Archive for the ‘Link Building’ Category
SEO News Round Up
Friday, August 13th, 2010

Happy Friday Guys! We hope you enjoy some of our favourite picks from the last two weeks in search.
GENERAL SEO
Google can’t find the original source of content? – May update follow-up
What are biggest challenges for an SEO project? In this article you will find 9 essential SEO action points.
Using Excel for SEO, in this article a nice collection of tips.
MOBILE SEO
Start thinking mobile SEO, how to optimise your website for iPad and tablets users.
Best practices for mobile search marketing campaigns in this article featured @searchengineland.
SOCIAL SEO
Twitter vs. Facebook – Twitter is imposing itself as the new “Answer Machine”. Why Google should fear Twitter.
What makes a tweet influential? New research by HP Labs’ Social Computing Lab, shows some interesting insights.
Foursquare vs. Facebook – Facebook is jumping into the geo-location game. And the winner is …
GLOBAL SEO
In this interesting article, Bill Hunt explains the SEO challenges of language detection, essential information to optimize local market content.
Other News from the World of Search
Google and Verizon, two leading players in Internet service and content, are nearing an agreement that could allow Verizon to speed some paid online content. What does this mean for SEO? Your site speed is an even more important factor now.
Posted in Link Building, SEO, Social Media | 1 Comment »
SEO News Round Up
Friday, July 16th, 2010

Here’s the latest news and developments in the world of SEO to help you keep up to date.
LINK BUILDING
In this article there are some fantastic tips and ideas about how to get links in tough industries.
LOCAL
How can you improve your ranking in Google Places? In this article you will find some great tips for optimising your listing and rankings in Google places.
The latest changes in Google Places OneBox – now if you click on the OneBox result, it does not take you to the business’s website but to the Google Place Page for that website (and the “More Info” link has been renamed “Place Page”).
SEO GENERAL
The biggest SEO Dont’s as suggested by SEOmoz
And the biggest SEO Dont’s for small businesses as suggested by Searchengineland
Does Google pay attention to the presence of a keyword in the URL? Apparently so … and so do Yahoo and Bing, take a look at this interesting test!
Starting from August/September 2010, Yahoo! and Bing organic search results will merge … We will keep on monitoring them head-to-head, so stay tuned!
Need a laugh? Well this guy tried to boost his website rankings by using the word “page rank” in the meta tags.
SEO EDUCATIONAL
If you want to find out more about SEO and even become an expert in this subject, we recommend this fantastic list of SEO resources.
That’s it!
Any of your own to add? Please leave ‘em below!
Tags: Link Building, SEO, SEO News
Posted in Link Building, SEO | No Comments »
What are the best link building tools?
Thursday, June 10th, 2010
Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) falls into two basic categories.
1. Onsite SEO – These are changes that need to be made to a website, either to the code, the text or the images.
2. Link Building – This is the generation of inbound links to a website
Both tasks involve a lot of thought. Both tasks require access to great tools. But when it comes to link building, it’s the tools that can often be the difference that makes the difference.

Here’s a problem: there are more ‘link building tools’ out there than you can shake a stick at. In order to find the best ones to use, you need to work out what you want them to do. There are the range of tasks they can carry out.
Link tools can tell you:
*how many inbound links you have;
*the pages on your website they link to;
*where those links come from;
*the type of links they are;
*any anchor text used in those links
*the ’strength’ of those links – how much ‘juice’ they are passing to you
Link tools can help you research:
*pages that include your brand name but don’t link to you – low hanging fruit when it comes to link building
*Powerful pages that you should target for link acquisition
*Pages that include the right context for link acquisition
*links used by your competitors that you may wish to target
Link tools can help you:
*record your link building activity
*monitor your links and check their strength and continued existence
*report the effects of link building program to stake holders
So as a company that does great link building, what tools do we use? Here are a few of my favourites:
Basics
http://wholinkstome.com/
https://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com/mysite
http://www.analyzebacklinks.com/
Advanced
http://www.backlinkwatch.com/
http://www.linkdiagnosis.com/
http://www.advancedlinkmanager.com/">Advanced
http://www.seomoz.org/linkscape
http://www.majesticseo.com/
http://www.opensiteexplorer.org/
My Choice
Without a doubt, my favourite link building tool is http://raven-seo-tools.com/. This does the lot. It analysis, reports, researches, monitors, and can also pull in data from your Google Analytics too.
