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10 Holiday SEO Quick Wins To Help Shoppers Find Your Business
The post 10 Holiday SEO Quick Wins To Help Shoppers Find Your Business appeared first on HostGator Blog . The holiday season might not quite be upon us, but the holiday marketing season definitely is. Business owners have to start planning for holiday shoppers sooner rather than later. When your target audience goes looking for gifts for their loved ones over the next couple of months, you want them to find you. SEO is a long game, which means that it’s a tactic you want to approach with a long-term strategy in mind. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth looking for ways to improve your SEO for holiday shoppers. 10 Holiday SEO Quick Wins That Take 15 Minutes or Less In addition to the ongoing SEO strategy you employ throughout the year, here are a few tactics you can try to boost your SEO during the most important season for small businesses. Good news: they all take 15 minutes or less! 1. Submit your sitemap. For pages on your website to show up in Google searches, the search engine’s crawlers have to find them first. You can speed up the process by submitting your sitemap through the Google Search Console . It’s a simple step that makes sure Google has all your webpages in its index, including any new ones you’ve added to the site for the holiday season. 2. Optimize your title tags for new holiday pages. If you already know your SEO basics, you’ve probably already done this for your existing pages (if not, our ebook on the subject will bring you up to speed). Now you want make sure you do it for any pages you create for holiday specific products and promotions. For every page or piece of content you add to your site for the holidays, do keyword research to find the best holiday-related keyword to optimize for and strategically add it to the title tag on the page. Also consider pages you can create specifically to make your website more findable for holiday shoppers. Pages that collect gift products under $10 or pages that highlight gift options for specific audiences give you the chance to optimize for various gift-related keywords your customers may be searching for. 3. Optimize all holiday images for SEO. Every image you add to your website is an SEO opportunity. And the holidays usually mean new images that add seasonal cheer to your site. Optimize every new image you add to your website for the holidays by: Customizing the filename to include target holiday keywords Filling in your image alt tags with your target keywords Adding the images to the sitemap you submitted in step 1 Choosing the right quality-to-size ratio to make sure your image looks good, but doesn’t slow down the site’s loading time. All of these should just take a few minutes per image, but can make a difference in how your site shows up in search. 4. Sponsor local charity events. This is one of those tips that allows you to do something good during the holiday season, earns you goodwill with your customers, and helps with SEO all at the same time. Look into the local charity drives and events happening in your area or in your industry to identify at least one to put your company’s weight behind with a sponsorship. Many nonprofit sponsorship opportunities come with a link back to your website as a perk, so this is a good tactic to build some extra link love around the holidays. If possible, try to find a cause that’s in line with your brand and/or your audience’s values. If you sell pet products, then see what events nearby animal shelters or rescue groups are promoting for the holidays. If moms are in your target audience, then a cause that helps kids is likely a good fit. 5. Add some seasonal topics into your content strategy. Unfortunately, creating the content will take more than 15 minutes, but if you’re doing content marketing, then you’ll already be spending that time on content creation in the next couple of months. What you can probably accomplish in 15 minutes is coming up with a number of good holiday content ideas to add to your strategy. If you’re a local store, make some of your holiday content local. You can highlight holiday events in your area, great local nonprofits to support, or some of the best local businesses to consider for holiday shopping. That way you can optimize for local variations of your holiday keywords, which will be less competitive. 6. Create relevant holiday blog categories. If you’re creating enough holiday content, then you can make it go a little further in search by creating relevant categories or tags on your blog using your primary target keywords. This signals to Google that your blog includes a lot of content around the terms you’re trying to rank for, so a blog that has 10 blog posts and a devoted category for “Miami holiday gift ideas” is going to look more relevant for that search term than one that doesn’t. And creating a category means you have a whole other page on your website optimized for the term. 7. Re-promote last year’s holiday content. If this isn’t your first year doing content marketing, then you can make the content you created in past years for the holiday season keep working for you by promoting it anew this year. Share it on your social networks, send it to your email list, and if you’re really proud of it, consider promoting it with paid search or social ads. As long as your old content is still relevant this holiday season, there’s no reason not to drive more traffic to it this year and boost its ranking power in the process. 8. Add links to new holiday content to your most popular old holiday content. Your old holiday content will now have more authority than anything new you create. You’ll have built up links, traffic, and keyword rankings to it. Figure out which of your pieces from past years were the most popular and have the most backlinks from other websites. Then look for natural opportunities to add links to your new holiday content within the piece. This is a relatively quick and easy way to give your new pieces some immediate authority by building off of what your old pieces have already earned. 9. Upgrade your web hosting for holiday traffic. A slow website can be the death of holiday sales. If you’re expecting an uptick in traffic during the holiday season, then you need a strong enough web hosting plan to support holiday traffic surges . Check with your web hosting provider to see if they feel that your current plan will support an increase in visitors. If not, consider if it’s time to upgrade to a new plan or a different provider. 