Can I get your expert opinion?
-
Hello fellow Mozzers!
I've been brainstorming about getting links for my site and thought of the following scenario, let me know if its a good idea or not.
Who we are: an IT consulting firm.
There are many tech support forums and groups on the internet including Google, Yahoo and a few other big dogs...
I thought it would be a good idea to browse them on daily basis and find questions/topics that haven't been answered or don't have any real clear good answers, or are very popular. Then create an article in the blog on our site describing the same exact problem with a solution. Then would post a response under that question/topic with a link back to the solution that is located on our site.
Hoping that this will bring in more traffic, links, and authority...
However I also thought about the possibility of getting spammed, since there are many spam sites that scrape forums and groups for web site addresses, email addresses, phones, etc...
So what do you guys think, is it a good idea or should I stay away?
Thank you!
-
"If I did that for every question that I answered here at SEOmoz, I am willing to bet that people wouldn't like it."
I think that most approaches would get treated as spam if you over-do them. Probably a good reminder that any technique/tactic that you use that includes the word "every" would probably be better turned down a notch or two!
-
I tend to agree with EGOL and Keri, I suspect you will be viewed as a spammer.
Yes, you are answering their questions, yes this makes for the internet being a warmer fuzzier place (and your answers might be the best damn answers in the world) BUT it will be clear to the forum owners that your intention is to generate a link. The trouble is you also know that the reason you are doing this work is to generate that link.
I wouldn't necessarily not do it, but I would be prepared for quite a few of the links to be removed because they will be viewed as spam (even if directly on topic). Don't get be wrong I don't think what you are doing is spam but it will be viewed by many forum admins as such.
Gary
<colgroup><col width="64"></colgroup>
-
Hi Keri,
Thanks for your response! I mostly agree with you, however I'm not talking about just dropping a link as a response to someone's post. I would provide an answer or partial answer on that forum for a specific topic and then put a link for the reference or for a full answer... I don't think this should irritate any forum admins. In the tech community people reference many sites as their answers (now I'm not sure if they're trying to do this as well or not) but sometimes its easier to post a link to an article or a video instead of providing an answer that has to describe 20-50 detailed steps for a user to follow...
-
I think that we are members of the SEOmoz community and the discussion of topics initiated on SEOmoz should remain here for community participation rather than be diverted.
There is nothing wrong with creating a post here and then refining it for use as a blog post on your own website.
-
Thank you EGOL & Mat for your responses!
I kind of see what you're saying EGOL, however I'm not talking about creating a link for every single post, as that would definitely fall under link spamming. I do want to respond to your answer about you answering that way here at SEOMoz. SEOMoz is more of a closed and tighter community than your average Google or Yahoo group. Most of the time people answer questions with very poor English, directions, instructions, references, etc... If I take my time and knowledge and create an easy to understand blog post with good content and easy to follow instructions and examples and reply to some topics (probably a few week) why would you or THEY think it would be a "sign post" and/or spam links?
-
I think there's a difference between looking at forums for ideas in general and using an aggregate of several questions to write an awesome blog posts that answers most of the questions people have about that topic, and writing a specific answer on your site to a question on another site, and going to that other site and just dropping a link to your site.
Using the posts for inspiration is fine IMHO, but as a user (or an admin) of a forum I'd quickly get irritated at a poster that is using the forum solely to link drop.
-
If I did that for every question that I answered here at SEOmoz, I am willing to bet that people wouldn't like it. They would view me as creating sign posts to siphon traffic.
Is it link spam? Maybe not in some people's opinion if a link is placed once in a while but to make that a matter of practice, my opinion is that it would be link spam. I believe that it would be abusing the SEOmoz community.
The perspective of this can be argued. People who receive the links have a whiter hat view than the community they are using.
-
Why does using people's real questions have to mean spamming? I'd agree if you only used the sites in order to drop links, but why should that be the case?
If there is a site where relevant questions frequently come up then why not use that as a source of inspiration for blog topics? Find the common questions, put together an excellent answer, when the question comes up again cite your post within the rules of the forum.
The forum becomes more useful, the user gets their answer, Igor gets a link and the internet is a slightly warmer and nicer place to be. Where's the spam?
-
This will work until they figure out that your posts are nothing more than "sign posts" to siphon traffic and spam them for links.
-
It's a good idea. I think Rand has previously posted somewhere about he has done this himself, blogging topics that have been asked about on Quora and the like.
The biggest danger in terms of spam from posting on forums is if you include you email address in the post. Publish an email address on the internet and it will get spammed (trust me - I've been using the same address for 16 years. It's an issue!). However if you don't actually put the address in the post then you won't have a problem. Almost no forums allows their members email address to be seen by other users unless they choose to.
[edited - correction, Rand had mentioned doing this on quora]
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
-
What are the benefits of having more refering domains than inbound backlinks or vice versa? and is it neccassary to get a click on a backlink which i created on someone elses website,
somebody told me if i get a click on my backlink , i will get more refering domains
Link Building | | calvinkj0 -
EHow - does anyone have a writer that they can recommend?
A client specifically wants an a guide posted on ehow related to their products. I have submitted an application and it has not been approved. Does anyone have a writer they would recommend?
Link Building | | Packaging-Group0 -
Should You Get Link back from Customers
In the SEO guide on Moz, it states as one of the link building strategies: Get your customers to link to you If you have partners you work with regularly, or loyal customers that love your brand, you can capitalize on this by sending out partnership badges—graphic icons that link back to your site (like Google often does with their AdWords certification program). Just as you'd get customers wearing your t-shirts or sporting your bumper stickers, links are the best way to accomplish the same feat on the web. We design websites for churches and non-profits, and put a link back to our site as the designer. We recently have been told this is spammy and not a good idea. However, from what MOZ says, it sounds like they are promoting you do this. Please comment. Thanks.
Link Building | | churchwebsites0 -
Can Google ban for use of Press Releases?
Is it possible for Google to ban you if you are doing multiple press releases on a weekly basis? All content is unique and news worthy, following proper ratio density/links Thanks!
Link Building | | TP_Marketing0 -
How long before a new dmoz Will get picked up?
Hi all, I have a site which I've been trying to get into dmoz. It's taken approx 2 years and I went back recently to submit it and it was there. I hadn't submitted for a few months so can't be sure when it went in. Is there a way to get google to spider that category again so it gets picked up quicker? The site is www.nutritionmission.co.uk and wasnt showing up in my search explorer results yesterday. Thanks for your time Ian.
Link Building | | ianwr0 -
Can bad links be removed from a website
An SEO company we contracted with linked us up with many poor quality sites - some in foreign countries and now our site has hundreds and thousands of poor quality links to inappropriate sites.. Is there any way to un-link from these? Thank you!
Link Building | | Barb1230 -
Dripable.com and dripfeed.com. I really see no value whatsoever in any service like this. If anyone has an opinion that differs from mine. Go ahead.
I cant believe people are still using services like this. The interesting thing is that they do seem to offer great customer service, but that "service" seems to only spin comment spam and back profile backlinks. Id love for our community to discuss more sites like this so that Junior SEO's or people just starting dong get wooed by the promise of AWESOME links. Cheers,
Link Building | | Gaveltek-173238
TODD0 -
Linking from different IP, but same server, how much it can hurt?
Example, Have a site on 173.194.33.51 and site on 173.194.33.52, same server, different IP addresses, same network subnet. Make one link from site residing on 173.194.33.51 to site on 173.194.33.52 Can this hurt? Can it be beneficial if site on 173.194.33.55 has good PR?
Link Building | | _Z_0