What do you think?
Have I missed any great link building tools? Leave us a comment below.
Tags: Link Building, link building tool, search engine optimisation, SEO
Posted in Link Building, SEO | 1 Comment »
Google has a new look Results Page
Thursday, May 6th, 2010
Starting from today, Google is rolling out a new look Results Page. The main change is a side bar – similar to the ‘options’ panel that previously opened on request. Here’s what it looks like:

The change is the result of months of testing. The panel allows users to get more specific in their search requests, to obtain results not just from the web but Videos, Maps, Blogs and so on. Users can also drill into the old-look options panel from here, which looks like this:

Although there are no new features – this is purely a UI change – it shows the direction that Google is travelling. They want to be able to answer search queries as accurately as possible. But they recognise that in order to do that they need more input from users about what they’re looking for.
The key opportunity for an SEO agency is that this will boost the amount of search volume generated by long tail keywords. Whether this means adding new content, developing new landing pages, or modifying your link building strategy, this long tail traffic should convert much more effectively than general terms.
When it comes to Pay Per Click, its going to be interesting to see how this impacts on CTRs, and ultimately quality scores.
What do you think of the new look SERPs? Leave us a comment below
Tags: google, SERPs
Posted in Link Building, PPC, SEO | No Comments »
How to Improve your Search Traffic with Deep linking
Friday, April 30th, 2010

Link building is one of the key ways to build the authority of your website in the eyes of the search engines.
And the greater the authority of your website, the higher up the Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs) it will rank.
Its important to remember when link building that you don’t just concentrate on your homepage, but build links to high quality sub pages too. This is called ‘deep linking’, and can significantly boost the traffic – and conversion rate – of your site.
Most websites only have links going to their homepage. This is because when they are mentioned and linked to from other sites, its easiest for others to lazily link to the homepage, even though there may be more relevant pages on your website.
Why you need to focus on deep links
1. It will improve your link profile.
Your website is best served by a range of links including those that go to sub pages, those that include images, some with your website name and others with appropriate anchor text. This link profile makes your website look authentic in the eyes of Google, and is a good basis for long term link building programmes. .
2. It will improve your useability
Links work best when they take users directly to the most relevant content. If people arrive on your website expecting certain information, and then have to search and click around to find it, many will leave before completing that exercise.
3. It lets you get more varied traffic
Deep links will make certain pages on your site rank much more highly for keywords that your homepage can’t. If you focus your homepage around one topic, but have other pages on other topics, those others need good external links in order to get a chance to rank highly in the SERPs for searches that are relevant to those other topics.
4. It lets you exploit the long tail
The chances are your sub pages include longer and more varied keyword phrases, since sub pages usually have more in depth information on a particular product you sell, or highlight a particular element of your service. This make your sub page more likely to rank highly for those longer tail keywords. If you build inbound links with the right anchor text too, then those pages will easily rank more highly for those longer tail terms.
How to improve your deep links
1. First of all, check how many – and what type – of deep links you have.
2. Work out which sub pages would benefit from inbound links
How many do they have already
What anchor text do they have
Do they get search traffic already?
Are they an important page?
Are they a good landing page for users?
3. Assess your internal links to those pages, and make the necessary improvements.
Do they have links from the homepage?
Do they have links from other powerful pages in your site, especially from within blocks of text?
Do you have sitewide navigation to your sub page?
Now its time to build some links to those pages!