10. Find and fix broken links. Broken links make you look bad and increase bounce rates, which hurts your SEO. With a free broken link tool like Broken Link Check, you can identify all the broken links on your website within seconds. Go through and remove or replace them all to create a better experience for your visitors and improve your SEO authority. Your Holiday SEO Checklist Good SEO takes time and none of these SEO quick wins should be seen as a replacement for a long-term SEO strategy. But if you want to find some quick and easy ways to give your larger SEO efforts a little boost for the holiday season, adding all of these steps to your holiday marketing list can help. For longer-term help with your SEO, contact HostGator’s SEO experts . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged content, customers, google-search, holiday, holidays, industry, quick-wins, web hosting
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How to Make a Website Quickly: Your Easy 6-Step Guide
The post How to Make a Website Quickly: Your Easy 6-Step Guide appeared first on HostGator Blog . How to Make a Website Quickly You’re here because you want to build a website, and you want to do it fast. Building a website used to require immense technical and development skills. But today, with the introduction of intuitive website builders you can create a website from scratch, in record time. If you don’t know where to start, or, you’re worried that building a site will be expensive, or time-consuming, then this post is for you. Below you’ll learn the exact steps you need to take to make a website in as little time as possible, even if you have no previous experience. 1. Choose the Right Website Builder More and more people are turning to website builders to help them quickly and easily build websites. From personal blogs to eCommerce stores, niche sites, and business sites . The opportunities are endless. With a website builder, you’ll be able to drag and drop your site to completion. You can move around blocks of text, add images and videos, change the font and color scheme, and a lot more. You don’t need any existing knowledge of HTML, CSS, or design best practices. Just select a theme, customize it to your liking, and press publish. However, the website builder you choose will end up making your life easier, or much more difficult. With the dozens of available website builders, it can be overwhelming to choose the right one. If you’re just getting started in your search, all HostGator packages come with a website builder you can use as an option. Not only is it low cost, but it’ll also provide you with a selection of hundreds of free themes and all the customization options you require. 2. Pick a Domain Name In order to have a website online, you’ll need a domain name. Your domain name is what your visitors will type in to access your site. For HostGator, it’s hostgator.com . You’ll have the option to purchase a domain name through the builder itself, or you can purchase it through a third-party domain name registrar. The easiest option will probably be purchasing your domain name through the website builder itself, as you’ll avoid the complex tasks of dealing with nameservers. When choosing a domain name , make sure that it’s short, memorable, and preferably uses the .com extension. 3. Select Your Theme With your account created with your website builder and your domain name purchased it’s time to start building your site. Building a website that looks good, functions properly, and is in alignment with the latest web design standards is a very difficult task. Especially if you’ve never built a website before. Luckily, by using a website builder you can choose from one of hundreds of professionally designed themes. The theme you choose will make up the foundation of your website’s design . With a drag and drop builder, you’ll be able to customize this however you see fit. Still, you’ll want to choose a theme that makes sense for your industry. 4. Customize Your Theme Once you’ve chosen your theme its time to start customizing. After all, you want a unique website, not one that looks like a stock template. It’s important to customize all of the stock elements of your builder’s theme. This is a surefire way to get a unique look, while still retaining the original functionality of the theme. For example, you can make customizations like: Adding more pages to your site Changing the stock images to your own professional photos Changing the theme’s color palette Rearranging the text elements and general layout Changing the font sizes or font style Once you start customizing your site you’ll be amazed at all the changes you can actually make. 5. Preview and Make Any Final Tweaks It can be tempting to hit publish right away and make your site live on the internet. Although you’re excited it’s important to go through a final review process. Your builder will have a preview function that lets you see what your site will look like without pushing the changes live. This will allow you to make any last minute edits and avoid any embarrassing mistakes. As you look over your site, ask yourself the following questions: Are there any glaring spelling or grammar mistakes? Are there any strange formatting errors? Do my images or videos make sense in the existing design? Do all of the buttons and links work? Can my visitors intuitively navigate my website? 6. Publish Your Site! With your final run through complete, it’s time to publish your site. Congratulations! Once you’ve published your site online, you can still make quick and easy changes from the back-end of the editor. Have family, friends, and colleagues look over your site to see if there are any changes you might have missed. It’s now time to start generating traffic, marketing your site, and making your online dreams come true. Depending on the website builder you chose, you might have additional marketing tools available that’ll help you grow your website. Now Over to You As you can see building a website doesn’t have to be difficult—it can even be fun! By using a website builder you’ll greatly speed up the website building process while giving you full control over the end result. Get started building your site today! Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged builder, css, hostgator, images, industry, internet, visitors, vodahost, web hosting tips, web-design, website-builder
