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Many website owners and
SEOs (search engine
optimizers) believe that
trading links is the
most effective way to
build the hundreds of
links necessary for good
search-engine ranking.
But there's another way
to build links that
deserves your attention:
content distribution.
A time-honored way of
getting one-way inbound
links to your website is
to distribute content,
usually articles, for
other websites to
publish in exchange for
a backlink. Most often,
the backlink is included
in an "author's resource
box," which is a brief
"about the author"
paragraph promoting the
author's site
Content distribution has
usually been thought of
as a website promotion
strategy rather than an
SEO or link-building
strategy. But there are
good reasons for adding
content distribution to
your SEO toolkit.
SEO Benefits of
Distributing Content vs.
Reciprocal Linking Alone
-
Links come faster.
You send an email
with your article to
a relevant website
owner. That's it. No
adding links to your
site and then
checking and
re-checking for
compliance. That
means you can get
more links from the
time and resources
you spend on
link-building.
-
Links are not
always available
through reciprocal
linking. Many
website owners
simply refuse to do
reciprocal linking.
Content distribution
is one way to reach
this large segment
of website owners.
-
Links are one-way.
Many SEO experts
believe that
reciprocal links may
be "dampened" by the
search engines;
i.e., they will not
help you rank as
high as one-way
links. Of course,
reciprocal links are
still valuable,
there's a just a
question of how
valuable they really
are.
-
Links per page
are fewer. Many
SEO experts believe
that the higher the
number of links per
page, the less SEO
value each link has.
When a website
publishes an
article, the
author's backlink is
often the only live
link to another
website on that
page.
Distinct Non-SEO
Benefits of Distributing
Content
What makes content
distribution a truly
special method of link
building is that it's
the only method where
the non-SEO benefits may
even outweigh the SEO
benefits:
-
Website building.
If you create
special content for
your link-building
campaign, you can
publish it on your
site. As a general
rule, the more
content your site
has, the more search
engine traffic it
will receive. Just
publish the article
and get it indexed
in search engines
before distributing
it, which should
help you to outrank
your republishers in
search engines for
that same content.
-
Traffic
generation. The
links in distributed
content generate
traffic in the form
of highly qualified
leads: people who
liked what you had
to say. Distributing
content gets you
traffic even when it
doesn't get you a
link. If your
article gets picked
up by a
large-circulation
email newsletter,
you will get a flood
of highly qualified
traffic.
-
Authority.
Distributing content
is the only linking
campaign method that
can make the
recipient website
and its owners
appear
authoritative. There
are thousands of
internet gurus who
owe their lucrative
reputations entirely
to the articles
they've distributed.
-
Mindshare.
Distributing
articles is the only
linking campaign
method that can help
you spread an idea.
This makes article
distribution
invaluable for
launching new
products or
services.
Drawbacks of Content
Distribution
Of course, nothing good
ever came easy. Any
website owners who are
looking for SEO magic
beans will be
disappointed by content
distribution:
-
Desired anchor
text is not always
available.
Unfortunately, the
content management
systems most widely
in place today make
it easier for
website owners to
accept content as
text rather than
HTML. This means
that many website
owners simply have
their content
management system
convert a URL into a
live link, rather
than taking the time
to code in the
anchor text. Still,
an experienced
content distributor
can usually find
ways around this
problem to make sure
that many if not
most of the links
use anchor text
-
Results are
variable.
Content distribution
is not quite as sure
a thing as
reciprocal linking.
The site that
publishes your
article has to like
not only your site,
but also your
article. This is
especially true for
the
passively-generated
links that come from
content
clearinghouse
websites. But
results can vary the
other way, too: an
article that catches
on will yield more
links than you ever
could have gotten
through the same
investment in
reciprocal linking.
In order to minimize
the risk of content
not catching on with
website owners, you
should make sure
your content is
high-quality, and
also plan for a
large content
distribution
campaign: the more
content you try, the
more likely you are
to find a winner.
-
Requires
significant
investment. You
need high-quality
content, expertise
in content
distribution, and
quite a few
work-hours to
distribute the
content and track
the results. Of
course, the cost has
to be weighed
against the cost of
reciprocal linking,
which is also
significant. These
costs can be
mitigated by
outsourcing the
entire process from
soup to nuts to a
content distribution
specialist. Costs of
outsourcing content
distribution compare
favorably with costs
of outsourcing
reciprocal link
building.
-
Requires special
expertise. There
are numerous newbie
pitfalls to
distributing
content, from
improperly
formatting articles
to writing a bad
introductory email
to accompany content
submissions. You
generally have to
have done numerous
campaigns to truly
get the feel for it.
Again, this
requirement has to
be weighed against
the real-world
requirement of
special expertise in
other link campaign
methods. Again, this
drawback can be
mitigated by
outsourcing your
project to a
specialist.
In short, there are
benefits to both
reciprocal linking and
content distribution.
All things being equal,
you should use both.
Still, content
distribution is the only
one method that carries
substantial non-SEO
benefits as well. Plus,
a professionally managed
content distribution
campaign may even yield
greater SEO results than
reciprocal linking would
for the same investment.
You owe it to yourself
or your clients to add
content distribution to
your SEO-toolkit--before
the owner of the next
highest-ranking site
finds out about it.
About The Author
Joel Walsh is the owner
of UpMarket Content,
offering a fully managed
content distribution
campaign guaranteed to
get you at least one
hundred one-way inbound
links for every three
pages of content:
website content
distribution
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