Should you buy links? Wrong
question!
The question you SHOULD be asking
is, “should I be promoting my online business and what risks am I willing to
accept?”
{NOTE: the SEO Guru ALWAYS
approaches any topic regarding the online experience from a commercial
perspective. So, even though there may
be things of interest to some beyond the scope of buying and selling goods and
services, the Guru is not addressing those. }
There is really only one
reason anyone should want to pursue, (free, paid or killed for), a link in the
first place. The potential of increased
profits.
I suppose there could be an
argument made that simple validation is also a motivation worthy of consideration
but to me the only reason that justifies compensation is either the direct
benefit of a delivered lead trackable to a third party source of someone who
has made the investment to attract traffic that they are willing to transfer to
me for a fair price,( where would PPC be
without this little concept in place?), or the indirect benefit of things like
endorsement from trusted sources, branding and of course, improved visibility
in organic results of search engines.
Links given freely are always
appreciated of course. Even if they weren’t, there isn’t much you can do about
it. If someone wants to link to you for any reason you might as well be glad
because you can’t control what someone else does on their site. Even the Associated Press is going to have to
accept that you can’t control what other people link to. http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20071009/185531.shtml
What Do Free Links Cost
Control is the issue of course
and there is a cost associated with loss of control. Reputation management issues begin with a link.
When the #1 result for a search for your name has a title like “ World’s
biggest loser”, now there is a link you can live without. There is little question
that even if you do nothing more than whine about it, you have an investment of
time that could have been better spent not doing the whining.
Or like in AP’s doomed case
where you feel the link does them more good than you, you may end up wasting
millions in court costs and lawyer’s fees only to find out it would have been
cheaper to offer to simply pay Moreover to stop linking to you in the first
place. What a dilemma huh. If you paid someone to NOT link to you, is that
still considered natural linking?
When a link is compensated either
by reciprocating, trading or cash on the barrel, at least then you do have some
degree of control over placement, context and method of compensation. There are
undoubtedly benefits and upsides to making a deal.
A deal is a deal and it doesn’t
matter if that method of compensation is dependent on clicks or page rank. At
least it doesn’t matter to the dealer or the dealee. That is business and the
way business has been done since the first cave man traded a pretty rock for a
mastadon steak dinner. The perception is that what you and I conduct is no one’s
business but ours. That is the
perception and the perception is what is causing all the uproar, confusion and circular
debates in the world of online marketing.
Enter the internet and a
search engine generating a lot of traffic and wielding a lot of power to divert
or alter that traffic on a whim. Now a third party forces it’s way into the
deal by virtue of perceived risk and all of a sudden there are considerations
beyond the objectives of the dealer and the dealee. Naturally, this is going to
freak some people out. Others it will only not sit well with, while still
others see the controversy as opportunity and publish their viewpoints in the
hopes of gaining links as well as swaying people to their way of thinking.
The Internet Marketer’s Manifestohttp://www.seo-scoop.com/2007/04/20/the-internet-marketers-manifesto/
OR
Google Needs to Stop Being a
Crybaby About Paid Links
http://www.wolf-howl.com/google/google-needs-to-stop-being-a-crybaby-about-paid-links/
But no matter what the
position being promoted, controversy ensues as the comments on sphin illustrate.
http://sphinn.com/story/17990
Without the controversy, it
wouldn’t be worth the effort.
The harsh truth is that third
party influence over certain business transactions are actually nothing new.
Just ask anyone who has ever been left anything in a will or tried to sell a
business that was located in a leased building.
But another harsh truth is
that anyone who has the power to influence any deal for their own profit, is
going to do it. It doesn’t matter if it’s a third party, a dealee or a
dealer. If there is profit at stake
everyone that can profit will attempt to and they will use whatever resources
they have at their disposal to try to increase their take. That includes FUD,
public relations department and behind-closed-doors arrangements.
The Guru actually sees nothing
wrong with that as he believes that is as it should be. Each interested party with even a modicum of
business acumen is going to quickly assess risk vs return and act in their own best interests. That is business,
that is human and that is natural human behavior.
Improved visibility in organic results of search engines. Herein
lies the rub.
So when it comes to links, we
already know one of the parties has a vested interest in maintaining some
degree of control over the market for a number of reasons creating what could
be considered a risk.
Here is a video of Matt Cutts and Vanessa Fox discussing how selling links can cause you to lose your page rank:http://videos.webpronews.com/2007/12/11/pubcon-las-vegas-2007-matt-cutts-of-google-and-vanessa-fox
But only you can decide just what that risk is
worth. If the risk is more important to you than the return, fine. Trackable
leads, endorsements and branding with a no follow tag -- no problem. Slap a tracker on the link reporting
impressions and click thrus, agree on a cost per impression or per click or per
action and theoretically, the benefit of these desired outcomes represent
little risk beyond the possibility of over payment due to the lack of industry
standards and pricing largely dependent on the individual webmasters own idea of the value of his site, (far
too often over-inflated in this Guru’s
opinion).
