with commenting, continued with unique content, and proceeded to full on linking and affiliate relationships.

If our last newsletter was about building connections instead of links, this newsletter is about cultivating and strengthening those connections.

You want to find all the sites that cater to your niche and weave your own stuff through them. And if you use a little brainpower, it's not even that hard. You're simply creating mutually beneficial situations, and everyone really does win!

We're really going for the long-term strategies here – by really spending time in your niches, you get to know the players, and more importantly, they get to know YOU. You become the preferred provider of your product or service because you're one of THEM. You're a trusted and active member of their tribe – not some out-of-towner with a snake-oil pitch.

Never forget – markets are people.

What "Web 2.0″ is doing now more than ever is allowing those people to talk to each other, so find where they gather, and join the conversation.

Contribute regularly and wisely, and you'll even begin to STEER some of those conversations your way.

If you cultivate the relationships you build through contributing, then your business will be the first and last name on the lips of your tribe when they decide to buy…

… or better yet, when they make a recommendation. :)

Until next time,
Keep Stomping,
~Andy Jenkins

P.S. Don't forget to try out Comment Kahuna while you can. They've already released an updated version, and we've gotten a lot of great feedback on the StomperBlog from your fellow readers who have put this free tool to good use.

P.P.S. And of course, don't forget to leave a comment – we'd love to hear what you think.

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Comments

16 Responses to “Stop Getting Links – Part 2”
  1. Ares says:

    ahh just noticed that this is the continuation :P

  2. graet man graet work nice post

  3. Tom Wigley says:

    Great article as usual,
    Im re-reading the entire stomperblog series and i must say they are fantastic.
    Wish i could get onto stompernet

    Regarding CommentKahuna, it is a great program, however it seems quite limited if it selects the first 50 blogs of your keyphrase every time.
    Never the less. Awesome stuff!

  4. #Diseño Web
    No there aren't sites like ezine in Spanish. I think I came across one of them, but the number of articles published was very small. I assume it wasn't successful

    In my view, the problem is that 90% of Spanish speakers live in third world countries where people earn low salaries and in weak currencies. Also, middle upper class is small. Then it is very hard to make money from content. There are not many people with disposable income as happens in first world countries. Therefore projects like ezine in Spanish are very hard to sustain.

    If your only purpose is to start driving traffic through Ezine. I recommend you to write your articles in Spanish and then ask somebody through elance or RAC to translate them for you. Make sure that the translator is English native speaker. Then publish it on eZine. Now, you might need to translate your website to English as well.

    Once you get the traffic coming from English visitors, your ranking will be better. Even in Spanish (not precisely the same ranking than in English)

  5. PS-RD says:

    More great information from the Stomper Guy's.
    Thanks for all the information, it really helps us little guys

  6. Pablo says:

    Good Stompernet post. I think that make a post unique content for other authority blog in your niche is a very good thing for your traffic and for your Seo. Thanks for your info Andy, it´s valuable.

  7. jakes says:

    Thanks Andy
    For me as some one that only start now with online marketing your articles and advice help a lot, and thanks also for the free stuff.
    Jakes

  8. Jonas says:

    This article is great to make you think of new ways of linking. In the first place it seems time-consuming, but in the long run it's much more rewarding than just asking for backlink.

    With the article marketing it's important that you always put the best version of your article on your own site and update your xml sitemap straight away, this way Google will know you where the first to publish and it will never be seen as duplicate content.

    Thanks for the usefull information guys!

    P.S.: If anyone is interested in exchanging content or something else with my blog (about travelling in Belgium, beer…) leave me a comment there!

  9. I am using komment kahuna as well as many others programs for finding blogs.
    I would say the only problem with comment kahuma is because we can't extract to the browser(firefox) to check it out if they are really nofollow

  10. I am using komment kahuna as well as many orhers programs for finding blogs.
    I would say the only problem with comment kahuma is because we can't extract to uot broeser(firefox) to check out if they are really nofollow

  11. Vi Wickam says:

    Like most of the Stompernet Articles, I think that this one is right on point.

    Posting appropriate and well thought out comments is a good way to establish credibility with humans as well as with Search Engines. After all, if search engines are doing their job, they should be serving up the real experts (most relavent content).

    This niche blog commenting, and article posting is what white hat SEM is all about – being the most relevant.

    Hats off to you Stompers!

    Vi Wickam
    President
    Zello Partners
    Local Search Marketing Experts
    http://www.zello.us

  12. Imanimer says:

    You're absolutely right and we couldn't have said it any better.

    If you're going to play "the authority" online about a specific niche then you should have to prove your worthwhilness.

    By doing so … you'll gain a flock of like minded people and what ever you say or contribute that is better put by you than them will get you noticed.

    When you share this same consideration everyone wins!

    Imanimer

  13. Diseño Web says:

    Hi, great post! I have a question. Do yo now Sites like EzineArticles, GoArticles and ArticleCity but in Spanish.

    Sometimes I think that some ideas that the people spoke about web 2.0 is just only for advances markets, what do yo think about that? Latin America and other markets have a chance?

    Sorry for my bad english :)

  14. Andy Beard says:

    I thought I would share my method of article marketing, because it is rarely if ever discussed and worth testing.

    I treat article marketing much like blog RSS feeds.

    I publish original articles on my blog, and encourage syndication.

    As an example many of my blog posts get syndicated on Webpronews or their sister site Searchnewz.

    Occasionally Google can pick up the syndicated version first and it ranks instead of my original content.

    However, I have given the guys at Webpronews special instructions, which they rarely forget.

    I have asked them to always link back to my original post from the syndicated copy.

    As far as I know they don't do this for any other author, because no one has asked them to do it. Everyone else just has a standard call to action link at the bottom of their articles that is the same on every post.

    The link back to me is just a simple "Comments", and thus any comments on the article go to my own blog as well.

    You can do the same with article distribution on Ezinearticles.com

    You can post articles on your own site, and once they are indexed, you can then syndicate them, but in the footer, rather than your usual call to action, use one of your links as a deep link such as
    "Original Title Of Article" was first published on my "Niche Marketing Blog" where I would love you to leave a comment for a free backlink to your site.

    The quoted words would be hyperlinks, and there is a reason to click though.

    Google use links to determine the original origin – links to your root domain don't necessarily help much, but deep links do.

    The only negative side to this is I tend to use lots of graphics and diagrams for my content, especially screenshots, so most of my content on my primary blog isn't suitable.

  15. I'm enjoying Kahuna but finding it really buggy. This is my first day using it and it really is simple and intuitive to use … just throws out some curly bugs at times.
    Kahuna has really helped me identify blogs in my niche of Baby Boomer stories and recollections. Thanks for the heads up.
    ~ Erin

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