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All About Off Page SEO
by Nial Robbins
More SEO articles

Published on this site: January 10th, 2008 - See
more articles from this month

Search Engine Optimization, or SEO, is a science of sorts that
would enable you to ensure a favorably prominent position for
your website in search engine results pages (SERPs). And since
80% of your traffic would come from the search engines, SEO
methods take on a critical importance in the success of your
online endeavor.
There are two kinds of SEO, on page and off page. This article
will tackle the latter.
Off page SEO is all about the things you could to get a high
page rank (PR) for your website after it has already gone live.
These are the things which you actually execute outside the
pages of your website, hence the name of this type of SEO.
What are these steps?
Well, all of them are concerned with building your link
popularity. Your link popularity represents the number of back
links your website has. To check you website's current link
popularity, head over to http://www.linkpopularity.com and use
the free tool that can be found there. The higher your link
popularity, the higher your PR will be.
Building your link popularity involves increasing the number of
websites that will link to yours. This is easier said than done.
It's not a matter of getting reciprocal links like "you link to
me and I'll link to yours." Google, in particular, despise
reciprocal linking. You have to get unilateral links to your
website.
The best way to do this is by ensuring that you have unique,
highly informative content. Really, this is the number one
strategy to invite websites to link to yours. But your content
in the realm of on page SEO, and it is assumed that you have
made all efforts to ensure great content.
What are the other ways by which you could build your link
popularity? Try the following techniques:
- Article marketing: There are thousands of article directories
on the Internet. You could submit articles to these websites.
For every submission, you will be allotted a resource box where
you could introduce yourself and share a link to your website.
Now, some of these article directories have high page ranks. If
your articles are accepted, they will be included in their
pages. Having a website with high PR linking to yours would go a
long way in increasing your own page rank. Additionally, if you
will submit just one article to a thousand directories, you'd
have a thousand pages linking to your website! Sounds like a
daunting task? There are article directory submission services
available. Seek them out. For as low as $25, they could submit
your articles to as many as 200 directories.
- Forum marketing: There are online communities dedicated to
the subject that your website is serving. Seek them out, then
join them. You'd be allotted a signature box, which would appear
in your every post. In your signature box, you could leave a
link to your website. Then post as many significant messages as
you could. For every post you will make, you'd have a page
linking to your website.
- Advertise: At http://www.craigslist.com . Now here's a novel
strategy. The website http://www.craigslist.com is a well known
classifieds website with a PR7 score. A PR7 score is rarely
high! To have a link in a website like this would give a
tremendous boost to your own website. Simply go to that site and
choose the category that your pages belong to, then post your
advertisement, with your link of course. It doesn't matter that
no one would get to read it. What matters is that the search
engine spiders would find your website as they would come from a
PR7 site.
- Look for partners who are willing to include your list in
their pages: The easiest way to do this is to use the free tool
at http://www.webconfs.com/backlink-builder.php
- Try triangular linking: Google despises reciprocal linking,
but triangular linking is one way of going around this
limitation. Look for two or more webmasters who are willing to
give it a shot. Webmaster A could post a link to Webmaster B's
website in his own pages. Webmaster B can post a link to
Webmaster C's website in his own pages. And webmaster C can post
a link to Webmaster A's website in his own pages. It may enforce
the same principle as reciprocal linking, but the search engine
spiders are not programmed to figure this out… yet.

Nial Robbins: Owns the work at home directory
website located at: http://www.NDR-HomeBiz.com Come by and visit
us today! Also, be sure to check out our "top pick" work at home
opportunity at:
http://www.NDR-HomeBiz.com/pips.html


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