Posts Tagged ‘link building farms’

Why Does Good Link Building Take So Long?

Links are commonly recognised within search engine optimisation as of great importance. Links play an important role in SEO because the more links a business has to its web pages, the higher the chance for an increase in traffic and for an increase of search engine awareness too. Links help others to find and explore a website which is obviously hugely beneficial when you have something to sell.

Link building can be done quickly using some methods but the results will be disappointing. If just beginning with the link building process it can be extremely tempting to select options which enable you to build as many links as you can in the shortest amount of time possible. Agreeing to link building schemes and working with link building farms are some ways to do this. However, the major problem with using this type of link building method is the quality of the links produced.

In order for a link to be useful and productive for a website, it must be from a relevant, high quality and well-ranked site. Traffic from sources like this will be most interested in your business and what you have to offer and the search engines will immediately judge your website based on the quality of the sites linking to it.

If you have numerous links to your web pages from spam sites and low quality websites irrelevant to your business industry, this is not going to reflect positively. If you have a selection of high quality links from respectable and trustworthy websites this is going to portray your business in a positive light and attract interest and attention.

High quality links are what is important in link building as part of search engine optimisation but opportunities to build links of this kind do not come around all the time. Link farms and other schemes do not provide links of this nature so unfortunately it is not a case of simply signing up and having appropriate websites linking to your site. Instead, research and effort needs to be put into your link building so possible linking opportunities can be identified and pursued further. This of course can take a considerable amount of time.

When links will really be advantageous for your business is when you have a large selection of links of this kind. This can take a long period of time to develop and will depend on the amount of effort put in to the link building process and how effective you are. Working with professional SEO consultants is advisable for efficient link building if you want to have high quality links as quickly as possible.

We at SEO Consult are highly experienced in link building and can identify and create links to your website which will help to benefit it enormously. Link building is a continuous process and we do not promise immediate results. Instead, we will build and develop a link building campaign for your business which will get your site noticed, visited and ranked too.

What Is A Link Building Farm?

You may have heard the term ‘link building farm’ or ‘link farm’ used in relation to the ‘bad neighbourhood’ concept in SEO circles. While it is fairly guessable what a link building farm might be, it is helpful to have a good understanding of the term.

‘Link farm’ is a term that often is defined as a collection of sites that all have hyperlinks to every other site in the group, and while some link farms are like this, not all are. Most link building farms build links for websites by creating a page that is almost entirely links. This means it has little or no actual content, one of the reasons search engines don’t value link farms.

The term ‘link farm’ is intimately associated with black hat techniques of search engine optimisation. There is a grey area, however, as there are legitimate reciprocal link schemes around that do not create the kind of spam that search engines hate. As with many grey areas in search engine optimisation, most companies choose to avoid it altogether.

Google is typically mysterious about their precise definition of what a link farm is. Google Webmaster JohnMu last year said that the search engine giant’s stand on this issue is to bring it back to what your viewers want. In a thread on the subject, he trotted out Google’s usual line when it comes to grey areas: ‘A good rule of thumb is to ask yourself “would I be doing this (linking there) if search engines didn’t exist?” Another way of looking at it is to think about where and how you will be linking … Do you want your visitors to see and use it or is it just for the search engines?’ (Google Groups, May 2008) The question of ‘would I be doing this if search engines didn’t exist’ is not hugely helpful as, in reality it covers about 80% of what webmasters do. The basic concept is clear, however. If you aim to increase the value of your viewer’s experience, you are on the right track, and if you are doing something that feels wrong, it probably is.

Being associated with a link farm can cause long-term harm to your site. Just as a good SEO campaign can take time to take effect, links to seemingly well-intentioned directories can turn bad over time. Webado, a webmaster commenting on the Google thread above, told of how, in her initial days of webmastering a charity site, she submitted it into a web directory. At the time, the web directory owners gave the impression that the directory was highly selective. Several years later, however, Webado discovered her site was still on the directory and now hidden among links to porn. The issue only got resolved when the directory was taken offline.

Not all sites are so lucky. Spammers are desperate to give their spam site credibility, and using a reputable site as a link is one way to do this. They do not easily let go, and usually will not respond to communication.

Link farms can be avoided by researching the sites you want your link featured on. Check a site’s PageRank and investigate its associates before submitting your link. The best way to ensure that your link is featured only in good neighbourhoods is to get the advice of professionals. Talk to your consultant at SEO Consult about linking as part of your SEO campaign.