Monday, December 12, 2005

SEO Web Links: Directory Alternatives

SEO Web Links: Directory Alternatives
By Joel Walsh (c) 2005

If you were writing a textbook on SEO linking circa 2001,
you almost certainly would have included a chapter on web
directories. They used to be the primary way of actively
acquiring one-way inbound links, before content syndication,
blogs, or the paid link market really took off.

Web Directories and SEO Links: What Went Wrong?

Fast forward a few years, and you'd have to rewrite the chapter
on directories and web links. In fact, you would probably
downgrade web directories from a chapter to a page or two. In
the SEO world, nothing good ever lasts long, and so it is with
web directories.

* Traffic
With Google more accurate than ever, there was no more reason
to turn to a human-edited list of websites. A directory might
get you one or two click-throughs a month--or none at all.

* Redirects
Once directory owners realized their link popularity was
valuable, they started hoarding it. Overnight, many, if not most,
directories switched their HTML links to search-engine-invisible
redirects.

* Fees
Most directories started charging for inclusion, or at least,
for inclusion with a link rather than a redirect. If the fees
were reasonable, that would not be so bad. But why would you
pay $35 for a link on a PR 3 page with dozens of other links
and virtually no content, on a site with dwindling traffic?

* Corruption
In the SEO world, low-hanging fruit quickly goes rotten. Any
volunteer-edited commercial category in a link directory runs a
very real risk of being taken over by a corrupt SEO.

* Dubious Link Popularity
Given the notoriety of many directories for selling or
inappropriately bestowing links, it's not hard to imagine
a search engine quality control engineer turning the link
popularity juice off from these sites.

* "Welcome to Our List."
If a directory doesn't charge a fee to enter, it may ask for
payment in the form of an email address. You'd better use your
special Hotmail account for that one.

* Anchor Text
Many directories do not allow for anchor text to be specified,
delighting in providing as little SEO value as possible for the
effort involved in submitting to them.

* Time
When link directories really were vital efforts to categorize
the web, getting a link in them was as simple as having a good
website and letting them know about it. Now that they've turned
into tightly rationed supplies of link popularity, that kind of
responsiveness is out the window.

* Idiosyncratic applications without any promise of timely
follow-up.

* Application forms that often empty straight into a black hole:

- No way of checking on the status of submissions.
- Threats of scuttling submissions that are re-submitted when
there is no response.

Web Directory Linking Alternatives for the 21st Century

* Reciprocal Linking With a Twist
If you network with other site owners, you can triangulate link
trades so that they are not direct. Heck, if you really like
each other, you may just link to each others' sites for the sake
of it! It's worked for me with some high-PR links.

* Blogging
Blog early, blog often, and someone is bound to link to you.
It's the nature of blogging. The fastest way to get inbound
links from your blog? Write about other blogs. The more
controversial, the better. Post this article on a webmaster
blog, and in the same post, reference the blog of someone who
thinks link directories are still a good idea! In the
blogosphere, arguments mean lots of links.

* Article Directories
These are the closest things to link directories, from an SEO
standpoint, to emerge in the 21st century. You submit an article
to one of these sites (of which there are over 200). In your
article you include a link to your site. Article directories are
everything link directories used to be: responsive, fair, fast,
no-fee, relevant, and quality sources of not only links but
information. OK, most of their pages are PR0 and the rest tend
to be PR 1-2. But with most article directories, you can choose
your exact anchor text for the link -- often more valuable than
PageRank for non-competitive search phrases. Besides, if most of
your links are on PR 4+ pages, how natural will that look?

In short, even if web link directories do still have some SEO
value, they should no longer be your first stop for one-way
inbound links. There are much better, and much less
aggravating, linking methods.

==========
Joel Walsh owns UpMarket Content, which helps clients get
one-way inbound links and web traffic by developing and
syndicating website content: http://www.UpMarketContent.com
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URL. 2. Link anchor text: "syndicating website content" OR
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