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THE WHOA FACTOR

Search Engine Optimization: June 2009 Archives

 

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Arrow SystemIn Speedlinking and SEO, Part 1: What is Speedlinking? we discussed the two possible meanings of the term "speedlinking," and I explained which definition I espouse and why.

 

Speedlinking, Slow-linking: Which Is Better?

Let me point out here that neither practice (writing link posts - which often contain longer and more highly descriptive link text - and anchoring links with pithy descriptive terms) is necessarily inferior to the other or innately bad for a blog's SEO (when used correctly, at least). Each has a role to play in any successful blog strategy. Yet, each is entirely different, which is why I believe that each should be called by a different name - a name that's more appropriate to its function. Thus, I call writing link posts speedposting (since it speeds up the posting process) and creating links that use shorter and less complex anchor text speedlinking (since it speeds up the linking process).

 

Speedlinking Defined

To recap, the definition we will use in this series on Speedlinking and SEO, is the following:

Speedlinking is the practice of using just one or two sometimes-insignificant words to anchor a link. The words in question are used either as a substitute for exact titles and/or full names (which are generally longer and more time-consuming to reproduce accurately) or to highlight specific keywords and short key phrases. Sometimes, the words chosen to anchor the link are ambiguous, universal, and nondescript, giving the reader little incentive to follow them. Speedlinking may be used in either a link post or a conventional one, though it's more likely to be used in the latter, since it lends itself well to easily achieving an unbroken narrative flow.

In my previous post, I linked to a few highly respected bloggers who choose to define speedlinking differently than I do. Today, I'll refer briefly to another blogger I also highly respect, who views the issue very much the same way that I see it.

 

A Blogger Who Shares My Perspective

The only blogger I've found thus far, who uses the term speedlinking in the clearer and more intuitive context described above is Confident Writing Coach Joanna Young. In How to write a links post, Joanna covers this topic, differentiating between simply "linking out" and "speed linking." In this post, she offers a description of speedlinking and demonstrates the practice in a few of its more positive and negative forms. While the topic of her post may be writing a link post, she doesn't use the term speed linking to describe that practice but rather to represent one possible method of linking out from within that link post. Many may find this distinction subtle and consider it unimportant, but I agree with Joanna that the term speedlinking has a very specific meaning and serves an equally specialized function in blogging and SEO.

 

Outbound Link Text and SEO

The next question thus becomes, "Just how important is outbound link text to our SEO strategy?" Answering this question will help us better understand the impact of speedlinking on our sites' SEO.

Let's start by consulting the Google Webmaster Central Blog to get the Big G's take on outbound anchor text:

Descriptive anchor text (the visible text in a hyperlink) helps accurately inter-connect the web. It allows both users and Googlebot to better understand what they're likely to find when following a link to another page.

 

Characteristics of Good Speedlink Anchor Text

This would indicate that our outbound link text is very important to our site's SEO. Does this mean speedlinking is bad for SEO? Not necessarily. It all depends on how it's done. With speedlinking, we need to ask ourselves a few questions to determine whether our method enhances or detracts from website SEO:

  • Is our anchor text relevant to the link's content?
  • Is it reinforced by surrounding page content?
  • Does it use appropriate keywords?
  • Does the link's URL structure use recognizable descriptors, such as keywords or titles, rather than numbers?
  • Are the URL descriptors relevant to the surrounding content?
  • Does the link contain a relevant title tag to further reinforce its anchor text?

All the above factors determine the SEO-ability of our outbound links - whether they are speedlinks or conventional links.

 

Information to Include in Speedlink Anchor Text

In summary, good outbound linking principles apply to speedlinking just as much as they do to any other type of linking strategy. While the anchor text of an SEO friendly speedlink may be shorter, quicker, and easier to execute, it still contains such helpful descriptive information as the following:

  • Keywords or key phrases
  • Names of individuals
  • Company names
  • Website or blog titles
  • Publication titles (as opposed to article titles, which are generally longer)
  • Domain names
  • Combinations of the above (such as "ProBlogger's speedlinking post," which contains a blog title and a key phrase)
  • Other brief but specific descriptive text

 

Some Final Thoughts on Speedlinking

Whether speedlinking or slow-linking, the links themselves should generally be deep links (links to website pages other than a site's homepage) unless your purpose is simply to refer your reader to the website or connect a particular individual with his or her website or blog.

Speedlinking can have a positive impact on your site's SEO, just as any other kind of linking can - as long as you give your speedlinking strategy a little forethought. When done properly, speedlinking not only draws the attention of search engines, but like any other outbound link, it can give your site's SEO a boost by encouraging other bloggers to link back to your content.

Speedlinking and SEO, Part 1: What Is Speedlinking?

