Really stuck guys. how do you earn links for an ecommerce site?
-
Hi seomoz guys
So I read a lot on seomoz and other sites, and see a lot of info about earning links, but this all seems to be aimed at blogs and brochure sites.
Being blunt, we sell stuff. Our competitors sell the same stuff. We are limited on what we can do product description content wise as our suppliers expect us to use the content they supply. We are now putting together q and a pages based on a great article in the seomoz blog.
Does anyone have any great ideas for developing link bait or just getting links to an eCommerce site?
We know our service is good, and our product is good, but that's not enough to convince someone to link to us.
Help
Thanks
Paul
-
Hi LIttlesthobo
We did run a competition/giveaway for around 2 years. What we found though was that we got the same people entering the competition all the time. i.e. professional compers.
Are you saying that your competitions give you continued social interactions and are generating back links for you?
Thanks
Paul
-
So now we are looking to build a Q&A, but I don't need to tell you how much of an investment that will be. And with our experiences its difficult to walk down that path not knowing if it will make any difference, and what ROI we can expect.
I would do this for some of your very best products. See how it works. My ROI might not match yours and it is very possible that magazines do not have the same potential that exists for hobby, tool, craft, construction and other industries.
-
I run an ecommerce site and definitely agree about the giveaways.
I notice that you are in the UK - me too. On the site I run monthly competitions - easy question stuff and the prize value is worth upto £20 per month max. I run an 'answer this question' in the blog comments and a winner will be chosen at random. Also, if you think you can get away with it, get them to like, share, tweet or whatever. I then publish that on various competiton sites such as loquax, uk competition sites - there are quite a few. A good one is HotUK deals, but you cant add your own. Somebody has to innocently add it for you. Once these professional compers get hold of it, they'll tweet and like it like crazy. Make sure the offer is attached to a page on your site so it gets all the social signals.
It depends on your product, but you could hire a good PR person to see if they can tap into some contacts and get you some press about any events. A contact of mine occasionally manages a couple of celebrity endorsements on twitter, but to be honest I find them a bit embarrassing and I doubt they've done any good!
-
Hi Egol
Thanks for your assistance. We are looking at building more content through Q&A sections, video etc. As you say this is a significant investment. How do you gauge the ROI on a content writing project like this? At the end of the day we are in this to generate revenue, or otherwise we might as well put on our coats and go home.
Something we did try in the last 12 months was adding more detail to our products. Ok, let's be specific. We sell Magazine Subscriptions, so we started adding details to the magazines about the target audience, if a kids magazine we listed what the target age is. We listed the ISSN numbers, as schools and libraries search by these. We added a whole raft of information bits to the magazines. The net effect, we dropped in the search results. This is probably down to other factors.
So now we are looking to build a Q&A, but I don't need to tell you how much of an investment that will be. And with our experiences its difficult to walk down that path not knowing if it will make any difference, and what ROI we can expect.
What makes it even tougher is a competitor of ours who does very little in the way of content marketing, and does nothing more than add a magazine to their site, gets ranked far higher than us.
So we work our socks off going backwards, and this competitor simply adds product and does fantastically well. There seems to be something amiss there.
I am waffling on now so I will end that there
Thanks for your help
Paul
-
I work for a site in the ecommerce space, here are some link building tactics I can give away
- Competitor analysis. Where are your competitors getting links from? That can be a good place to start.
- Start a blog if you don't already have one.
- Giveaways. This one is huge. Either hold contests where you give away free stuff or give free stuff to prominent bloggers and have them review it for you. The former can get you a lot of traffic and social media buzz, the latter gets you a solid link.
- Charities and student groups. Find groups that have pages set up for their sponsors, and become one of their sponsors.
- Get in the news. Hold a local event and then get it covered by local media.
- Job postings websites, internships, job pages for universities.
- Microsites. Tumblr meme sites are my favorite.
That should get you started. If you want more, check out this link and see which ones fit your business:
-
Once again Egol hit the nail on the head. The only thing to add is giving incentives does help out the generation of user content. Such as: Add a product review/image/video for a chance to win a gift card.
-
I approach this problem by building an information site with a store.
That requires a huge writing investment to produce articles, photos and videos on how to select the products, how to use them, how to fix them, etc. However, every article/video that you create starts pulling in traffic and over time your long tail keyword reach becomes enormous. Your site will be EVERYWHERE in the SERPs.
If you do a good job lots of people will share your content, link to it from forums. Manufacturers might link to it if your content is better than theirs. Trade associations, clubs, professional groups, bloggers, forum posters might link to you. People will share on facebook if you have great content.
Over time, if you track the entry page of your conversions you will learn the types of content that pulls in sales and that will inform future content development.
