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3 ways to give your link building some oomph

Let’s face it, building good quality and relevant links to your website is an integral part of any SEO strategy. Link building should be a large part of your ongoing SEO tasks, and everyone has their own methods and places to go to get them.

It’s easy though, to run out of ideas once you’ve been building links for a few months and exhausted your regular resources.

Take a look at a few of our ideas to give you extra oomph in link building.

Social bookmarking
Social bookmaking sites such as del.icio.us, Simpy and Furl allow you to ‘bookmark’ web pages online. Google indexes each user’s bookmarks, and therefore any bookmarks for your site get picked up as inbound links. It’s quick, easy and effective, you can deep-link to pages in your site, and you control the anchor text.

Another great thing about social bookmarking is that when you post a bookmark, it will appear in the ‘latest bookmarks’ page. This will open it up to the rest of the networks users.

Industry blogs and forums
Get involved in all the industry forums and blogs that you possibly can. If possible add your site to the footer of your posts. Not only you can get involved in interesting industry discussions, increase your knowledge base, and grow your industry contacts, but it means building inbound links to your site as well.

“My industry is very niche; there isn’t an industry blog/forum.” Start one! However small your industry is, you’ll find you’re not the only person who wants to talk about it online. Starting your own blog/forum also allows you to have much greater control over the content.

Link baiting
Let the links come to you! Link baiting is all about attracting links the natural way. Add some good quality content to your site that someone will enjoy (or hate) enough to link to it. Write something that will generate interest from your users, or other industry websites. Whether it is a controversial theory, or giving something for (essentially) nothing, as long as it gets you noticed, you’ll more than likely get links.

This is much more difficult than it sounds. If you’re stuck for link baiting ideas, check out this article on the art of link baiting. It gives a comprehensive look at the different types of link bait.

How to retain Google history in AdWords Editor

I can’t imagine my working life without it now. In actual fact – how did we cope before AdWords Editor?

If you’re not already familiar with AdWords Editor it’s a great offline tool from Google to speed up creation and management of AdWords accounts.

You install Editor on your local machine, download your current configuration and make changes to your account offline until you are happy to upload the changes. Find more information here.

I find AdWords Editor incredibly useful when taking over management of existing client PPC campaigns. This frequently involves a lot of restructuring as accounts may have been set up with 10’s if not 100’s of keywords crammed into the same Ad Group. Editor allows me to get things right offline, so I can be confident everything works well before going live.

If an Ad Group contains one particularly well-performing keyword then we look to ‘peel and stick’. Peel and stick? It’s the process of pausing a better performing keyword (generally with high click-throughs) and placing it in its own highly targeted Ad Group.

Isolating effective keywords using ‘peel and stick’ generally improves CTR’s as your advert can be much more targeted. A high performance keyword just isn’t as cost-effective in amongst lots of under-performing variations in one huge Ad Group.

What about the keyword history? Will it be lost?
Well, it depends how you restructure the account. I’ve read some well-known books which advocate deleting the keyword and then creating it again in a new Ad Group. Personally I think this is unwise as once you delete a keyword you can’t restore it, and if something goes wrong then your history is lost.

It’s not only keyword history you will loose, ad history is important too. If you’ve spent 6 months testing new ads and trying to improve click-through-rates and then create a brand new Ad Group, Google will view this as entirely new and untested. By starting from scratch you will end up paying more to prove to Google that you are a relevant and reliable source all over again.

So how do you retain the keyword and ad history?
Using AdWords Editor right-click and copy the entire Ad Group which contains your keyword and paste into your desired location, whether it be in the same campaign or a new one.

Once the Ad Group has been copied, delete all irrelevant keywords. My advice would be to keep the existing adverts associated with the old Ad Group but to introduce new ones into the mix. This way Google can tell that you’re introducing a new ad amongst tried and tested ads and these generally ‘bed in’ quicker.

Although you cannot see any history on the Ad Group you’ve just copied, don’t worry, Google can. I recently tested this on one of our client’s main keyword phrases which they’ve spent near to £1M on and have drastically lowered the CPC over the past couple of years. In fact this keyword is incredibly expensive to target if you’re new to the market.

I used the technique above and managed to switch from the old to the new Ad Group without any increase in CPC. But I would personally advise to be careful and err on the side of caution and test, test and test.

This issue of account history raises another question. How much can you edit or change your advert before Google views it as new? This question will be tackled in the near future, so keep on checking our blog or subscribe to our RSS feed.

Microsoft offering SEO services

It has immerged this week after much speculation that Microsoft has begun offering 2 SEO packages to anyone who owns a website.

This is an interesting move from the computing giant as they also own one of the 3 major search engines.

The service they offer looks to be fairly comprehensive, it includes reviews of:

  • Site design, aesthetics and usability
  • Titles, meta info, headers, keyword density, pages indexed
  • URL structure, redirects, sitemaps, 404 error pages
  • Inbound links and link building suggestions
  • Keyword research
  • Current rankings
  • Competitors for your keyword targets

It seems to me though that most of the above will be automated reports from programmes designed to analyse the elements in question.

Depending on the size of your wallet you get some or all of the above. You also get 1-3 hours consulting time with an SEO expert.

The packages range in price from $5,500 to $8,600 which seems a lot for just 1-3 hours of time with a real person, after all, there’s only so much a program can tell you about a site.

It will be interesting to see how this service takes off, and whether they optimise sites towards Google’s website guidelines or for their own search engine.

Hidden text within CSS - Don't try to fool Google!

The ever-growing SEO team at Coast Digital is always keen to tell our readers of recent experiences in developing natural results for our clients.

A recent case is a good example of how one business had made the mistake of applying CSS to hide text content off-page on their website.

The content wasn't necessarily put in place to cheat search engines, but more to focus on the design elements of the website in question, which features lots of nice graphics and visual impact. Unfortunately in this instance the hidden text resulted in a black mark from Google.
 
In adherence with Google's guidelines on not hiding content we’re always keen to emphasise to clients the importance of how each web page should deliver genuine content that can be read on screen.

Implementing ethical SEO is often a balancing act, as you don’t want to completely overhaul an eye-catching website design with piles of text or headings.

Below is an example of CSS hiding content off-page:

.hidden {
            position: centre;
            left: 0px;
            top: -1000px;
            width: 1px;
            height: 4px;
            overflow: hidden;

The above CSS would be considered bad practice SEO. If a visitor can trawl through the page coding and locate this information then you are guaranteed that the search engine robots and spiders can too.

Before Coast Digital became involved in the SEO of this particular domain its natural listings were in a state of limbo, as Google wasn't prepared to issue competitive page 1 / position 1 listings, despite a strong inbound link popularity to the domain.

Removing the black mark against your website in Google can take time. Coast Digital recommends the following strategies to get your website back on the right track:

  • Remove all hidden CSS immediately
  • Replace hidden CSS with genuine on-page headings and content
  • Publish visible content your reader will want to read
  • Submit your website to Google Webmaster Tools
  • Submit your website to Yahoo! Search Submit
  • Focus off-page SEO efforts on building quality, related inbound links to your website
     
    If things are still looking bleak then request reconsideration from Google. 

The opinions expressed herein are the personal opinion of the author and are not intended as statements of fact and do not represent the view of Coastdigital Limited in any way