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Image via Microsoft Office Online

Speedlink.gif

 

Speedlinking: Two Conflicting Definitions 

Quick Links

A growing tendency has spread among bloggers. Many use the shortest, simplest anchor text possible when creating outbound links.  In fact, some go so far as to label their links with such nondescript words or phrases as "here," "Click here," "his site," "they," and other similar non-specific anchor text. If you're one of these bloggers, you're not alone. With the incredibly fast pace of modern life, both online and off, who could blame a blogger for wanting to create and post links as quickly and painlessly as possible? Yet, there are some real drawbacks to this type of speedlinking (which we'll discuss later in this series). 

Link Posts

Many bloggers also frequently prepare entire link collections, placing them all within a single blog post and effectively making them the whole reason for the post's existence. (This is, of course, in contrast to the practice of writing stand-alone posts, which make their own points and use a few well-chosen links to reinforce those points.) Such link collections (the best of which generally contain some commentary by the blogger in addition to the links) are often referred to as resource posts.

Link posts can be a very rich source of knowledge to a blog's readers, since they point to more comprehensive information than the blogger may have sufficient time, space, or expertise to otherwise provide. There does, however, seem to be a bit of confusion about this particular type of post, since creating it has also been labeled by many respected bloggers as speedlinking.

 

A Few Speedlinking Questions This Series Will Address

Given the contradictory nature of the above definitions, let's ask ourselves a few questions, as we prepare to develop some helpful guidelines for optimizing our outbound link strategy:

1. What exactly is speedlinking?

2. How important is outbound anchor text to our SEO strategy?

3. Does speedlinking help or hinder search engine optimization?

These are fascinating questions, which we will explore in our next few posts. I'll give you my take on the first question in the current post and answer the other two in the remainder of the series on Speedlinking and SEO.

 

My Speedlinking Definition for This Series

Since Question 1 implies that a definition of the term "speedlinking" is necessary before we can progress further into our discussion, let me share my own chosen definition and my reasons for preferring it over its counterpart.

 

What I Believe Speedlinking Is Not

Whenever I personally refer to speedlinking, I am not talking about the practice of writing link posts, which are posts that are built around a list of links to other blog posts, articles, and websites. This practice has been called speedlinking by none other than ProBlogger Darren Rowse. In fact, Darren has been credited by Webmaster-Source with coining the term as a description for this type of resource post. (See, What is Speedlinking?) Other well-respected bloggers agree with Darren on his definition of speedlinking, including David Airey. (See How speed linking can help you.)


Speedlinking vs. Speedposting

While I highly respect both of the above bloggers, I beg to differ. I submit that "speedlinking" is a misnomer for the post type described above. A more accurate name for this linking practice would be "speedposting," since that designation better fits its function of creating a faster, simpler blog post.

One reason I distinguish between speedlinking and speedposting is that the phenomenon I refer to here as speedposting isn't necessarily any faster in terms of creating the actual links than any other type of linking would be, since it has nothing at all to do with the design of the links themselves. Whereas the practice I refer to as speedlinking actually creates links more quickly, the only thing speedposting accomplishes - and this is a lot - is that it eliminates the need for creating an original post entirely from scratch by replacing it with a plethora of link-based referrals to credible outside sources of previously written content.


What I Believe Speedlinking Is

What I call speedlinking is the first-mentioned practice described at the beginning of this post: the practice of using just one or two words to anchor a link, rather than the lengthier - and consequently slower - method of describing a link's content more precisely, such as by using the exact title of an article or blog post or the full name of a website or individual.

To recap, the definition we will use in this series on Speedlinking and SEO, is the following:

Speedlinking is the practice of using just one or two sometimes-insignificant words to anchor a link. The words in question are used either as a substitute for exact titles and/or full names (which are generally longer and more time-consuming to reproduce accurately) or to highlight specific keywords and short key phrases. Sometimes, the words chosen to anchor the link are ambiguous, universal, and nondescript, giving the reader little incentive to follow them. Speedlinking may be used in either a link post or a conventional one, though it's more likely to be used in the latter, since it lends itself well to easily achieving an unbroken narrative flow.

 

Tune In Next Time for Part 2

Next time, we'll provide some further support for our perspective on speedlinking and discuss the importance of outbound link text to SEO strategy.

So, stay tuned for Part 2 of our Speedlinking and SEO series: How Important Is Outbound Link Text to SEO?

 

Outbound Links: How Important Are They to Your SEO Strategy?

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Image via Microsoft Office Online 

 

Anchor Chain Links

Links and SEO

We all know that website links play a critical role in search engine optimization, but often the precise role specific types of links play is unclear to us. Today's post will focus on outbound links and their part in the SEO equation.

 

 

A Few Link Basics

Before we begin, I think we might benefit from a few definitions, so here are a few basics from W3C.org (World Wide Web Consortium), which it provides in its Introduction to links and anchors:

A link is a connection from one Web resource to another. Although a simple concept, the link has been one of the primary forces driving the success of the Web.

A link has two ends -- called anchors -- and a direction. The link starts at the "source" anchor and points to the "destination" anchor, which may be any Web resource (e.g., an image, a video clip, a sound bite, a program, an HTML document, an element within an HTML document, etc.).

