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How to get non Reciprocal Links

September 22nd, 2008

In this article we will look at how to get non reciprocal links.

Webmasters have become paranoid with link popularity therefor making it the most popular SEO techniques that is used on the web today. Why should you be worried about link popularity? Because it is one of the most important things that search engines use to rank web sites. Search engines have begun to see a problem with this because webmasters are trading links left and right. So now they put less importance on reciprocal links. Below you will see how easy it is to get non reciprocal.

1) You should get your site listed in both Yahoo! and the DMOZ because it can boost the rank of a site much more than a few links from an other site. It can be hard to get listed in both Yahoo! and the DMOZ because they only accept sites that offer original content and sites that are believed to be useful to Internet surfers. To get in Yahoo! it may cost you from free to 299 dollars, it depends on what category the site belongs to. The DMOZ is free matter what category your site belongs to.

2) Write articles to be published on other sites, like this article here you are reading. Use your expertise to write useful articles in your subject/market to be published. You can submit to Yahoo! Groups and articlecity.com. The sites that include your article will also include a resource box with a link back to your site.

3) Get your site listed in directories that are related to your site’s market. This is very useful at not only boasting your ranking in the search engines, but getting you targeted traffic. If you own a site that’s about games search with game resources or game directory. Let’s say your site is about dogs search with animal links or dog directory. You can also try…

Add site + your keyword/market Add URL + your keyword/market Submit URL + your keyword/market Suggest URL + your keyword/market Your Region + Add url/market your keywords + “directory/market

4) Create a great content site, if your site has great content or something that no one else offers you will find over time people will link to you because they feel that you have great content or service(s). It takes a lot of time to get links from other web sites this way, but it is well worth the time. You should write artless that are related to your site’s market, if you are not that great at writing articles or not sure where to start have a look at articlecity.com to get articles that you can publish on your site.

5) Put your signature at the end of each of your posts at forums. Join forums that are related to your site’s market and post about subjects that you know about with your signature at the end of the message. Some forums allow this, but not all do allow this, so you should make sure it’s allowed by checking the web site’s rules or the term of services that you have to agree to. Also don’t go around spamming the forums with your links because this WILL make you hated more than you are liked and will make visitors not trust your site.

KEEPING TRACK OF YOUR LINK EXCHANGES

September 22nd, 2008

All of us want to increase traffic to our web sites. It helps
our search engine rankings, and provides us with potential new
customers. One of the best, and certainly least expensive, ways
to do that is by exchanging links with sites similar to our own.
However, you don’t have to accumulate very many links before it
becomes difficult to keep track of them all. Many of them have
similar sounding (or identical!) names, descriptions and even
URL’s. Let me suggest a simple way to keep track of them so you
don’t embarrass yourself and annoy others by requesting to
exchange links with someone more than once. Create a simple
spread sheet with four columns and no more that 51 rows; one row
for titling your columns, and 50 for listing links. Search
engines do not like link pages with more than 50 links, so if
you make your spread sheet only capable of holding 50 items, you
won’t exceed that arbitrary level. Each link page on your site
will be a separate sheet in your spread sheet file. You can
rename the tabs along the bottom to match the page titles on
your web site if that helps you keep track. Your four columns
will be “Title,” “Description,” “Page/Location,” and “URL.” Take
the first link page on your site and just type in the info. Copy
and paste may or may not work as some software insists on
copying the hyperlink info as well and makes necessary stuff
like wrapping text difficult or impossible. The page/location
column is used to code which link page you have the placed the
reciprocal link onto, and where up and down the page. For
instance, the first link on your page one is coded 1.01. The
12th link on page 2 is coded 2.12. The 18th link on page 3 is
coded 3.18, and so on. Once you have done that, have your
software alphabetize the page. The links will then be arranged
in alphabetical order so you can easily find whatever you are
looking for. Additions to not-yet-completed pages can just be
added to the bottom, and then re-alphabetized. Try it!