Use directories for these links, even if your site is well established. Try to use niche directories relevant to those sub pages
Look at your homepage inbound links and work out which of those would be better off pointing towards your sub pages. Contact the party responsible for those links, and ask them to modify them. The chances are that the change would take their users to the most relevant page on your site, so they should be happy to make that improvement.
Utitlise relationships your business already has with suppliers and trade bodies, and try to work out if any of those are ripe to be approached for a link to relevant content.
Thats it.
Deep links are better for users, and they give more pages on your website the chance to rank highly in the SERPs and get more, relevant traffic. If you want Euston Digital to show you how to improve your website link profile with our link building services [link] then get in touch.
Tags: deep linking, Link Building
Posted in Link Building | No Comments »
Traffic to the World’s Largest Websites
Tuesday, March 30th, 2010
If you have an interesting headline, and brilliant, compelling infographics you will get inbound links.
Tableau let you add great data visualisation to your website. Here’s an interactive chart that shows traffic to the World’s largest websites:
If you want Euston Digital to boost your website higher on Google with our effective link building services, then get in touch.
Tags: infographics, Link Building
Posted in Link Building | 1 Comment »
What makes a ‘Twinfluencer’ – an influential user of Twitter?
Wednesday, March 17th, 2010
We’re using this dataset in order to show how great, compelling infographics can become great linkbait.
Thanks to some AWESOME data visualisation tools from Tableau Software, you can display any data in an interesting and interactive way. This simple technique is a proven way to generate inbound links to your website.
If you want Euston Digital to let you know about some other great link building services then get in touch.
Tags: link, link bait, Link Building
Posted in Link Building | No Comments »
10 tips to help you get the most out of your link building
Thursday, February 18th, 2010
Link building has long been a cornerstone of Search Engine Optimisation. It’s one of the main ways that you can build the value of your website in the eyes of Google. Search Engines need links in order to find your website; and they need links to work out how important your website is. Links can give your website ‘authority’, a key goal of SEO.
Since you have to do link building, here are my top 10 things to remember when carrying out your link building.
2 amazing free tools for link assessment.
Let’s start with 2 free tools to assess the value of a domain/or page:
The old but always amazing SEO Book Toolbar for Firefox
The Brand new Open site explorer from SEOMoz -don’t forget to create a free account to extend the access!
1. Choose quality over Quantity
It’s not about the sheer volume of links to your website. It’s about where those links are coming from. A few high value links will push your site higher than many low value one.
But how do you work out what is a ‘high value’ link and what isn’t?
2. Assess the number of outbound links of the link-giving website/page.
Outbound links are links that direct the Internet user to another website.
If the website giving you an inbound link has many (20+) outbound links, the authority that it passes to you will be lower than if it just has a few.
If the website giving you an inbound link has many inbound links itself, the authority that it passes to you will be higher than if it just has a few.
Remember this equation for the Link Giving website:
Lots of inbound links + few outbound links = Great website to get a link from!
Also, as mentioned in the “Design and content” guidelines section from Google, the “100 outbound links maximum” recommendation is also a good one to follow.
Zillions of free tools exist to assess number of OBL but SearchStatus for Firefox is our tool as it can do many other things!
3. Make sure you are using targeted anchor text
Your inbound links must built using keywords that you want to rank highly for. These links can then tell Google not only how important your website is, but what keywords it should rank you for. Make sure you vary your anchor text however, otherwise Google will be suspicious. Use three different keyword phrases, and occasionally your website name too. Image links need to have anchor text in the ALT tag of the image.
4. What is the link-giving website all about?
The best websites to get inbound links from are those that are an authority in your particular market. If you sell glasses, then you want inbound links from editorial websites that write all about glasses, lenses, vision etc. High value links come from websites and pages that are relevant to your website. Also, we have to stress that point 3 and 4 are linked: ignoring the anchor text when evaluating the topicality of the on-page content would be just plain stupid.
5. Have a look at PageRank or better, MozRank but take them with a Pinch of salt!
PageRank is the ‘value’ Google used to place on a page. Although pretty Obsolete as a “precise” metric, it gives a broad idea of a page authority.