Even if a monthly fee
for branding, endorsement or validation works, again, rel= no follow can give
you the false sense of security promised by the Google altered perception
machine.
But what if you believe
that organic converts better than ppc or that organic grabs the lion’s share of
the clicks? What if you believe the more Google tries to control links the more
value to influence their ranking the links have?
It’s not my job to tell
you what to believe or how to spend your money. As an online promotion service
provider, my job is not to tell you what you want or to assess risk for you. My
job is to listen carefully to you as you explain your objectives and then honestly
inform you of my opinion of the risks involved compared to the returns you
could expect and then increase your traffic, sales and/or image at your bidding.
Invariably I get the
question, SHOULD I BUY LINKS?
Wanna know the funny thing? Most of the people who
ask me that question are the people who least need to worry about the risk. The
risk motivating the question being whether or not they may be penalized by
google instead of the risk being about going broke.
Logic would dictate
that anyone concerned about the risk of being penalized by Google, is actually worried about losing something they already
have. In this case sales coming from
targeted traffic generated from superior organic placements in the SERP’s. Fine, that makes sense as that is pretty much
the definition of risk. Losing what you already have or at least losing a
perceived opportunity that you have already made an investment in, (which was a
calculated risk the minute a decision was made to put up a webpage and long
before this question ever came up).
But far more often than
not, when I take a look at the site belonging to the askee, I see a site that looks like a third graders
ransom note and written by a Marlon Sanders school of “But Wait – There’s More”
drop out with a title tag that reads,
index-Mozilla Firefox.
Little traffic to speak
of and certainly no sales to lose. There is VERY little visible investment in
design, content or anything else. Yet
they brag of the #3 spot they have for a keyword with over a million results
like that is all they need for proof of their valuable contribution to the world
of online commerce.
It’s obvious to me that
what they really want is to do very little work, invest very little of
themselves and then have me make them a lot of money for a couple hundred
bucks, BUT they don’t want the site to get penalized for breaking any google
rules.
That’s fine I have no
problem with that but don’t waste my time and yours trying to make me think you
are wanting one thing when you are actually wanting another. If you tell me it’s
a thin site with little content but you want it placed, I can help you evaluate
risk vs reward. When you tell me what a great site it is and you want it placed
for competitive keywords but you don’t want it penalized, that is borderline
crazy and I can’t help you with that.
Then I get the people
who read more seo blogs and forums than I do. They come to me and tell me they
want top quality links from only trusted authority sites with a minimum PR of 7
and without a no follow tag for $1 each to link to their affiliate site
promoting herbal male enhancement BUT they don’t want to break any Google
guidelines.
Again they are telling
me they want top placement for a site that lacks the content, the longevity and
the trust built by their competitors without having to build as good a
resources as theirs without breaking any rules. They are wanting me to promote
a great site when they don’t have a great site.
Again, fine. I don’t
care and I can help you assess the risk of this too but only by us both being
straight with each other.
I can help but the Truth Must Set You Free!
If you want to build a
great resource and want to gain link popularity without breaking any
guidelines, fine. I’ll help you develop strategies that get links for free. We may
build a nifty little widget to give away for free. We may set up a video
blogging site. We may do a lot of things that involve virtually no risk of Google
penalizing your site, (bear in mind that they can do anything they want any
time they want in regards to how and who they rank).
Fine, I can help and I
enjoy building complex sites and managing complex strategies. BUT the objective
here is not getting penalized instead of making the site profitable fast.
If you tell me you want
this site at #1 within 30 days, I can help with that too, BUT it is very likely
the placement in Google won’t last long. Very high risk with every so-called SEO
on the planet writing to Google accusing everyone else of breaking the rules. Again the objective here is not making a site
profitable. The objective is to spam the crap out of Google.
Fine, I know a lot of
people and can help you assess the risk vs the return for just every genre
there is to be promoted online.
Finally, there are
those who run online businesses. They are familiar with their own site and with
the sites of their competitors. They
want to compete effectively and maximize return while managing risk. They know
what sales are. They know what margins are and they know that Google’s business
is Google’s and they know they have to make sales and maintain margins to
survive and that is their business.
These people I can make
a lot of money. I can do the work they aren’t specialists in, faster, cheaper
and with a better return they can do it for themselves.
If you know what you
want and you tell me what you want, I can probably help, but if you are wanting
one thing and ask for help getting another you are either lying to me, lying to
yourself or lying to both of us and either way, you lose.
So the question is not,
SHOULD I BUY LINKS. The question is “how do I make more profits for my online
business”? Buy em, trade em, give away goodies for em or pay for them by the
click, links are a part of online promotion and you need them if you want increased
sales, more branding or improved image.
Now, my next blog post
is going to be about
CONTENT HOSTING – THE TEXT
LINK OF THE NEXT DECADE
What content hosting
does for the buyer, the seller and the search engine and why presell pages are
bullshit!
Peace Y’all
The SEO Guru
If I catch you buying
cigarettes with your lunch money again I’m going to quit giving you lunch money
and you can just go hungry!