This method is slow work and really expensive but has a great payback over time, in my opinion.
Make your site the "go to place" for anybody anywhere who wants to learn about products, how to use them, how to select them. Other people in your niche have probably not done this and people will buy from you because you are the widget man.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Webmaster tools not showing links but Moz OSE is showing links. Why can't I see them in the Google Search Console
Hi, Please see attached photos. I have a website that shows external follow links when performing a search on open site explorer. However, they are not recognised or visible in search console. This is the case for both internal and external links. The internal links are 'no follow' which I am getting developer to rectify. Any ideas why I cant see the 'follow' external links? Thanks in advance to those who help me out. Jesse T7dkL5s T7dkL5s OkQmPL4 3qILHqS
Technical SEO | | jessew0 -
Representing categories on my site
My site serves a consumer-focused industry that has about 15-20 well recognized categories, which act as a pretty obvious way to segment our content. Each category supports it's own page (with some useful content) and a series of articles relevant to that category. In short, the categories are pretty focal to what we do. I am moving from DNN to WordPress as my CMS/blog. I am taking the opportunity to review and fix SEO-related issues as I migrate. One such area is my URL structure. On my existing site (on DNN), I have the following types of pages for each topic: / <topic>- this is essentially the landing page for the topic and links to articles</topic> /<topic>/articles/ <article-name>- topics have 3-15 articles with this URL structure</article-name></topic> With WordPress, I am considering moving to articles being under the root. So, an article on (making this up) how to make a widget would be under /how-to-make-a-widget, instead of /<widgets>/article/how-to-make-a-widget I will be using WordPress categories to reflect the topics taxonomy, so I can flag my articles using standard WordPress concepts.</widgets> Anyway, I'm trying to get my head around whether it makes sense to "flatten" my URL structure such that the URLs for each article no longer include the topic (the article page will link to the topic page though). Thoughts?
Technical SEO | | MarkWill1 -
Off-site company blog linking to company site or blog incorporated into the company site?
Kind of a SEO newbie, so be gentle. I'm a beginner content strategist at a small design firm. Currently, I'm working with a client on a website redesign. Their current website is a single page dud with a page authority of 5. The client has a word press blog with a solid URL name, a domain authority of 100 and page authority of 30. My question is this: would it be better for my client from an SEO perspective to: Re-skin their existing blog and link to the new company website with it, hopefully passing on some of its "Google Juice,"or... Create a new blog on their new website (and maybe do a 301 redirect from the old blog)? Or are there better options that I'm not thinking of? Thanks for whatever help you can give a newbie. I just want to take good care of my client.
Technical SEO | | TheKatzMeow0 -
Will really old links have any benefit being 301'd
I have a client who when they built their site never had any of their old links 301'd - I've now managed to locate a few of these links and am going to redirect them. The site was rebuilt 2006/07 - and it ranked page one and #1 for lots of relevant keywords, if I redirect these to the current pages will the rankings still carry??
Technical SEO | | lauratagdigital0 -
Are site wide links bad for web developers?
Like many web dev companies, we put an anchor text credit (varying the anchor text) in the footer of clients' sites. As it's a footer link, it's site wide. This strategy's been troubling me for a while and I've been anticipating a drop in our rankings ... especially in light of Penguin. But it hasn't happened. Any other developers our there taken a hit by having site wide links? anyone have any views on this? Anyone want to comment on the spurious and unlikely scenario that Google may recognise that web dev companies have always used site wide credits and may therefore be overlooking / not penalising them?
Technical SEO | | 2Stroke0 -
Mega Menus - Site Links - Bottom of the Page
Here are the questions: If you replace your top menu with a mega menu - like rei.com, target.com etc - that has dramatically more links and lots of non-optimized testimonials and calls for action, and locate the actual code of the mega menu at the bottom of the HTML , How will this affect your sitelinks? Will this now, make your on-page content more visible and indexable? Or does the Google bott dismiss this as just navigation content? In the past, I've have seen this technique work well, but that was before site links were easier to obtain. Looking at sites with virtually no navigation on their home pages and good authority, I've seen site links seemingly gleamed from alt attributes.
Technical SEO | | Runner20090 -
Canonical on ecommerce site
I have read tons of guides about canonical implementaiton but still am confused about how I should best use it. On my site with tens of thousands of urls and thousands of afiiliates and shopping networks sending traffic, is it smart to simply add the tag to every page and redirect to the same url. In doing this would that solve the problem of a single page having many different entrances with different tracking codes? Is there a better way to handle this? Also is there any potential problems with rolling out the tag to all pages if they are simply refrencing themselves in the tag? Thanks in advance.
Technical SEO | | Gordian0