You can see the PageRank of each page by looking at the green PR bar on the Google toolbar. Whilst it’s not the be all and end all, and whilst the bar is often out of date, it is at least a measure of the ‘importance’ of that web page in the eyes of Google.
That said, we would advise not to use PageRank. The main problem is that it could up to 9 months for the PR data to be updated. A site could i.e have suffered from a penalty from Google in the meantime.
Mozrank would be a better option as they use roughly the same information but updates it more frequently.
Mozrank can be tracked w/ many tools including SearchStatus (see it does many things!)
6. Where on the page is your Link located
Links coming to your website are best when high up the page or buried within editorial. Links from footers or sections called ’sponsors’ or ‘partners’ are of much lower value.
7. Link-giving website domain
Links from websites with some domain name extensions are worth more than others. Google values most highly links from .com, .co.uk (in the UK), .edu and .gov.uk (in the UK) domains. Others are worth less (but not worthless!)
8. Don’t ignore links from Social Network websites
Although most of the links on social media Networks (Facebook, Twitter, Digg, Stumbleupon etc…) are no followed (due to shortened URL which are redirects), People have to think about the SEO authority that will come from editorially given links resulting from the social media exposure.
Also it seems that these ‘active web’ links are becoming taken into account to a great extent by Google, so bear them in mind.
9. Don’t ignore forums or blogs
Take some time to participate in and build links from relevant forums and blogs. Make sure they ARE relevant though – that’s the key. Aside from bringing some SEO value these links might actually be followed by genuine users.
I couldn’t stress enough on the fact that links on forums (if not no followed) carry little SEO value. They would hence be a relevant strategy only if they bring quality traffic to a site –which is generally the case when you gives good advice… on time!
10. Make sure your inbound links are ‘followed’.
Website owners can add some code to their links that instructs the search engines to effectively ignore them. Check the source code of the link giving website. Find your link and check that it does than have the value rel=”nofollow”.
Okay… that’s a bit Old School! Here are 2 handy tools to save you a lot of times by automatically highlighting the “no follow” attribute:
- For Firefox: Guess what? SearchStatus… again!
- For Google Chrome META SEO inspector: http://goo.gl/ju9U
- For IE: uhm…sorry?
And that’s it!
Link building is an important way to build the authority of your website, and tell Google what your website is all about. But it can be time consuming too! Follow these basic guidelines to make sure you build links in the most effective and efficient way. If you want Euston Digital help with your link building campaign then get in touch.
Charly Wargnier
Tags: google, Link Building, pagerank, SEO
Posted in Link Building | 1 Comment »
How to use LinkedIn to market your business
Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Social Media Marketing is the new media buzzphrase of the moment. The Internet is starting to burst with opinions and ideas of how to use social media to market your business.
We’ve not been afraid of that either, with our basic guide on how to use Twitter.
However, when people talk about social media they’re usually referring to Facebook, Twitter and sometimes MySpace.
The social network that is often overlooked is LinkedIn.
The traditional approach to LinkedIn is to use it to promote your own personal business interests and connections, often as a career tool. But the power of this business focused social network can be bring leads, sales & revenue too.
LinkedIn is a bit different
Whilst other social networks are good at reaching focused demographics, interest groups or the mass market, LinkedIn is a place to find specific individuals. For this reason, it makes more sense for sales of low volume high value products where decision makers are harder to find.
Using your employees’ contacts
LinkedIn is all about individual people reaching out to other specific individuals,. As a starting point, you need to utilize your and your employees network contacts, From there, you need to move onto people that they’re connected to (2nd degree contacts). And so the process will continue.
But don’t be Spammy
Every time you reach out using LinkedIn will will show your real, professional, and company name. Therefore its important not to turn off those contacts – or in other words, don’t be spammy. Every move you make, every contact you reach will be visitible to your networks, so bear that in mind so as not to appear over zealous.
