Link Building's Tipping Point

Post on 07-Jan-2017

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Transcript of Link Building's Tipping Point

Rand Fishkin, Wizard of Moz | @randfish | rand@moz.com

Link Building’s Tipping PointThe same shifts we’ve seen in query & content evaluation are coming to

links. What does it mean for SEO? And how can marketers react?

Slides:Bit.ly/linktippoint

Where Link Evaluation Algorithms Have Been…

PageRank

Source Diversity

Anchor Text

Trust Distance

Domain Authority

Location on Page

Spam Outlink Analysis

And Dozens More Individual Factors

Outlink Propensity

Rate of Link Acquisition

Nofollow vs. Follow

Links in Images

Link Density

Content Relevance

Website Relevance

Trust Factors

Co-Citation

Content Duplication

Links within Tags

Geography of Host

Surrounding Text

Surrounding Text

Where We BelieveThey’re Going Next…

From Reasonable Surfer toAll-Seeing Eye

Together we see all…

We know all…

There is no escape…

Google knows where visit paths begin…

Where they go next…

And where they end up.

Their Goal is Searcher Satisfaction

Google’s Core Search team is always asking the same question:

Are searchers satisfied with these results?

How do they get the answer?...

Aggregate Behavioral Data

Do searchers, on average, click the results we rank highly more than the results we rank lower?

Aggregate Behavioral Data

35% of clicks

19% of clicks

11% of clicks

All Good!

Do many searchers click on nothing at all, and instead change their query, or choose a “related search?”

Aggregate Behavioral Data

If it’s these, maybe we show more results for commercial & manufacturing equipment up front.

Do searchers, on average, “short-click” some results, while “long-clicking” others?

Aggregate Behavioral Data

If clicks on Probake.com results in a quick return to the SERPs

While the NYTimes.com piece gets high engagement w/ few bounces…

Google might swap their rankings

Machine and Deep-Learning Models

Sites & pages that satisfy searchers

Sites & pages that don’t satisfy searchers

Sites & pages that link to these good

resources

Sites & pages that link to these poor

resources

ML model to identify traits highly

predictive of good vs. bad links

ML Models Can Apply to Spam, Too

Editorial, high value, search-quality-team, hand-reviewed links

Links that point to good stuff, but are

manipulative, sketchy, paid, or coerced

ML model to identify traits highly

predictive of good vs. bad links

Domain Reputation & Author Authority

Based on what Techcrunch links to & its own link attributes, Google may vary the ranking equity passed

by its outlinks

Domain Reputation & Author AuthorityBut, Google might assign

different weight to articles in different subsections, or

different authors.

e.g. Samuel Scott’s links may deserve to pass value

“Anonymous executive”… not so much.

Google’s Transforming Itself into a Company Built Around Learning Models

Via Backchannel

To Build a SustainableLink Strategy for the Future,Every Marketer Needs…

A Strategic Roadmap

Link Goals

Strategic Approach

Tactical Initiatives

KPIs/Metrics

An Example…

@randfish

This is my kinda website!

A) Mustachio’d mascot

B) Pasta-centric

C) Solid reviews

LineaPasta’s Long-Term Link Strategy

Rank in search for key terms and earn direct traffic from linking endorsements

Apply a product-centric link strategy. Use our partnerships & endorsements by chefs, restaurants, & media to earn links.

Outreach to current partners, sales mentions to restaurant buyers, leverage founder’s contacts w/ chefs, PR w/ media

1. Links from our partners2. Links & mentions from media/press3. Rankings for key terms4. Search visits

Link Goals

Strategic Approach

Tactical Initiatives

KPIMetrics

We Also Need…

@randfish

Buy-In on Experimentation

Via PointBlankSEO and Allie Brown

Link tactics like an event photo gallery

might work, but it also might fall flat. Link

building needs room to try and fail.

The Right Expectations RegardingTime-to-ROI

Via WB Friday

A Balance Between Long-Term Investments & Short-Term Hacks

High upfront costs Pay (in time/$$) as you go

Long-Term Investments

Slow to show ROI

Earn links while you sleep

Non-existent Spam Risk

Can Show Fast ROI

Effort In = Links Out

Can Have Spam Risk

Short-Term Hacks

Long-Term Link Strategies that Work5

The Community/UGC Path

@randfish

Enable a platform where a community earns value by contributing content, products, ideas, reviews, submissions, etc.

