The venerable, hoary «
back link strategy» for search engine optimization is wheezing like a dying animal.
Especially, the particulars in KW research and
back linking strategies.
Not exact matches
Link your HR processes
back to
strategy with integrated appraisals, 360 reviews & human capital tools.
In this
strategy, you'll be producing content specifically intended to circulate («go viral») and naturally prompt people to build
links pointing
back to your domain.
Now that I've outlined the basic concepts of modern
link building, as well as a high - level view of the
strategies you'll need to be successful at it, let's take a step
back and look at how
link building came to be, how it's evolved, and why it has an undeserved questionable reputation in the SEO (and general marketing) industry.
I've noticed you seem to list the «3 posts per week»
strategy over the long haul as well as commenting on other blogs that will allow
back links.
Leaders of Australia's melon industry will meet with supermarkets today to discuss
strategies to get rockmelon
back on shelves, after a listeria contamination
linked to two deaths saw the affected fruit removed from stores.
I think in fairness to Steve Hart, Unite's
strategy makes union
backed candidates from a broader social background part of their political
strategy, but certainly not the end of it: At the Unite meeting at Labour Conference, Jon Trickett & Len McCluskey made the case for Unite & Labour developing MP's from down to earth backgrounds, but
linked this very much to having policies that adress the needs of working class voters: The Unite
strategy is fairly broad, including recruitng union members to Labour, developing MP's (who as McCluskey are
backed because they «reflect the values of the union movement» — rather than just being from a particular social class), and supporting the CLASS think tank to develop policy — I did a write up of this meeting for the Morning Star (and a rival Progress one), which may be of interest (I think it will appear if you click on my name)
Clearly, I don't have a blogger's editorial calendar, or a plan, or a
strategy, or a way to lure you in so you will keep coming
back, or «stickiness», or SEO, or Google analytics that I can understand, or
link backs.
This can be a good
strategy for authors trying to build their mailing lists (of course, you'd need a
link for email signup in the front or
back matter of the book), and can get you some sales in the «post free» lift period that occurs immediately after your book is free.
Other successful marketing and promotion
strategies included newsletters, hiring public relations help, contests, giveaways, author events, commenting on other blogs with a
link back to the author's website, and cross-promoting with other authors.
Thanks for the
link back and good article — shows how quickly you can go in the hole with a
strategy like this.
As readers of Planet3.0 might know I have been somewhat critical about the anti-pipelines movement (be it Keystone XL, Northern Gateway, Kinder Morgan or something else), my basic position (check the
link for something more substantial) is that as long as selling the tar sand bitumen is massively profitable then the anti-pipeline
strategy boils down to getting governments and corporations to turn their
backs and walk away from huge sums of money.
We'll get their website's on - page factors nicely optimized, run a comprehensive
linking campaign, develop a good content
strategy, and then sit
back for a bit, prepared to see their rankings improve.
Back in October of last year, we realized that, in order to improve our client's search engine visibility on Google, Bing, and Yahoo!, we needed to develop a
link building
strategy outside of the traditional content marketing, «if you write it, they will
link» mentality.
· Experience working with CMS and building / administering content in CMS environments, Google and Bing's services, including Analytics and Webmaster Tools,
link building and viral
strategies, and
back - end SEO elements such as htaccess, robots.txt, metadata, and site speed optimization