Sometimes it’s hard to explain to people what a quality link is but in simple terms this is how I describe a site you want a link from:

  • It doesn’t have to be relevant to your industry
  • It doesn’t have to be an authority in it’s niche
  • It doesn’t have to be the same links as your competitors

It can be totally unrelated to your site, too.

What it has to be is a site that wasn’t built SOLEY to provide links to other sites because generally speaking, it takes a lot of authority for Google to like such sites (social media sites, directories etc).

That’s the sort of links I go for anyway and the more authoratitive the site, the better.

  • You don’t want it on a useful links page
  • You don’t want it on a page with other sites as to make it look like a paid link wether it is or not

You do want it on a page that’s in Google’s index, ranks for it’s title somewhere and does not have a Google grey bar toolbar value (although this can change).

If you want to increase Pagerank, you better make sure the pages that link to you have PR, can transfer it and are making your link the focus of the article.

Do the stuff above (and a lot of it) and you’ll have a natural link profile as is possible that will probably stand the test of time.

I don’t use that many tools for linkbuilding website promotion because I don’t really want the same links as my competitors for my clients – you just need Google, your brain, and I find a script being able to identify Nofollow comes in useful (I use SEO For Firefox but that’s about all I use it for).

Of course there’s many ways to SEO the cat (and I don’t IGNORE competitor research) but if I was a linkbuilder picking through a competitors backlinks instead of trying to think a bit more creatively about building a brand online I think I would shoot myself in the head.

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