| |
|
|
Do Link Exchanges Still Work?
by Gary Ruplinger

Published on this site: November 22th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month
I've read about link exchanges a lot recently. I've seen a lot of people
who say that their predictions that link exchanges would stop working
saying that they were right, and that they don't work, and that they in
fact hurt your website.
Let's stop right there.
I'm going to clear up a few things. All link exchanges are not dead. Link
exchanges when implemented properly can still be very beneficial to your
search engine rankings and can even drive traffic to your site.
Before I tell you how to do it right, let me tell you how to do it wrong.
Any link exchanges promising hundreds or links immediately upon joining
should be avoided unless the only search engine you care about is msn
(and even that may be ending soon). Exchanging links with every site under
the sun is also bad. Using a link exchange as the only way you get links
will also not be a path you want to wander down.
Okay, so now that I've taken all the fun out of it, let me tell you how
to do it so that you avoid any search engine penalties and actually see
your search engine rankings improve from link exchanges. First, find service
or software that will allow you to manually seek and choose your partners.
Second, once you're in, take your time. A few links here and a few there.
Third, be consistent about it. Exchanging links should be done every week,
or at the very least every month. You want the number of links to increase
over time. Fourth, only trade links with sites that are related to yours.
Also, make sure you visit the site you're linking to, you don't want to
be linking to sites that are junk unless you want to be thought of as
a junky site as well. Fifth, keep the number of links to under 10% of
the total number of links pointing to your site. That means you're going
to need other linking strategies, but that's okay, there are several available
and you should be using them all.
So now you're armed with the knowledge of how to do link exchanges and
stay in the good graces of the search engines. So the next time somebody
starts proclaiming from their high horse about how link exchanges got
them banned or hurt their rankings, just keep in mind that they were likely
trying to use shortcuts to get artificially high search engines.
There are in fact a lot of good reasons for websites to be linked to one
another, and the search engines know that. The thing the search engines
don't want to see is a website that will only link to a site that will
link to it. Make sure you have one way links pointing both into and out of your website in addition
to your link exchanges and you'll be in good shape.

Gary Ruplinger - is a search engine optimization expert who has
written a free report to helping website owners get their sites to the
top of search engines
with a detailed step by step plan called the Ultimate Traffic Blueprint
- available at http://www.ultimatetrafficblueprint.com


|
|