2012-03-31

Introduction

Once again, Distilled did a great job organizing yet another LinkLove conference taking place quite traditionally in the Congress Centre on Great Russels Street in the lovely Bloomsbury area in Central London. Foliovision was there on March 30 to pick up some fresh insight and tips from this year's LinkLove speakers.

01 handing out lanyards

Duncan Morris, CEO at Distilled kicked the sold-out conference off with traditional networking with your neighbours.

As a Distilled and SEOmoz subscriber, I guessed pretty much accurately what will be the most important takes from this conference looking at the main topics featured:

Content building vs. link building

Getting links from high-quality authoritative sites

Making outreach of your e-mail marketing efforts effective

Competitor research

Building relationships in the blogosphere

Smart and effective old-style link building

New trends in SEO strategy

linklove sold out intro duncan morris

full house linklove sold out

Pretty much everything that we do for our clients in Foliovision was covered so I was extremely curious about the presentations and the speakers. This was my first SEO conference, so I was really looking forward to seeking these people live, as I have been following their blogs and twitter accounts for quite some time.

Quicklinks to Presentations:

Content Strategy vs. Link Building - Rand Fishkin

Making Outreach Effective - Michael King

Which Links are Really Helping Your Competitors to Rank - Branko Rihtman

Getting Golden Links - Jane Copland

Building Target, Relationships and Links - Wil Reynolds

Building Links With Products and Developers - Tom Anthony

Easy Ways to Win - Do it Differently - Martin MacDonald

The Critchlow Hierarchy of Needs - Will Critchlow

  Exciting lineup of linklove speakers

All of the speakers seem to have lots of relevant experience but not all of them held great presentations. Veterans like Rand, Martin and Will gave the impression that they know exactly what they're talking about whereas some of the other presentations were either vague or the speaker was working harder on entertaining the audience than delivering useful insight.

Content Strategy vs. Link Building – Rand Fishkin (CEO & Co-Founder at SEOmoz)

  SEO leader Rand Fishkin warns us about article networks

I expected Rand to be all white hat and moralist, but I certainly didn't expect him to start his presentation with a "F#$&! Link Building" Slide. Definitely caught attention of those who had less coffee that me in the morning and needed a wake up call. Basically, the message was that a pure link-building approach isn't the right way, in Rand's words:

"I'm going to do some dumb (link building) and I'm going to hope it sticks - That's a dumb approach."

Link Building is Painful

The traditional way is painful, you have to be contacting webmasters directly in a personalized way

That's why private link networks popped up and have been so popular ever since - a whole network of links for $49? Great!

Not actually a good idea - if you go overboard you might get burned - it works in the short term or just partially

Why Links are in Danger

The intent of an link was never to rank for it's anchor text - the algorithm was originally never designed  to do that

Google didn't meant for SEOs to rank

Since How Google Makes Liars Out of the Good Guys  - Google's got angry and a lot of sites (700,000) mainly in the US received penalty emails from Google

Don't use blog/article/link networks!

Build My Rank and other networks shut down - a stupid idea to look for a substitute in terms of other link networks

Linkerati (targets of linkbait) are a far bigger group - networked creators are everywhere

Go Social

Social networking sites now dominate link sharing - 66% of internet users use them

As a result, social signals in Google are on a rise - individual link metrics have lower correlation with SERPs over time

Google says they don't get social signals directly - depends on what "directly" means here

Google does collect a massive amount of social media data about every user - from Quora, Facebook, Twitter, Flick, digg, etc. - check it in your Google account

They get a representative sample of "indirect" data to set up their social graph

Tactical Approach vs. Strategic Approach

Tactical option A - ranking here will make things better - build content, build communities, promote great content

Tactical option B - link building like crazy

Strategic Approach - Acquiring customers at lower costs is winning

Paid search is very expensive, average cost for a conversion - $95

Organic SEO - a lot cheaper, same impact for $15

Customer Acquisition Cost Ratio  - what you get for what you invest is a lot better for organic SEO

Rand boasting with SEOmoz doing great in terms of conversion

5 Reasons to Invest into Content vs. Link Building

Simultaneous wins in multiple channels at once (social, link bait, etc.) – build up a follower base – brand visibility

– hopefully google will notice and feature your G+ page in SERPs

The future is stronger social following - invest in things for the long term

Rand's "Give me 400 linking root domains button" => the publish button in SEOmoz's backend, of course

Duckduckgo.com could go big example – niche market search engine, but Google started exactly like this

Rand about building brand, brand, brand - makes everything easier

  Rand Fishkin topsy

What content should I make?

