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Measure Distribution to Project Content-Focused Link Building

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, June 23, 2008

My Network and DistributionAaron Wall claimed, in Strategic Content Based Link Building, that you could gain $10,000 worth of links with two days of work. That’s a lot of hyperbole, which goes back to how I didn’t make 3K in a week. My 3K post and my criticism in the comments on Aaron’s post is at the heart of this post’s idea: (more…)


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Link Buying Even Matt Cutts Could Love

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg,

So I got the following pitch in an email, in summary:

We will create personas and add value to communities around your topic and get links to you from members of those communities. Each link costs $xyzabcd.

When link buying turns into genuine, valuable editorial content that people would be happy to find in a SERP, which content only indirectly affects the links you built… is link buying still problematic?

Update: See more on what google wants, from the horses’ mouth.

Two Videos: On Buying Sites and SEOmoz’s Give It Up

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, June 15, 2008

Have a look - yours truly is in a Web Pro News video on buying sites, and at SEOmoz’s Whiteboard Friday, where I shared some local search stuff!

My Best: Social Media, Influence, TLA, Competitors’ Keywords, Cars etc.

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, May 17, 2008

Here are some of my favourite - and your posts - that I’ve published since beginning to blog here. You’ll probably find a few that you never read before. I hope you enjoy!

Social Media Analytics - How to Measure Social Media Activity (more…)

30 Lovely Resources and Helpful Links

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, April 29, 2008

You’re likely to see some of these in future posts here and aroud the various lovely places that take my stories. So check out as many of them as you have time for, cuz there are some real sweet ones in here.

Diorex doesn’t blog anymore, so Smaxor republished some of his classics. (more…)

Value Links And Understand Search Like Matt Cutts With Submarine Crawling

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, April 22, 2008

Matt Cutts and this Webmaster Central post recently explained that “high quality” sites were being given special treatment - submarine crawling. Since we all know that links from high quality sites are more valuable than those from average/mediocre sites, Matt and Google have in effect given us a new measurement for the value of a link - submarine crawling.

Russian Submarine

Russian Submarine courtesy of Orpheus Grey.

What’s submarine crawling? (more…)

Silver Star Mercedes Montreal: Car Dealership Case Study

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, April 17, 2008

If you live in Montreal, you’ve probably seen Silver Star print ads. But you’d be a lot less likely to see them in search results on any major search engine because their search marketing effort is nonexistent (well OK, maybe MSN might return them). Not only is their SEO (What is SEO?) non-existent, it’s a near-100% duplicate of Mercedes-Benz Canada’s site!Mercedes Silver Star Splash Homepage

If you’re Google and some random Canadian searches for “Buy Mercedes Benz car,” would you rather return the more authoritative Mercedes-Benz website or a total copy on a subdomain?

The answer isn’t as obvious as you might think. (more…)

The Triple Threat Interview: Stuntdubl, Graywolf and Sugarrae on Independent Webmastering

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, April 13, 2008

Todd Malicoat (Stuntdubl SEO Consulting and Clientside SEM), Michael Gray (Graywolf’s SEO blog) and Rae Hoffman (Sugarrae Website Audits & SEO) were lucky enough to kick back with me at SMX West, so in my infinite generosity I decided to let them school me on some of the finer points of being an independent webmaster. This is intermediate level stuff mostly (my fault for not having better questions; see the end of this post for your chance to followup with your own questions), but there are a few nuggets in here for those of you who pay attention.

Todd Malicoat, Gab Goldenberg, Michael Gray

I began by asking Todd what he was up to in terms of personal projects.

He’s doing affiliate marketing, and his focus at the moment is on developing thicker, fully built out sites in “high dollar” niches. Most affiliate marketing industries have lots of saturation though, so Todd suggests that people getting into the game build a niche site first, since it’ll be easier.

“Do something you like, that’s profitable, then cross-promote other sites [that are more lucrative],” said the Stuntman.

Michael Gray joined the conversation at this point and gave me the example of the Motley Fool, who have built a community of passionate users. My notes are hazy on this point, but I think he was getting at the fact that a passionate community can be a valuable asset, especially as it makes your revenue defensible against search engine mood swings.

“Write like you enjoy it,” Mike said, “or your site will be undefensible.” Also, if you can create one, a brand is an extra line of defence.

The conversation moved to blackhat issues at this point.

Mike highlighted that some of the drugs spammers promote are illegal to sell without a license. Further to this insight, Mike contributed what I think is a somewhat obvious point yet hasn’t been made in any blog/forum/site/book I read, which is saying something: “Blackhats today need technical proficiency. You need to be a programmer. There are no blackhat marketers,” [ the way there are succesful whitehat SEOs whose success is based on their marketing prowess and comes in spite of not being skilled with code].

We got back to the less shady side of things, and I asked the trio what they did for content and whether they hired any out.

