7 golden rules of white hat link building
Christoph Cemper defines his 7 rules of link building from a white hat perspective (being to work in line with the search engine guidelines).
- Relevant page & in-content links
- Domain trust
- Natural anchor text distribution
- Nofollow
- Juicy page
- Don’t spam
- Don’t buy links for PageRank
1. Relevant page & in-content links
The most important thing in link building these days is to have relevant links to relevant content. A relevant link means a link on a relevant page within the content. So a link in the footer or sidebar of a page is not the way to go anymore.
Think like a user, not like someone performing SEO. Therefore relevant external links are good as well. Don’t worry about wasting PageRank, but think about adding value for the user.
2. Domain trust
Second to relevancy comes trust when performing link building activities. You need links from trusted sites to become trusted. And this trust is important for both links from and to a page. When it comes to trust the domain age of a site is a strong indicator.
But Christoph Cemper also coins an important term: “co-citations”. This basically means that a page is part of group of unlinked pages that share the same inbound links, and are thus co-citated.
Co-citations and SEO
In 2006 link building expert Jim Boykin wrote an article on co-citation in relation to SEO. There are 2 basic lessons that can be learnt here. It is important…:
- Who you link to with and
- Who is linked with you.
Build trust
Think about this for a second or two (and read Jim Boykin’s article). Then you’ll understand how Google can algorithmically determine if a link is relevant or not and if the link is within a “bad neighborhood“.
So it is important to build trust through relevant domains, not only links. Because trusted domains respond differently and more quickly in search engines than ‘regular’ web sites.
Authority and PageRank
Trust is often referred to as authority, which is becoming increasingly important in Google’s algorithm. A recent comparison of PageRank and SEOmoz’s mozRank indicate that PageRank started weighting in authority as well.
3. Natural anchor text
A natural anchor text (or link text) means that not all links have the ‘perfect’ anchor text. But search engines can detect this and devaluate your site. So make sure you realize a natural anchor text distribution.
The problem is that there are too many companies (SEO companies too!) that fix on PageRank and precise anchor text, but even big companies (trusted sites) can get in trouble with it (see Christoph’s case study in his presentation below).
A natural anchor text distribution is reached by doing link building as follows:
- Vary the anchor text
- Add nofollow to some links
- Add useless anchor texts (brand name, site-url, read more, click here)
The important thing here is that regular users don’t care about anchor text. Therefore ‘useless’ anchor texts make sense. So vary the anchor text and don’t worry too much anymore about a precise anchor text.
Basically you’re in trouble if all your links look like they were built by an SEO. If a lot of the links to a certain web page have the same precise anchor text, search engines can figure out that is not a natural link profile.
4. Nofollow
Did you ever build nofollow links, on relevant pages that is? Sounds strange for SEO doesn’t it. But yes, you should! Because you don’t care about PageRank that much anymore (do you?). Also realize that normal users don’t care about nofollow either. They do of course not see or know if a link is a nofollow link.
Turning this around: if you don’t have any nofollow links that could be a footprint. But don’t overdo it. Based on data, from the SEOmoz’s index built for their Linkscape tool, 2.7% of all links on the web are nofollowed. Another interesting fact is that 73% of those are internal, so nofollow is actually far more popular as a link sculpting tool than a spam prevention device.
Remember the 2 key elements of link building nowadays: we want relevant and trust, not a ‘filled green bar’. It needs to look like it is build by users.
5. Juicy page
A juicy page is actually simple to define: it ranks. And therefore a juicy page is a page that passes value to you.
How do you check if a page is juicy? If we follow the definition that a juicy is a page that ranks, check if a page is juicy as follows:
- Pick unique phrase from the page
- Search Google for this phrase (with “quotes”)
- Check if the page is on position number 1
If the page does not rank on position number 1, it’s not that much of a juicy page. In that case competitors probably stole the content of that page and, even worse, Google thinks that page is more relevant (or is the page you’re checking a copy?).
How to find relevant pages?
Extending this approach you can follow the next steps to find a relevant page for link building purposes:
- Search the keyword phrase you are targeting and look at the top results
- Use combinations of the target keyword
- Filter commercial, duplicate, etc. web sites
- Check if the page is juicy
- Are there any spammy looking links on there?
6. Don’t spam
This is not a surprise, especially from a white hat perspective, but you should not spam links. Practices which do not look natural (= built by users), and therefore could be marked as spam, are:
- Links on duplicate content pages
- Adding links into pages which are years old
- Links within a bad neighboorhood (see Co-citations above)
7. Don’t buy links for PageRank
Especially since Google started manually adjusting the PageRank of web sites that buy or sell links for ranking purposes only, it’s not a smart move to buy or sell links for PageRank only.
Besides that paying for links is against Google’s guidelines, it doesn’t align with the 2 key elements of link building these days: relevance and trust.
Not all paid links violate Google’s guidelines. As Google states: “Buying and selling links is a normal part of the economy of the web when done for advertising purposes, and not for manipulation of search results. Links purchased for advertising should be designated as such.” [= adding a nofollow tag to it]
By the way, the PageRank value and weight in Google’s algorithm is deflated anyway. So you don’t look at PageRank anyway. (do you?)