How Does It Work?

Invest in amplification of the contributions

Nudge your contributors to drive the links

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This is Yelp

It’s TripAdvisor

It’s Etsy

It’s Medium

It’s Dribbble

It’s Memeorandum

It’s ProductHunt

It’s Ravelry

It’s ForexFactory

The Press & Media Path

@randfish

Focus on people, a product, an industry, or a problem that naturally attracts press interest

How Does It Work?

Leverage the fundamentals of fame, controversy, storytelling, etc. to amplify

Associate your narrative with the keywords most important to your search traffic

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This is Tesla

It’s Warby Parker

It’s Dollar Shave Club

It’s Uber

It’s Goldie Blox

It’s Simple

It’s Glowforge

The Embed Path

@randfish

Create a platform (media, commerce, etc) or product (tools, graphics, forms, etc) that works via installation on 3rd-party websites

How Does It Work?

Build the initial audience that uses your embed and helps it to reach broad adoption

Leverage the embed’s format to earn the right links to the right places

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This is Slideshare

It’s Vimeo

It’s Typeform

It’s RottenTomatoes

It’s Walkscore

It’s TradingView

The Partnership/Alliance Path

@randfish

Find an audience for your service that forms links alongside the partnership/relationship

How Does It Work?

Craft a common structure for the ask or nudge you use in the partnership (in the contract, with a suggested style, logo use, citation requirements, etc.)

Vary link destination & anchor text over time & across partners to give boosts where you need them

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This is ReturnPath

It’s FullContact

It’s Trulia

It’s Box

It’s Sendgrid

It’s Otis Elevators

The Content Marketing Path

@randfish

Publish content that has high chances of earning natural links & citations from others

How Does It Work?

Market your content through channels that reach the audiences most likely to link

Grow a scalable process for amplification to continue attracting new potential link sources

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This is Eater

It’s Master of Malt

It’s Wordstream

It’s Collectors Weekly

It’s Politifact

It’s GrooveHQ

It’s Polygon

It’s KPCB

Why Isn’t Manual Link Acquisition Strategic?

@randfish

Find places to get links (competitors’ link profiles, directories, broken links, et al)

How Does It Work?

Figure out ways to acquire each link

Move on to the next potential source on the list

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Manual Links Don’t Scale w/ Decreasing Friction

Directory Links

Broken Links

1:1 Email Link Outreach

Guest Post Links

Profile Account Links

Same Work Required Day 3 as Day 300

These 5 Strategies Do:

Community/UGC Path

Press & Media Path

Embed Path

Partnership/Alliance Path

Content Marketing Path

Over time, less work yields more links

Great Link Builders Focus on Their Flywheel

Moz’s Flywheel

KW Research + Industry Intuition

Publish Content

Promote via Social Channels

Push to email + RSS subscribers

Earn Links + Amplification

Grow social, email, RSS, & WoM channels

Grow Domain Authority

Earn Search & Referral Traffic

Rank for More Competitive KWs

KW Research + Industry Intuition

Publish Content

Promote via Social Channels

Push to email + RSS subscribers

Earn Links + Amplification

Grow social, email, RSS, & WoM channels

Grow Domain Authority

Earn Search & Referral Traffic

Rank for More Competitive KWs

In 2006, I was lucky if new content led to any links or rankings at all

KW Research + Industry Intuition

Publish Content

Promote via Social Channels

Push to email + RSS subscribers

Earn Links + Amplification

Grow social, email, RSS, & WoM channels

Grow Domain Authority

Earn Search & Referral Traffic

Rank for More Competitive KWs

But, by 2016, nearly every post earns a handful of links, & some earn a lot!

Moz is a Business Built on Content

Dollar Shave Club was Built on a Press

& Media Flywheel

Via NYTimes

Dribbble was Built on a UGC/Community Flywheel

But… Almost Every Flywheel Findsa Point (or Points) of Friction

Publish Content

Promote via Social Channels

Push to email + RSS subscribers

Crap… We’re not reaching anyone who will link/amplify us

Link Building Growth HacksCan Accelerate a Flywheel

Hacks aren’t necessarily evil, spammy, or without value.

They can be highly useful when applied to a sound link strategy.

