Tags: search

10 Feb 2010, Comments (0)

The Basics of Link Building

Author: admin

Building a great linking structure for your web site is not something that happens in the time it takes to throw a web page together. Building a successful link structure takes months, and sometimes longer.

When you begin creating your link structure, you’ll probably have mostly outgoing links. Those are links that lead to other pages — popular pages if you can manage it — that will help to bring traffic back to your site. Over time, however, you should be building your links to include not only links back into your site, but other useful links that aren’t damaging to your search engine results rankings.

One of the most important things to remember as you’re building your link structure is that quantity isn’t nearly as important as quality. Your linking strategy will be far more successful if you create links (both inbound and outbound) that are high quality. Link to great sites that are more popular than your own and try to gain links from those sites to yours too.

Of course, getting those inbound links won’t be nearly as easy as creating outbound links to other web sites. Gaining links to your site is a business process. It takes time and a lot of consistent effort on your part. As mentioned earlier, one strategy for gaining inbound links is to send letters to prospective sites requesting a link, but don’t send out 10,000 generic letters, generated by some mail-merge program that doesn’t customize them in any way to the particular site that you’re targeting.

Your link request will be most effective if you can give potential linking partners a good reason for them to support you. Perhaps you can show their customers why they should purchase more of that site’s products. Whatever the reason, try to give the site you’re requesting a link from some motivation to take the time to add your site to their linking system.

Also keep in mind that link building is a time-consuming process. You’re not going to populate the Web with links to your site in one week or even one month. Once your site is built and ready for customers, link building will be an ongoing process that you’ll work at for the lifetime of the web sites.

17 Jan 2010, Comments (0)

Long Tail Search

Author: admin

Long Tail wasn’t coined to deal specifically with search. Anderson was originally trying to explain the difference between the success of e-commerce stores compared to that of brick-and-mortar stores. His theory was that because of space constraints, brick-and-mortar stores have to justify every item that’s put on their shelves. This means the items have to ‘‘earn their keep,’’ so to speak, which in turn means that an item found in a store needs to generate consistently high revenue.

E-commerce stores aren’t beholden to the same rules. Theoretically, an e-commerce store doesn’t have to pay for the actual shelf space to stock a store, which should reduce the cost of carrying items. In many cases, nor do e-commerce stores have to physically stock an item in a warehouse somewhere. They can (and very often do) use a method called drop shipping, whereby products are shipped directly from manufacturer to consumer. The e-commerce site is nothing more than an order-taking system. That reduces the cost of providing a wide selection of items to consumers, which in turn means that e-commerce stores can afford to stock less popular, but still wanted, items.

A commonly quoted example of this concept is a brick-and-mortar bookstore such as Barnes and Noble versus a pure e-commerce store such as Amazon . com. By most estimates, Barnes and Noble stocks an average of 300,000 books, and not all of those books appear in all stores. What all those books do have in common is that they sell a certain number of copies each month. They are items that have proven to be in demand, and therefore they earn the half inch or so that they occupy on the shelf.

Amazon . com stocks millions of books — many of them books that don’t sell more than a copy or two each month. Nonetheless, Amazon is still a successful retail business because it costs much less to make those books available to customers. There’s no shelf to pay for and not everything you find on the Amazon.com web site is stored in Amazon warehouses, which means Amazon can offer customers books that are less popular or are popular with only a niche segment of the population.

What really makes this concept interesting from both a retailing and a searching aspect is that studies show that around 20 percent of the revenue generated by a retailer is generated by the most popular items — those items that are most searched for and most in demand. The remaining 80 percent of revenue is generated by the less popular niche items that users are searching for.