How to get going
1. Find an ‘open networker’
An open networker is someone who has linked to as many people as they possibly can. They have messaged everyone in their network, and every new contact, to expand their contact list as much as possible.
To find an Open Networker (or LION – LinkedIn Open Networker), search on LinkedIn for ‘LION’. When you find one, invite them to your network. If they accept, you then have access to their 1st degree and 2nd degree contacts. Sometimes LIONs include their email address in their LinkedIn profile name, making it all the easier to invite them to your network, even though you’re not connected to them at all.
You can also find open networks on TopLinked.com.
2. LinkedIn Answers
Anyone can ask a question on LinkedIn Answers. Anyone can answer. It allows you to interact with people who are not in your network, which of course helps to make new contacts.
If you ask a question many people can answer you. Once the question closes (after a few days or whenever you decide), you choose the ‘good’ answers. Of these “good” answers you then choose a ‘best’ answer.
The person who gave that answer gets an ‘expertise point’ that shows in their LinkedIn profile.
You could therefore use LinkedIn Answers to display your expertise.
In addition, people sometimes ask “where can I get a…” types of questions, often with regard to specific services. If you have a product or service that fits, you can answer these questions with a link to your website.
Sometimes it might be that you can offer a small answer, and then say ‘for more info’ or ‘for my full answer see…’ and then link to your blog, where you can answer the question in full.
3. Get recommended in ‘Services’
Another method is to get as many people in your 1st and 2nd degree networks to recommend you for a particular service. Some users will scour services to find a supplier. The more times you’ve been recommended, the greater the ‘reach’ of those recommendations. And the more positive your business looks.
4. Find ‘buyers’ in a organisation
Since every profile in a business includes a job title, its much easier to reach out to a specific person in order to try and sell to them. Most people will be connected to others in their organisation, so if your first degree contact is someone in a business you’re trying to target, the chances are that you can use their contacts to find the right individual..
5. Building Links
LinkedIn used to offer ‘followed’ links, which were an important method of link building as part of your Search Engine Optimisation program.
These days however, these links are either ‘no followed’ or redirected. Nevertheless, they can be an important source of referral traffic to your website. Links still get clicked on after all.
Make sure all employees have links to your website in their profile. Make sure the links are visible and can be crawled by the search engines by making all profiles include the “show website” feature. You can do this in “Edit My Public Profile“. Click “Full View” and also “Websites”.
That’s it
Often overlooked as a source of new business, LinkedIn is a powerful tool to reach specific buyers in organisations. Make the most of your network contacts using the techniques above.
If you want Euston Digital to help you with your Social Media marketing then get in touch. Any comments please leave them below.
Tags: Link Building, linkedin, SEO, Social Media
Posted in Link Building, Social Media | 1 Comment »
5 Tips to Boost your Directory Submission Workflow with a Simple Google Account!
Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
Here’s the 1st blog post of series that will hopefully help you in your daily task of Directory Submissions and managing them VERY FAST!
As an SEO Manager, I’ve seen many SEO’s pretending to do fast and efficient Directory Submissions.
While many do an excellent job, some use automatic submission tools, resulting in significant drops in rankings.
Others like myself go the long way round and submit manually. This is a time consuming, so its all important to do in fastest way possible!
I think it would be relevant to share a few tips on how to submit to directories Fast AND in a 100% White Hat way.
Let’s start with something straighforward: managing your Link Building Campaign with a simple Google Account. I will give you 5 Tips that you can apply straight away & are meant to be a time saver for any Seo Manager who does directory submission on a daily basis on a regular.
Ready? Here we go!
1. Submitting easily with Google Toolbar Auto-fill
Autofill is an essential tool in any directory submission process. The one integrated in the Google Toolbar is pretty straighforward and will autofill any basic info like the company name, email address and address.