10 of My Favorite Hacks

@randfish

#1: Republishing

Take an existing piece of content

Re-create a part or the whole

Create additional traffic, reach, and/or rankings

XXa

Xb

Xc3X

Medium is a great cheat-code for this:

Via Medium

The built in network, the ability to use rel=canonical (and/or link to

the original post), and the domain’s ranking ability make it a sweet

republishing platform.

More Republishing Tips & Tacticsin this Webinar:

Via Mozinar

#2: Guest Contributions

Via LitHubThe best guest posting advice I’ve ever read

A Tactical Tip for Guest Contributions:

The language you use in these queries matters

“submit post”“guest blog”“guest post”

Often Sketchy Usually Solid

“share your story”“write for *”

“guest author”

#3: Local Links

Geography can be a big link opportunity… But it can be a process to find potential sources. Try this:

Let’s say you’re Ace Spirits, just off Main Street in Hopkins, MN

Step 1: Find the two most popular, similar businesses in your region.

We’ll skip chains, since Ace is a single-store, and go with Surdyk’s and Zipps (they have the most reviews)

Step 2: Use a combined query for those businesses plus the region

Boom! A link opportunity.

And another one.

And another!

It goes on like this for page after page

We can repeat this with combinations of all the other competitors, too

PSA: Be cautious visiting online liquor stores late at night while building slide decks…

I’ve become a cautionary tale…

But, then I got this note from the owner

#4: Small Site/Content Acquisitions

Likely a very inexpensive purchase that adds lots of high-relevance visitors

Via OSE &

Similarweb ProMore details about this tactic in my blog post

#5: Be Someone Else’s Press

Via Peach and RetailWorks

#6: Bio Links

Anchor links on my bio led to rankings for G’s blog, as the bio was republished

#7: Resource Lists (& Directories)

Once again, language structure matters

“directory”“submit link”

“add your site”“add url”

Often Sketchy Usually Solid

“resource list”“recommended sites”

“inurl:resources”“KW + websites”

#8a: Testimonials

You don’t have to wait to be asked. If there’s a product, service, or

company you love, email the founders or folks on marketing and offer an unsolicited testimonial.

Via Buzzstream Discovery

#8b: Case Studies

If you’re up for a heavier commitment, offering to be

a vendor’s case study is another strong path

Via Bynder

#9: Brand, Image, & Content Reclamation

If you have content (particularly logos, brand names, or visuals) that have widespread use, ID’ing pages with them that don’t link back can be an

easy, powerful link grabVia Vertical Measures (who does, BTW, link back)

For visuals, my best results come

from “search Google for image” (e.g. 200+ vs. 5 in G Images & 7 in

Tinyeye)

Using FWE, you can run queries for unlinked mentions, like this

Better yet, set up an alert so you get notified as

they happen

Via FreshWebExplorer

#10: Orthogonal Alignments

Your website & business

Social Causes

Geographic Connections

Network Connections

Artistic Intersections

Accessibility Programs

Founder Attributes

Technology Applications

Employee Programs

Sponsorship or Support

Artistic IntersectionsThere are literally thousands of web design galleries focusing on various aspects – mobile, web, responsive, use of CSS,

use of JS, etc.

Via BestWeb & MediaQueri.es

Social CausesWhere your businesses values overlap with causes (e.g. Moz & Women in Tech), there’s great opportunity to support visibly &

earn link value

Via GSBA &

50/50 Pledge

My Final Advice:Align Your Strategy to Where Google & Users Are Going.

Ask: Do your links mimic how people might find you without search?

The NYTimes writing a feature about pasta machines might be a

strong starting point for restauranteurs & chefs in need

Via NYTimes

Ask: Are your link sources pointing to content searchers find valuable?

By its very nature, sites like Hacker News (despite the nofollows) indicate

a degree of value provided to the audience by the links (and rankings

tend to follow)

Via YCombinator

Ask: Will your link profile pass Google’s machine-learning smell test?

Think of learning models like savvy SEOs manually reviewing your link profile by hand. If they think “this all looks legit,” you’re probably in good

shape. If not…

Via OSE

If your strategy fails to align, you may have a long-term issue w/ Google’s evolving link algorithms.

Link building is far from dead. Links are still critical to rank.

The best marketers will combine long-term strategy & short term hacks to win the SERPs.

Slides: bit.ly/linktippointFollow Rand: Twitter.com/randfish

Rand’s Blog: Moz.com/rand

Thank You!