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Potpourri
of Linking Facts and Fiction
Teacher: Eric
Ward
Here's a collection of linking
related tid bits you should be aware of.
Paying for a link at Overture.com
(formerly GoTo.com) that is not in the top five in the search
results is, in most cases, a waste. Results of six and lower
are not made available to the Overture partner sites, which
collectively have millions more users than Overture does alone.
Like AOL, for example. If the cost increase is just a few cents,
get in the top five, and your site could be found across all
of Overture's partner sites rather than only at Overture.com
http://www.overture.com
Did you know that search result
links from Inktomi can vary from partner to partner. In other
words, obtaining a high ranking through Inktomi will become
harder over time since the partner site can tweak Inktomi results.
Have you ever noticed how some
sites have multiple links at Yahoo! even though Yahoo! plainly
states that the most they will give a site is two? Yahoo! definitely
shows favored nation status to certain sites. Do a search at http://www.yahoo.com for
the term "Discovery School" and you'll see what I mean.
If you want a cheap way to track
visits to your site that are generated via links embedded in
email messages, just create a duplicate page/URL that is marketed
only via email. Nearly all visits to it would have to come
via email clicks on it. The only exception is if someone links
to that URL or bookmarks it.
The Netscape Open Directory,
which started as NewHoo several years ago and then became DMOZ,
wasn't taken seriously at first by most folks. Fast forward
a few years: It now is as powerful as Yahoo! and LookSmart,
distributes listings to more than 300 other sites, and offers
multiple link opportunities to your site (if your content truly
justifies it). BTW I'm a category editor at Netscape http://directory.netscape.com/Computers/Internet/WWW/Best_of_the_Web/Web_Reviews/
So if you publish web site reviews
on your site let me know.
In some cases, you can purge
a dead link from a search engine by submitting that same link/URL
to the engine where it's appearing. But before you do so you
might consider re-creating the dead file, since the search
engine thinks it's still alive.
Overture isn't the only pay-per-click
search engine worth utilizing. About.com has its own auction
based search service called Sprinks, and I like it.
http://sprinks.about.com/
Want to scare yourself? Read "The
Link Controversy Page."
http://www.jura.uni-tuebingen.de/~s-bes1/lcp.html
How long will it be until someone
takes what LinkPopularity.com does and makes a business out
of it? How long will it be until search engines charge for
this info? And when they do, I hope they'll be able to answer
questions such as, "What sites are linked to my competitors'
sites but not to mine?" or "What links to my site and my competitors'
sites have appeared within the last week?" I'd pay to subscribe
to such a service.
http://www.linkpopularity.com/
Do you know what link equity
is? Link equity is all the work you've done to build links
to your site, and the links themselves. Did you know that many
failing dot-com sites sell their link equity to competing sites.
If you have a bunch of links on other sites pointing to your
site, before you close your doors, contact your competitor
and offer your domain, and it's link equity to them. The harder
part is valuation of links. A Yahoo! link is more valuable
than a link from your Geocities page :)
About the teacher:
Eric Ward founded
the Web's first
service for announcing
and linking Web sites back in 1994, and he still offers those
services today. His client list is a who's who of online brands.
Ward is best known as the person behind the original linking
campaigns for Amazon.com Books, The Link Exchange, Microsoft,
Rodney Dangerfield, WarnerBros, The Discovery Channel, the AMA,
and The Weather Channel. His services won the 1995 Tenagra
Award For Internet Marketing Excellence, and he was selected
as one of the Web's 100 most influential people by Websight magazine.
Eric also writes columns for ClickZ and Ad Age magazine, and
is the editor of LinkAlert!
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