Once you’ve installed the Google Toolbar, here’s what the auto-fill button looks like: ![]()
The Google Toolbar has 2 important drawbacks though:
- 1 set of data per Google account, that is per toolbar. In other words it’s impossible to manage several accounts/clients without logging out and logging in again.
- the data auto-fillable is static: that means it doesn’t work with selections, checkboxes, radio buttons and any valid form fields and you cannot choose which field you would like to autofill.
To do all that, you will another tool, but that will be another post!
2. Creating Filters in Gmail to easily redirect each email to its appropriate folder
If you do dozens of directory submissions for dozens of clients, you easily end up after just a few months with thousand of emails to manage. Between confirmation emails, emails related to articles that need to be edited because they don’t fit into the directory editorial guidelines & listings that need to be relisted as they have been rejected, we, as Seo Managers, needs to keep track of everything fast… and for that you have to have a reliable and friendly email client.
Here at Euston Digital, we’ve been using Gmail for years and we can easily say it’s by far the best email client. You can sign up for a free account here.
With the last months improvements, playing with filters has never been so much fun!
So what can you do with the filters?
- Filter each email containing the words “Denied” AND “article” so that each related email goes to a folder called ”Rejected Articles”
- Filter each email containing the words “Rejected” BUT DOESN’T HAVE the word “Article”. By doing so your emails related to directories will be in a different folder than the ones related to articles directories.
- Filter each email containing the word “Twitter” so that all Tweets could be in one Folder…. and so on.
Once you’ve set up your filters, here’s what it looks like:

3. Take Advantage of the Import/Export Filters Function & apply your settings to all your Google accounts
Once you’re happy with a set of filters, here’s where Gmail makes the difference: you can easily apply the same set of filters to all of your clients, that is all of your Gmail accouts!
Here’s how:
Step 1: enabling the Filter import/export function.
This is still a Gmail Labs function so you will have to go to lab (upper right of you screen, as pictured here: ![]()
then do a Ctrl+F for the term “Filter import/export” and click on “enable”.
Step 2: Once that’s done, you will have 2 new buttons in your filter section, as shown below. The rest should be self explanatory, drop us a line if it’s not!

4. Articles Management made easy Using Google Docs
Nowadays, Article Directories is still considered as a relevant way of obtaining quality backlinks to any website. However, managing articles for dozens of clients can be one of the most time consuming task in Link Building. To Help you be faster Google Docs is here! Many benefits from it, let’s expose 3 great functions here:
![]()
- 1st Pro, no need to search each article on your computer or anywhere else anymore. Each article will now be at one click of a button! Indeed you can access Google Docs direcly from Gmail, upper right of the screen. There, all the articles related to the appropriate Google Account/Client will be listed and stored as long as needed.
- Another great benefit from Google Docs: you can invite any of your clients to view the possible changes you’ve made. Once invited, they’ll be able to review the changes and edit them on the fly, without even signing in to any Google account!

- And last but not least, with the new Bulk Upload Function launched a few days ago, you can easily upload on Google Docs all the articles your clients are likely to send you in a Word format at once! Files can be uploaded to Google Docs either by enabling a right-click menu item or through drag-and-drop functionality… another great time saver!
5. Managing Multipe Gmail Accounts at one click of a button
A final tip useful when Deadlines have to be met and it’s just a hassle to switch from one account to another:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1320
Once Installed, you will quickly realize this is a fantastic Plugin for directory submissions! A simple right click at the bottom right of your browser will display the following pop up:

As you can see, it’s now easy to visualize which one of your client account has messages, and, even better, a simple click will direct you to any Google account of your choice. Everything’s working fast and smooth!
Conclusion
At Euston Digital, we all hope this blog post – my very first post actually! – will help you optimise your work flow while managing your link building campaigns. Feel free to drop any comments about what you think about this article as well as sharing some tools that could help SEO’s to be even faster and have more time to…. say… do more PPC?
Charly Wargnier
Tags: Directory Submissions, Link Building, SEO
Posted in Link Building, SEO, Search Engines | 10 Comments »
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