- use keyword research to see what audience likes

- Fiskars example: Scissor producer having a creative blog concept - visitors creating content

- or reverse and build content, tools for your current visitors

- or come up with a brilliant idea - Shitter (immediate success)

10 PRO Tips to do Content Marketing Right

DollarShaveClub.com – video (4 million views) that raised 1.5 million dollar funding

– but no link building, bad title tag, the site was down in a critical moment

– just a little bit of SEO and it would be beautiful

Visualize the time when a link is shared by time zone

FeeFighters Blog - immediate success

Economist – charts and infographics that get scraped or linked to

Zemanta's Blog Links Tools – images and content put in front of bloggers - a white hat link network, highly recommended

Twitter Stories – content curation + unique design

Slate's Partnership with Quora

Koozai's viral blog posts via Google News

See Jane Work: Demographically Targeted Office Supplies – use political and social messages to get people involved

- target search suggestions - type "Romanians are" into Google

PrideBait – find interesting people, interview them, write about them, let their publicity rank for you

16 another question

Analysis by Foliovision

Rand started the day with a clear message to all black and grey hat SEOs that their days are done. Well in our view, some balanced link building isn't going to lose its importance that soon. Rand had a resourceful presentation that would deserve a lot more structured approach. Coming from a business college, I wonder where did all that structure from actually all the presentations go. In Foliovision, we believe great content and reasonable amounts of link building do make sense when done together to supplement each other. But yes, content is key.

Making Outreach Effective – Michael King (Director of Inbound Marketing - iACQUIRE)

  Mike King acquire black hat

Last time Mike spoke at LinkLove he even rapped, this time he tried to entertain us solely with his presentation. Mike rushed through the slides so quickly I had the impression he didn't want us to see at least a half of them.

The main point of Mike's presentation were outcomes of a marketing research they did in iAcquire to measure certain factors in outreach efficiency. They find out that:

gender: female got a higher response rate, men got more conversions

salutation: personalization is key. Other that the obvious, "Hey" had the best conversion rate, but the sample was too small (unsurprisingly). "Hi" did the best among the relevant. Use Rapportive to find names.

day of the week: Tuesday seems to work best, but weekends tend to get high open rates as people receive less mail, so they're more likely to open it

time of the day – 9AM had best response rate – but it makes sense to send at night, so people get them in the morning

length of the emails - emails longer than 1000 characters tend to rank better

logo vs no logo - emails with a logo are better

Other discoveries and suggestions included:

throw away form letters and personalize – do more social linking

phone number in email is worse than no number – better response rate from email without number can be due to a feeling that someone is trying to be trustworthy, but isn't - scams

Mike shared a bit about their outreach workflow.  To build a relevant target audience, they crawl 14 million page in a year -> put them through an algorithm -> filter blue (Wikipedia and other hard-to-get) and black (bad quality) -> filter them according to a few SEO metrics -> employ a quality control team (personalized for each client) -> then the real work starts with doing manual outreach

  Mike King iacquire wonders of SEO

Link Equity

Mike hates the term "link juice". What Mike likes to use when talking to a client is "link equity". He explained building quality links is more like building a piece of real estate than gaining juice.

the price of a link is measured in how much would it cost to buy directly (or a very similar link)

the cost is a function of incremental traffic in price of a CPC campaign

09 jo turnbull question

Analysis by Foliovision

Mike's presentation was more about turning a rather dull subject (marketing research for outreach) into a show. We didn't get the best of both worlds actually. When it comes to his conclusions, we can only argue that they don't have much impact on a lot of online marketers. Some of them were pretty obvious (e.g. time of the day) while some aren't applicable by a lot of companies (e.g. including phone numbers - depends on the client's industry).

I found iAqcuire's outreach workflow the most interesting part of his presentation. For a big agency or an in-house in a huge brand, this is actually the way to go.

We don't like the term "link juice" at Foliovision either and we also do think about links as equity. This idea wasn't a part of Mike's presentation, but as with a house, you can rent links (buy a link directory subscription) or buy (earn) them. Renting links isn't a good long term strategy.

Which Links are Really Helping Your Competitors to Rank – Branko Rihtman

  Branko Rihtman

Is SEO a science?

You would have to apply scientific principles - define questions and undertake experiments

Practical science is what we need to apply, four principles:

Don't BS yourself

Truth above profit

Stay curious

Share knowledge

Do social signals without links help rank directly or do they attract links?