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Serverstadium Dedicated Server Reseller program – $100 account credit
ServerStadium offers some of the most competitively priced servers in the industry – but we also offer a reseller program that is just as co… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1726614&goto=newpost Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, php, VodaHost
Tagged hosting, industry, offers-some, php, priced-servers, read-the-rest, rest, the-most, the-rest
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How To Get Backlinks: The Beginner’s Guide to Link-Building
The post How To Get Backlinks: The Beginner’s Guide to Link-Building appeared first on HostGator Blog . What Is Link Building? Once you launch a website and start working to figure out how to get found online, you’ll start to hear a lot about link building. Understanding what link building is and how to do it can go a long way toward making your website more visible online and more successful at reaching your goals. If you could use some help understanding the basics of this important, but difficult part of online marketing , here’s our guide on all the basics you need to know to get started. What is Link Building? Link building is one of the most important and difficult parts of SEO. Any tactic that helps a business or organization get links from other websites that point back to your website count as link building. There are a lot of different strategies people implement to try to gain new links, but even for the most consistently successful tactics, it can involve a lot of work, time, and failures in order to achieve a few successes. Nonetheless, in the competitive space of SEO, link building is one of the strategies that will have the biggest influence on how well you perform in the search engines and how easily people find your website. That makes it worth devoting some of your time and marketing budget to. Why Link Building Matters One of most important things any marketer or website owner needs to learn about SEO is that you are not the search engine’s priority – at least not as a marketer. The goal of Google and the other search engines is to deliver up the best, most useful results to their users. To do that, their algorithms look at various signals that suggest people like and trust websites (or that they don’t, as the case may be). Every time one website links to another, it communicates to the search engine that site A thinks site B has something worthwhile to say that its own visitors can trust. It’s like receiving a reference or a good review in SEO terms. And if site A is one that has a lot of links from other sites pointing back to it, then it’s like receiving a reference from someone really well respected, making it that much more valuable. While links are only one of many ranking factors that the search engines pay attention to, they’re one that holds a lot of weight in how search engines decide which websites are authoritative and trustworthy. When you have a lot of other sites linking to yours (especially other sites that are seen as authoritative and high value by Google), it makes you look like a more reliable pick to include high up in the search rankings for users. It’s specifically because link building is so difficult that it’s a really good way to set your website apart and stay competitive in the search engines. There are two main approaches you can take to link building: Trying to earn links naturally with the content you create. More proactively reaching out to websites to try to get your link included on them. Most brands that do link building will benefit from doing a combination of the two. 5 Steps to Earn Links Naturally Before anyone’s going to link to your website, you have to give them something worth linking to. That means that previous to starting on the more proactive link building strategies we’ll describe below, you should start with some initiatives that will set the stage for making your website worthy of getting said links. 1. Keyword Research SEO isn’t about getting just any top spot you can manage, it’s about ranking for searches that are relevant to what your website provides. For any SEO strategy, including link building, your first step should be to research what language your target audience is using and what information they’re out there looking for. Then, you’ll know what content to create and what types of links you want. Spend some time doing keyword research to figure out the main topic areas and questions your audience is interested in. This will form the basis of both your content strategy and your link building efforts. 2. Content Marketing Other websites won’t have many good reasons or natural opportunities to link to your website’s homepage. What’s the likelihood the information you have there is going to add something important to an article or other webpage on their website? For other people to want to link to your website, you have to create the sort of content they’d have a reason to link to. That means embracing content marketing . For most businesses, that will mean starting a blog and making a commitment to create original, high quality content to publish on it regularly. It’s a lot of work, but in addition to being an important step in link building, it also gives you more opportunities to connect with your target audience. When you provide them with helpful information, that gives them a reason to care about your brand, follow you, and likely think about you first the next time they need whatever you’re selling. 3. Content Promotion With so many blogs and media sites out there, people are unlikely to stumble across your content without you putting some effort into making it easy to find. Obviously, SEO is part of that equation – when people can find your content in the search engines, that’s one of the best way to drive new views to your website. But for most websites, obtaining links and search engine rankings will only come after you put some effort into helping your first readers find your content. For each piece you publish, plan a strategy for getting it in front of people. That could include sharing it on social media, sending the link to people you expect would be interested in it, posting it in relevant forums, or even using paid promotion on Google or social media sites to boost its reach . The newer your blog is, the harder it will be to get your first followers, so expect to spend some time (and possibly money) working to get your content seen. Nobody can link to your awesome posts until they know they exist. 