Links that point toward a website are called inbound, or incoming, links. They're also called backlinks. Links that point away from one site and toward another are known as outbound, or outgoing, links. Another link type is the internal link, which refers to a link that points to other pages on the same website.

 

Perceived Link Value

Many believe that inbound links are the only ones that have real value for improving a site's SEO (though some website owners are willing to concede that internal links might have some value as well). Few, however, are willing to accept the notion that outbound links have much of a role to play in website optimization strategies. Yet, according to the experts, this is indeed the case.

 

Indirect Benefit of Outbound Links

Mike Murray, of Fathom SEO, puts outbound links into their proper context for us, in Outbound Links and Misunderstandings:

Outbound links don't help you in the sense that they could affect the ranking algorithms - at least not directly.

He then clarifies a misunderstanding that many have about the animal:

Outbound links don't hurt you in that you're not penalized for linking to other websites. The only exception is when websites link to non-related website directories or link collections just for the sake of linking.

 

Direct Benefits of Outbound Links

Keyword Ranking

Joel Walsh, of AgoraBusinessCenter.com, takes this explanation one step further, stating, in his article on SEO and Outbound Link Relevance, that

Outbound links' anchor text affects a page's search engine ranking in much the same way that inbound links' anchor text affects search engine ranking.... though it is slightly less powerful. If you have a particular keyword in the anchor text of a link on a webpage, that webpage will likely show up in search engine results -- even if it appears nowhere else on the page, and even if there are no inbound links with that anchor text.

Tim Grice, of SEOWIZZ.net, has in fact discovered that one can indeed

...rank a page for a keyword with no anchored backlinks and little in terms of content.

How did he do it? He explains, in his post on Outbound Link Theory, that he

created the page for "seo consultant leeds" and anchored the phrase to a couple of well known 'local' training and government sites.

About his results, he says,

...after this little trial my page now sits at the bottom of the first page on google.co.uk for the keyword. 

His conclusion follows:

This suggests that outbound links hold a good bit of weight when it comes to ranking higher in Google. Use them in conjunction with a targeted title tag and generate some optimised inbound links and it could help cement your site at the top of Google for some pretty competitive keywords.

Trust Value

Leo di Milo, of Internet Marketing Techniques and Theories, shares a few insights he's gleaned from other SEO experts about outbound links, in 3 SEO Musings on Outbound Link Structure, Keywords and TrustRank:

I have seen several prominent SEO sites who link up very liberally....

While I can only theorize as to why this is done, I do know that linking to other sites in your niche will help springboard your site in the SERPS.  I believe that it will help get that trustrank that most of us in competitive niches need in order to get to the next level.

It is really all about connections.  It is the way the internet operates.

Relevance

Fathom SEO confirms this, saying,

Links -- like much of the Internet and search engines -- are about relevance. If you're linking out for a good reason, don't worry about it. You may have some real fires to put out elsewhere, not the artificial ones fueled by hype.

Traffic

SearchEnginePromotionHelp.com offers us these further words of wisdom about The Effect of Outbound Links On SEO:

You do not lose visitors by offering links to other pages. Links to other pages will bring you more and repeat customers. All visitors will leave your web site sooner or later. No matter how great your web site is, no one will stay on your web site forever. The question is what web surfers do when they leave your site.

If you don't have outgoing links or if you hide your links, then you send your visitors back to search engines (which give you nothing in return). If you offer your web site visitors links, you can send leaving visitors to other web sites that can send you their visitors in return.

Carefully chosen links to outside resources can improve the experience of visitors who visit your web site. Give, and you shall receive. This is true for many aspects of life and it also works for web site promotion.

 

Good SEO Is More Than Inbound Links

Jennifer Sullivan Cassidy reminds us of the following, in Balancing Inbound and Outbound Links:

There is more to having a good position in the search engines tha(n) hoarding all of your links.  There are many sites that I see have wonderful keyword-rich content, many thousands of backlinks, yet are so afraid of losing their PageRank that they only link to their own sites or internal pages....You're not going to plummet in the SERPs by providing links to someone else.

 

A Few More Points About Links

Webconfs.com offers the following two important reminders, in Links - Another Important SEO Item:

Besides the anchor text itself, the text around it is also important.

So, always remember that your content must reinforce your link text to make it more relevant to search engines.

Their second crucial point is,

When links are concerned, one aspect to have in mind is the ratio between inbound and outbound links. Generally speaking, if your outbound links are ten times your inbound links, this is bad but it also varies on a case by case basis. If you have a site that links to news sources or has RSS feeds, then having many outbound links is the inevitable price of fresh content.

 

A Final Thought

Jennifer Sullivan Cassidy leaves us with a little food for thought about the inbound links we all covet:

Unfortunately, in order to get one-way links, which are the jewels of link-building, someone has to be giving away those links.  If we all hoped to get links, but never gave them, then there would be no such thing as one-way links at all.

And where would that leave our SEO strategy?

 

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Search Engine Optimization category from June 2009.

Search Engine Optimization: March 2009 is the previous archive.

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