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Books by
Gerry McGovern
Content Critical

Gaining competitive advantage through high-quality web content
The Web
Content
Style Guide

The essential guide
for online writers, editors and managers
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March 21, 2005
Get linked to get found in search engines: Part 1
By Gerry McGovern
Search optimization is about getting links. The more links you get to
your website, the more likely you are to get into the first page of search
engine results.
Killer web content gets killer web links
One of the main reasons the first 10 links are to me when you search for
“Gerry McGovern” on Google, Yahoo or MSN is because I actively encourage
people to republish this newsletter, once they credit me and link back to
me. I have been publishing New Thinking since 1996, and it’s a great way of
getting links and getting my name quoted on other websites.
Link within your discipline
As a general rule, get linked from websites within your particular
discipline. This is important for two reasons:
-
The more people see you linked to within a particular discipline, the more
impressed they are likely to be, as web linking is akin to embedded word
of mouth. If people see you linked to from lots of other websites, that’s
a major credibility builder.
-
Search engines like to find logical patterns and grouping for links, and
will tend to reward you if you are well-linked within a particular
pattern, once the person is searching for a careword related to that
pattern.
Don’t overly focus on hub websites
In a network, a hub is a place that has a lot of links coming into it, such
as Yahoo, Google, Microsoft, Amazon.com. It’s great to get linked from these
hubs. However, especially when you’re starting out, it may be very difficult
to get such links. Sometimes it can be a clever strategy not to overly focus
on getting linked through these major hubs. Rather, also focus on minor hubs
that still have the capacity to deliver value.
Strengthen your “weak ties”
A study was done on how a group of people found work, and the results showed
that a “friend of a friend” was more likely to get them that important job
introduction than close friends or family members. There are all sorts of
reasons for this. For starters, there are more friends of friends than there
are friends. It can be very comfortable to get links from websites you
admire and from those of your peers. However, these may not be the websites
your customers are frequenting. You don’t want to be getting links from
websites that have nothing to do with your business, but you do need to
think outside the box, and, of course, to keep thinking about what websites
your reader is visiting.
Go for quality, not quantity
There may be short-term benefits from the search engines for getting lots of
low quality links, through reciprocal linking and other more dubious
practices, of which there are many. However, just as you should write
content for people who search, rather than for a search engine, you should
get links that are likely to impress your potential customers, rather than
simply garnering some short-term benefit from a search engine. One link from
a well regarded website could bring you far more business—search engine
traffic or not—than 100 from lesser-known websites.
Gerry McGovern
You are welcome to republish this article once you place the following text
and link at the end of the article:
Gerry McGovern provides website
content management solutions

Related links
Search optimization
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Next issue: Get linked to get
found in search engines: Part 2
Previous issue: Search
optimization, not search engine optimization
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Just as you
should write content for people who search, rather than for a search engine, you
should get links that are likely to impress your potential customers, rather
than simply garnering some short-term benefit from a search engine.
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