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Common
Sense Link Exchange
Creating a simple links page to exchange links for the purpose of
higher search engine ranking is a bad idea. Now you're probably saying
to yourself why else would I make a links page? The answer is simple.
You want to offer your visitors good quality content. Following this
line of logic will help you go a lot farther in rankings and traffic
than just throwing a links page together.
You see, search engines, especially Google, are trying their best to
only rank sites that have quality content in a specific area. When you
throw together a links page that has 150 links ranging from household
goods to zoos in Australia on a single page, you have just created a
worthless page to a search engine because you just created a worthless
page to a web visitor. No one is going to take the time to sort through
all those links in the slight chance that there could be something of
value to them.
Let's say your trading links with someone. Ask yourself, "If there
was no such thing as a search engine, would anybody find my site on this
links page?". If the answer is no, you probably don't want to exchange
links. You're only wasting your time. That's why so many webmasters
today barely read link request emails anymore. I've gotten a link on a
related site that sometimes equals as much traffic as a single search on
Google for that topic, so it is important where the link is located. I
expect no traffic if my movie poster site is stuck somewhere between car
insurance and real estate sales amidst 100 other links. However, if the
page is entitled posters and every link on the page is related to
posters and art or movies then I can expect some visitors coming from
that site.
The best way to go is to make a links page that offers sites that are
similar to your own site's content, and don't put 150 sites on one page
with a title tag that says the exact same thing as your homepage. If you
plan to list hundreds of site links, put them into categories. For
example if your site is about cars or anything to do with the automotive
industry, then you have a gold mine of content ready to mine and tons of
sites that can and will exchange links with you - if you have a good
directory. You should categorize your links section into cars, trucks,
automotive parts, racing, etc. and each category breaks down into more
sub-categories like automotive parts leads to tires, brakes, and on and
on. Before you know it you've got a great addition to your site that
your visitors will like to visit, and others will want to be listed on.
The search engines will even list your links pages, and every listing
helps.
I turn down sites every day because it's a complete waste of time to
get their listing. Linking to them could even harm my rankings. Sites
that have 25 pages of links in no other order than alphabetical or
numerical are not going to help you. They can only hurt. Links sections
or directories should have a logical categorization with a descriptive
title tag at the top. Title tags that run on forever and have no
keywords relating to the page's content are worthless. Some people think
they are doing great by repeating their company name and product over
and over again, but it makes the page less useful to search engines and
web visitors.
It seems more and more that the organized directory is dying out. New
webmasters come and go without knowing the tricks of the trade, while
search engines are getting more strict on just about everything. You
must organize your directory and link only to sites that relate to yours
or you are wasting your time and the time of those that you want to
exchange links with.
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