Use Niels Bosma’s SEO Tools for Excel

Scientific approach – build plugins and use APIs to track content vs tweets/shares/likes vs links -> Result: a look at which social media audience is more likely to link

MS Minesweeper effect: after the initial research step, we have 2urls -> which point to 214 twitter users -> who tweeted 12,000 URLs, which is about 3.700 domains

Identifying valuable Twitter power users - users who tweet their links only or just links to your niche are not as valuable as users who tweet about various aspects of life - those aren't likely to send out spam signals

Example: Pinterest content doesn't rank well with pure social signals, but ranks OK with some links

Priorities: Links are first; then everything else - social shares are not yet the goal

Analysis by Foliovision

Branko made an impression of a misplaced family-loving scientist during his presentation. His dry presentation was very data-oriented and confusing for a marketing-type like me, although I like the idea of applying scientific principles into SEO.

Branko tried to encourage us to use APIs and don't shy away from an analytical, scientific approach to SEO. Well, we do a fair bit of analysis in Foliovision, but in the end, the presentation left me quite confused as to where to start if I would want to apply these principles in a medium-sized inbound marketing department.

breakout sessions: improving your blog strategy

Getting Golden Links - Jane Copland

  Jane Copland olympics of SEO

Link Building Like Everyone Else

Most SEOs do link building in the same way, so they get the same links

You need to think differently to be successful, following the crowd won't get exceptional results

If you're using link networks, you get the same stuff everybody else does, to start outranking competition, you need golden links

10 belgian question

Do it like Michael Winner

Use the bus lanes when driving around London if you've got enough cash to pay the fine and when you get caught - pay the toll - you just have to think out of the crowd

Example: How to get an ad into the Olympic Games? Normally, you would have to spend 700 million dollars (viewership 4.7 billion in 2008) But there's only a 20k fine for streaking – that's a big saving

Create a fake product, like the 10 Downing Street Experience

You still need traditional links and volume, but golden links push you further

Great links can be acquired on BBC, but you have to have a great product pitch - example: Zombie Boot Camp

Outreach is not dirty - don't be shy, a little bit of showing off is good, but don't lie

fix broken links found by webmaster's tools

Opportunity is everywhere if you look at your obstacles differently

  Jane Copland with audience

Takes from Q&A:

Reciprocal links are not bad when they're not between spammy sites

Reaching people on social and in comments has actually brought employment opportunities in SEOmoz for the people

Newspaper sites have different policies – some won't link ever

Identifying targets first or building content first - the former is usually trickier than the latter

Analysis by Foliovision

Jane's presentation was more about PR and product marketing strategy than actual link building, but she managed to bring a fresh breeze into the conference room nevertheless. Her grey-hat approach appealed to most of the audience and she was received a lot better than the previous speaker. After all, you don't have many ladies as speakers on SEO conferences.

Thinking differently is an approach applicable in offline as well as online, so the presentation was kind of like teaching SEOs how to go viral by being creative in product and content development and their communication. Quality is key here, as you won't get those golden links unless you are absolutely exceptional or do something really crazy which gets you tons of attention. This is an approach we like to apply and encourage, but is limited when you can't exactly influence product development or the sales pitch.

Reaching to the right media people (for stalking, read on) in your niche via social networks could be a way to increase your chances of scoring the golden links.

Building Target, Relationships and Links - Wil Reynolds

Wil Reynolds - Building Targets, Relationships and Links

Wil's presentation was basically a case study of him stalking a big fish in online marketing that he done a few weeks ago.

Stalking

Want to get somebody's attention? Well, start stalking!

You have to start tracking everything - tweets, mentions, everything you can get

Pull RSS feeds of his/her tweets, etc. into iGoogle

To be successful and noticed, you have to add value, help them out and act as your target, not as you

Use Wil's Chrome plugins - look them up in his tweets

The basic philosophy here is stalking = helping

Use inboxq.com to find new followers - through answering questions

Build a relationship online and meet in person, friends are more than links

Analysis by Foliovision

Wil's case study was more like a real-life detective or spy story than something most SEOs can apply. Will put up quite a show and showed us some awesome tips for making tracking easier, and I can imagine that we'll add some of his tools into our daily client relationship-building efforts. On a larger scale (say you've got more than 50 clients), it wouldn't be feasible without lots of experienced relationship-building staff, though. And you can't really build relationships simultaneously on twitter, although you could do this to a degree on Facebook with customized privacy when sharing content. Not with comments, though.

Wil's case was special, more about building business relationships through social networking. It's definitely a great way to earn some tweets, shares and links in the end as well. I would definitely use such an approach for some really valuable contacts like people in media and in special cases related to the client's industry, but definitely not on a large scale as you don't get any guarantee of a link even after great effort.

