I spent a lot of time today deciding if I would share this with you or not. Ultimately I decided that my emails are supposed to be helping you build your online business and cash-flow.
You know you need to have backlinks to your main site to bring traffic and help you get a better ranking in the search engine results pages (SERPs). You also know that not all links are created equal, and not all of them are do-follow (don't worry about what that means, it's not actually relevant). The thing about backlinks is that when you create one, it must be relevant to the site the link is on. What that means is that if you link from a cooking forum to your drone training site, the link is not relevant to either location and will be discounted at best or get you penalised at worst.
The anchor text is also important. When you put a link inside a blog post, the anchor text should be something that the reader would naturally click on, to find out more about how to do this search Wikipedia, they are the experts at link placement.
Now, here's the juicy part of this post. To find .gov and .edu blog and forums to get backlinks from simply do a search in Google, Yahoo, and MSN with these terms "inurl:.gov + inurl:blog +
Regards,
P.S. When you are building backlinks it's boring. Definitely tedious, but it's something you need to do regularly. Not necessarily every day, but at least once a week, you should be building a handful of backlinks. Other than .gov and .edu links you also need to diversify your links across a bunch of platforms, which is even more tedious, but necessary.
The solution is to automate as much as possible.
Two tools can help remove the monotony and improve the consistency of your linking. |
|||
Brent Milne 12 Torrens St Happy Valley South Australia |
You're getting this email because you signed up on my |