At this point, Rae chimed in with her usual, helpful insight, “Where are the waiters and what’s it take to get another beer here?!”

Rae Hoffman

Rae’s been hiring her content creation out, and recruiting people off of Craigslist (sound familiar, SEOmoz?). That’s apparently worked out great, and both Todd and Michael are doing the same now. This made me wonder about quality control.

“Plenty of people like Lord Of The Rings and write their own spinoffs of it,” Gray said, “but they’re not necessarily good writers.” So Mike uses Problogger’s job boards. (On a related note, I’ve been sitting on Hire Bloggers .com if anyone’s in the market; it gets some typeins every month.) Another source he goes to is to tap bloggers already in the space.

Another tip Mike shared on managing writers is to use a 30 day probation period. “I can tell if they going to work out within about two weeks” Mike said, “but 30 days gives me leeway just in case and allows for testing their ability to meet an editorial schedule.” He continued, “Keep them on a tight leash at the start, and be sure to check their references.

Aside: Guy Kawasaki’s the Art of the Start emphasizes doing this at the start of the selection process, and using it to screen out people, by seeing who only gets mild, noncommital references. I’m reading it now and it’s a great book. And even better than reading Guy’s advice, you can read this case study on how SEOmoz recruited Jane Copland!

After a brief segue by Rae about some linkbait of hers attracting links from TechCrunch and follow-on links for a total of 200,000 pageviews and later continuing to send 5,000 - 8,000 referrals a day, we moved to the topic of raising barriers to entry.

As mentioned above, it’s important to build a community. But it’s not as simple as just buying a vBulletin license and telling friends. You need to understand the dynamics of user participation online, according to Todd and Mike.

First, you need readership. Most of your readers and users will be passive content consumers.

The second step after that is that your commenters will start appearing. At this point, you need to start and nurture the conversation.

Finally, and usually after a long period of starting and nurturing the conversation, your users will carry it on themselves.

The question, then, is how do you build up readership?

Todd emphasized the importance of having a strong start. “Get your exceptional content out first,” he told me. The point here is to get it bookmarked or have a “check in the history” (not sure if he meant that your browser history will show a checkmark next to it). Todd’s point [as I took it] was that you want people to have a positive recollection of your site the second time they visit, and the third etc.

Another highly overlooked tip Todd shared was to link out to people promiscuously. But the timing should happen after your content is awesome enough to make a good impression once people check out who is linking to them and come by to visit your site.

And that’s where we wrapped things up. Well, not quite. Todd, Michael and Rae all offered to answer follow up questions I might have, so rather than be a guru-hog, I’m going to turn the floor over to you, dear readers, and let you submit questions (by leaving a comment). Those that are most original/likely to produce useful responses will get passed on. Big kudos to the trio :D!

Liked this? You have a huge choice of what to do next: subscribe to my RSS feed, give it social media love at StumbleUpon or Sphinn, link back, comment, check out related posts … Or if you’re really smart, sign up for SMX Social Media - Mike’s going to be speaking there, and you’re sure to meet other great folks to learn a lot from, just like I got to meet the triple threat gang!

I also strongly encourage you to check out SEM Canada, where I just got accepted to speak and where many people with lots to teach will be speaking too. Andy Beal (Marketing Pilgrim), Christine Churchill (Key Relevance), Bill Slawski (SEO by the SEA / Key Relevance), Ken Jurina (Epiar), Jane Copland (SEOmoz), and Todd Friesen (aka Oilman) are just some of the big names who’re going to be there. So go register for SEM Canada now!

Oh, and if you’re lucky you can get a picture of Matt Cutts when he’s not throttling Mike:

Matt Cutts Michael Graywolf Gray

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Scratchpad: Questions, Reputation Management, Domains and PPC

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, March 17, 2008

Scratchpad, for those of you who don’t know, is my informal column. Take the ideas for what they’re worth and ignore the style.

Questions

Q1: What is the best measure of attention equity? Links? Daily visitors? Repeat visitors? Subscribers? Trends in the prior statistics? Something else?

Q2: Is scannable content contributing to (more…)

The Biggest, Baddest, Resource Bonanza Bar None!

Author: Gabriel Goldenberg, March 11, 2008

Here’s my effort to share original resources that haven’t received wide attention/link love on other blogs. Hence I haven’t shared Aaron Wall’s tools (how useful would one more mention be?), Xenu Link Sleuth or SEOmoz’s tools (though I had to put them in the Friends section). Here is search marketing’s BIGGEST, BADDEST, RESOURCE BONANZA BAR NONE! (If you enjoy it, subscribe - there’s lots more where this came from ;) .)

The SEO Business

What makes Web sites credible?

Proposal layout and design

Five Simple Ways to Make Your Proposal More Competitive

Canada Business - Starting a Consulting Business - Interesting item for my fellow SEO consultants here (more…)

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