Building Links With Products and Developers - Tom Anthony

 Tom Anthony - Building Links With Products and Developers

1997 - Google "discovers" links

right after that - SEOs start to manipulate the linkscape and the cat & mouse game starts

Does Google still trust links? There are trust issues.

In the old days, every link was equal, now every link is screened for a multitude of factors

SEOmoz Google algorithm survey 2011 – 40% of the algorithm is thought to consist of external link signals (down from 66% in 2009) – introduction of other signals

either way, spamming anchor text still works to a degree - so what are Google waiting for?

Link authority vs link volume graph shows us a great peak at DA 30 - that's the "normal" link distribution - link profile

Anomalous link profiles can be white hat, but are usually not (spam advances faster than normal content), therefore Google is penalizing - deindexing whole clusters of domains even though collateral damage is done

Panda sacrificed some white hats for the sake of getting rid of many black hats - a  great win for Google

What Should SEOs stop doing?

"We have changed the way in which we evaluate links; in particular, we are turning off a method of link analysis that we used for several years."

Google search blog, 2012

Many of the big and small link networks (e.g. Build My Rank) have been deindexed lately - 20,000 to 30,000 domains got deindexed virtually overnight - that's 100,000,000 links gone.

Putting the Love Back to Links

Google is scrutinizing every link

The future are rich snippets and rel="author"

Google+ isn't primarily a social network for Google, it's an identity service

Google is defending their search territory and attacking social territory

author stats are appearing in webmaster tools

What to do:

Make sure you have authorship markup set up properly

target trusted authors for links

shift your strategy from where you want your links to who will publish them

Author Crawler by Tom Anthony

automated data discovery of author snippets data for link analysis

loads of different uses for this data, e.g. identifying people you should be following (Wil's stalking)

Follow @TomAnthonySEO to get the link soon

19 another question 4

Analysis by Foliovision

Tom's presentation was exactly the kind of presentation I expected to hear on LinkLove - a thorough insight into history and the latest trends in SEO and a lot of talk about Google. I really liked Tom's idea that we should shift from site-oriented targeting to people-oriented targeting because Google will likely make authorship even more prominent in the search results in the future. I can only agree with his views of Google+ and his concerns about link networks. Setting up the rel="author" and also the rel="publisher" snippets is what we have done for all relevant clients a few months back and we're looking forward to see the impact. If you don't have these snippets set up properly yet, you're probably missing a lot. We will see how will the new Author Crawler perform in real life and then we might do a review.

Easy Ways to Win: Do it Differently - Martin MacDonald

Tips, Tricks from the Trenches

Martin MacDonald - Easy Ways to Win at SEO

Martin, with 10 years of SEO experience in industries like gambling, entertainment and travel spoke with the authority of a veteran. In his view, SEO's have two basic problems:

We're fighting all alone (and yes, according to the raised hands, most of the people in the room had small teams or did SEO alone)

What the others do? We tend to do the same.

Martin would rather go the easy way and win still - the easiest way is going against the flow in link building

Martin doesn't shy away from mentioning building an army - make somebody help you - mobilizing troops and getting links in a spammy way would cost him $10 a link

Everyone likes to link to author profiles - use them to harness links

Ranking Without Links Example

If you would get involved, you could even hijack a community

Martin hijacked Rand's community by disproving a guy that lied about ranking without links

Rand got involved into the debate, but Martin was the first one to bring evidence that the guy is a liar and has lots of links

Rand retweeted Martin and not even did Martin's post rank #2 for Martin's name, but it even ranked for the liar's keywords on #2 for at least 12 hours

Great Links

You can get links and traffic from a widget on BBC's site

A human editor in BBC is picking mentions about BBC and linking to them in a widget on the BBC blog for a week - he should expect lots of new mentions this Monday

The take: build widgets to make competitors build links for you

Shaping Link Equity

harness affiliate links - with 302 redirects

changing the way the affiliate network works – you can put # between your root domain and the affiliate code, then a 301 redirects your domain URL only, and a 302 redirect is put on the affiliate code, your competitors should then pass you their link juice

Ignore Convention, Reverse Hubs

Example: Shit for Links - Exchange links for real useless stuff. The idea earned probably earned a comment even from Rand

The five monkey theory applied to SEOs - following the crowd is not the right thing to do, in SEO and in life

Q&A

Does exact match anchor text still work?

- Yes it does!

There is a breakthrough point for a overwhelming number of links. You have to build up nice and gradually.

