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What
Makes a Site Link-Worthy?
Teacher: Eric
Ward
What is the motivation for one
site owner to link to another site?
The fundamental design of the
web allows for any document to link to and to be linked from
any other document. This is how the web's inventors intended
it when the hypertext protocol was first developed long ago,
before most of us had ever heard of the Internet.
Initially developed as a way
to help researchers interlink related documents from computers
all over the world, the web was soon discovered by those more
interested in commerce, and several years later, here we are.
It's interesting to me that nearly every commercially related
web development since its founding has been in some way related
to the link (that is, an attempt to find new ways for one site
to be linked to another). Banner ads are, at their core, just
a link from one site to another. So are text ads in newsletters,
buttons, badges, icons, etc. A paid search engine listing or
optimized search result is nothing more than a link. Your coveted Yahoo! text
listing, that banner that gets you one percent click-through,
and even that email newsletter sponsorship -- no matter how
you spin it -- are all links. Anything to be clicked on that
shuttles people from one place to another while online constitutes
a link.
The development of all forms
of linking has never improved upon the original, and no amount
of cleverness will ever change one universal truth: the less
useful your content, the less likely you are to ever receive
a link to it.
If we think of the word "useful" as
a continuum, then the most useful sites are those that provide
rich, quality content on a specific subject on which the editor
or provider is an authority. Think of the U.S. Government's CancerNet site.
Now there's the ultimate example of content on the right side
of the continuum -- tens of thousands of pages on every facet
of cancer, all free, all generated by experts in the field.
In fact, with no marketing department, the CancerNet site currently
has more than 3,000 links pointing to it from other sites around
the world. It's one of my standard sermons: Useful content
gets linked. When CancerNet hired me to do some link planning,
there wasn't a whole lot for me to do. It took me less than
a month to tweak what was already in place -- a great collection
of inbound links.
The reality is we can't all be
CancerNet. Most sites simply do not have the kind of relevant
content that allows them to get linked. So what do you do if
you are simply trying to sell a few widgets and don't have
any reference to quality content? If your site lands on the
left side of the useful continuum, you accept that you are
not going to get many links. And those links you do get, you
will probably have to pay for.
If you don't want to accept this
reality and truly want to seek and acquire links to your site,
you have one (and only one) other option available to you.
Make it link-worthy.
What is a link-worthy site? Let's
imagine you have an online magic store that caters to professional
and amateur magicians. On your site, you sell tricks, supplies,
hats, capes, and wands, even the saw-the-person-in-half gag.
If your content were nothing
more than an online store, why would anyone link to it? You
might get a few links on any magic-site web guides and link
lists. But then what? If you are an online store with nothing
but products as your content, then you MUST look to associate/affiliate
programs as a means of generating links. Basically, paying
for them.
But maybe there is something
more you CAN do, if you are willing to roll up your sleeves.
What if, along with your products,
you create a searchable database of information on magic. What
if you had complete biographies of more than 700 magicians?
What if you had a section devoted to magical world records,
or a glossary of magical terms, or a directory of magicians
on the Internet?
This would then be an excellent
example of how a store site can add rich, relevant content,
value, interest, and community to its web site, as well as
sell merchandise. This site would be covered by just about
any writer who writes about magic and/or reviews web sites.
The above is not just a wide-eyed,
hypothetical example. In fact, the site I'm referring to is
called MagicTricks.com.
Thinking like a site reviewer,
it's difficult to find high-quality online media outlets and
site reviewers willing to cover or link to marketing/sales
sites. The more a site offers deep information on a certain
subject, databases, community, guides, forums, reviews, etc.,
the more likely the editors are to want to cover it. Whether
it's a business or consumer site, the more content-rich the
better, especially if the site's mission is sales. A site designed
to sell a product is far different than a true reference site
with hundreds and hundreds of pages of free information on
a particular subject.
The best analogy I can think
of to explain a sales-focused web site is a public library.
A library is, first and foremost, about content, although it
does sell things. You can buy copies of books, order maps,
buy online database search time, or rent study offices or PCs.
Some libraries even have video-rental services and snack shops
or restaurants. Money definitely changes hands at a library.
But nobody would confuse this commerce with a library's true
mission: offering content to patrons. In a like manner, a web
site also needs to be a library of information on whatever
its focus might be. Add great content to your product site.
Again, why?
Because useful content gets linked.
Products don't.
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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