Analysis by Foliovision

Martin's arrived right out of the trenches to  deliver some hard SEO knowledge which included some tricky ways to get BBC link to you (won't probably work for long after LinkLove) and an affiliate link URL trick that will be discussed in detail in many Search departments around the world, including ours. We're happy he could make it as he was "to be confirmed" and we didn't even know the topic. It turned out that Martin himself wouldn't probably come up with a unifying theme for his presentation.

Martin managed to deliver a mix of great and entertaining tips, but in my opinion, in a sort of unstructured and confusing way. I certainly got the feeling he wasn't telling the whole stories and just touched the surface on a number of topics without concentrating on the details.

I can certainly agree that exact match anchor text is still working and that building up links gradually for new sites makes perfect sense.

The Critchlow Hierarchy of Needs - Will Critchlow

Will Critchlow - The Critchlow Hierarchy of Needs

Distilled leader Will has finished the conference with his own hierarchy of needs for the mediocre SEO.

Mediocre to Great

Start by asking Why? - Not once, but 5 times, until you get to the root of the problem

Linking campaingns tend to be mediocre because:

You're not doing anything

You're not doing enough of the right things

You're not acknowledging your weaknesses

You're not cultivating spiky enough spikes

The Critchlow hierarchy:

Discover what you need to improve and win

Pitch big visions and small next steps

Experiment to find ways to improve and to persuade

Invest with evidence and experience in hand

Discover

Analyze what it's going to take to reach goal

do a SWOT analysis

Pitch ideas afterwards

Quality is what gets ahead of the competition - Apple had 75% gross margin of the market with 9% market share

Only exceptional content gets noticed - Having mediocre content is useless - it's an exponential function

Self-assessment for Websites

assess your website in 5 fields: design, content, commission assets, investment, USPs

Your goal has to be to rank on an exponential scale

This process should highlight the priorities

don't fill the gaps - the weak spots, rather concentrate on your spikes - make your strengths rank

Sometimes, you also need someone else to tell you how you're doing - reality check

Another tool is to plot direct visitors against linking root domains – the conversion rate - you can identify content with low and high conversion rates and adapt accordingly

How To Do This Right?

Content quality must be high enough

Benchmark yourself against yourself in the past

Forget about sub domains - redirect to root

Don't worry about no follow links

Example: The Boston big picture posts get links - great content, adaptable to any site - you can get amazing photos - it scales beautifully - endless themes

Do small experiments to lower risk with a risky pitch

Try an experiment: set up a sign up form, get people to sign up to get great content

Business Model Comparisons

Content library = physical real estate

- Red Bull owns its own media house - a little scary

Good conversion rate = efficient supply chain

Big Ideas and Experiments

Pitch a big idea and a small next step, set up a lunch with your colleagues

Gawker's editorial strategy - one of his staff writers always had to look for funny videos, pictures, take pictures of Chinese goats, etc. - segmentation of team work - one part of the team focusing on high authority and other on link building

Kerry Lauerman (Salon.com) says - 33 percent fewer posts, 40 percent more traffic

Small experiments should be set to test your biggest risk - thus de-risking the plan

Use kickofflabs.com  for these little experiments

Read the Lean Startup

Update reports to include the metrics your experiments are focused on

Invest

Key take-aways:

Use shorter checklists

Communication checklists are a good idea

Ask what should we do if that goes wrong – critical situations will be easier to handle - (Hudson river plane landing example)

If you can't find 10 targets to link to your idea in 10 minutes, it's probably not a good idea

Take time to research whether they have linked to something like your content before

Making Plans

Make an activity plan

Make testable assumptions

Measure progress towards your plans

"Who hates planning? I though I hated planning, but I what I really hated were plans."

Analysis by Foliovision

I think Will had the longest presentation out of all speakers and the most resourceful one when it comes to strategy. Although speaking at great length, I really liked that that he could sum it all up in four sentences in the end.

Will is really digging deep when it comes to content strategy, but at the same time, he threw in some really funny videos to make his points clear. On top of that, there were some really useful tips when it comes to organizing your content writing team (Gawker's editorial strategy) and de-risking by experimenting.

Will wasn't talking about things that would be big news to a person with marketing education and experience, yet he managed to sum up the most important aspects of a broader approach to inbound marketing perfectly. I doubt many people will take the time to assess their sites through his spreadsheet, though I will take the time to assess our most troublesome sites.

thoughtful SEO: beautiful reflections on new link building strategies

Photo credits: Alec Kinnear, Foliovision. © Distilled.co.uk. Web republishing welcomed with credit to Foliovision and link this article. Thanks.

Review: LinkLove Conference London 2012

Post from: Foliovision


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