4. PR While people in the PR industry don’t necessarily tout themselves as link builders, PR work includes helping brands get coverage in the media and on a number of websites – often with links. By either working with a PR person or creating an in-house PR strategy , you can find more opportunities to gain mentions of your brand on other websites, position people in the company as thought leaders, and encourage coverage of initiatives you take that could be considered newsworthy, like a charity drive or creative stunt s. 5. Relationship Building People are more likely to link to brands they know and trust. For people to know you, you have to make connections. A whole industry has grown up around identifying and figuring out ways to connect with influencers . Think about ways to interact with other people and brands in your industry that doesn’t make it all about you. Participate in online communities they’re in, join Twitter chats you notice they regularly attend, or ask them to be an expert source for a piece of content you’re writing. When it comes to the link building strategies we describe below, you’ll get a very different response from someone who knows who you are and already feels a connection to you than someone who sees you as a total stranger. 5 Common Link Building Strategies Once you have some good content on your website that you’re confident in and a baseline of relationships with various people and brands in your industry, you’ll be in a strong position to start employing common link building strategies. Here are a few of the tactics people find the most success with. 1. Targeted Content Promotion Most of your content promotion efforts will be trying to get your content in front of a large number of people in your target audience. This tactic involves identifying a number of individuals you think would be likely to like, share, or link to your content and sharing it with them more directly. If it’s someone you already have a relationship with, tagging them when you share the post on social media may be enough to get their attention. If it’s not, then you can try crafting an email making the case for why you think they’d like your content, citing similar content you’ve seen them share or times they’ve written about related topics. The biggest risk of this tactic is coming off as an annoyance to the people you’re trying to reach. You’re essentially asking strangers to do you a favor, so you should always do your best to think about how your content might benefit them rather than making it about you. And if you’ve spent time building relationships like we recommended, this tactic will go a lot smoother. 2. Brand Mention Campaigns Every time someone mentions your brand, that’s an opportunity for a link. Using a link reclamation tool, Google Alerts, or advanced search commands in Google, you can find places around the web where someone’s talked about your brand and any of the high up people in your company that may be seen as thought leaders. In every instance where your brand or CEO or founder gets mentioned that doesn’t include a link back your website, craft a pitch to the website owner asking them to add one. Pro tip: Do not send a template email to every website without taking a minute to actually visit the site. If they’re criticizing your company, you risk annoying somebody who already doesn’t like you. And if the mention actually has nothing to do with your company but is some other use of the term you use as your brand name, you’ll both be wasting your time and look lazy to the recipient. But for websites that are mentioning your brand because they think you’re worth talking about for positive reasons, they may be inclined to take a couple of minutes to add the link at your request. 3. Skyscraper Content The first step in this strategy is to spend some time seeing what shows up on the search engine results page (SERP) for a number of relevant keywords for your brand. What you’re looking for here is content in the first few spots that isn’t actually that good or that’s outdated. If you feel confident that you can create content that’s better (or already have), then these are your targets for the skyscraper content strategy. For each of the identified terms, create really awesome content or improve the content you already have. Aim to make it some of your best work and definitely make sure it’s more thorough and helpful than the content that currently claims those top spots in Google. Once your content is published, find out which pages include links to the sub-par content you’re wanting to replace on the SERP (most SEO tools include a feature to help with this) and get to work contacting those sites to recommend they link to your content instead. Be careful in how you word your emails. You do want to make a case for why your content is more valuable than the content they link to now, but you don’t want to sound like a pompous jerk. If the other content has outdated information, point that out. If your post is more thorough and includes more actionable tips than the competitor’s, emphasize that. Focus on what makes your content valuable rather than trashing your competitor. 4. Guest Posting Part of what makes link building so difficult is because it often involves asking someone to do work that benefits you more than it does them. Guest posting is a useful tactic because when you write a good guest post for another website, you’re doing something valuable for them and their audience. Including a natural link back to your website in the post doesn’t require any work on their part and, if you do it right, will provide value to their audience in the process. It’s a win-win. Start looking for blogs in your industry and in related or complementary industries that accept guest posts. You can use Google for this – do searches for terms like industry “guest post” or industry “guest post submission guidelines” and start visiting the sites that come up to get familiar with the kinds of topics they cover and what their typical posts look like. Brainstorm topic ideas that are in line with what they cover (but haven’t been written about on the site before) that will provide you with an opportunity to link back to a page on your own site. Then send a pitch that follows their guidelines. Not every pitch you send will get you a “yes,” but as long as some do, you’ll be able to build a number of links this way. You do have to be willing to put in the work here to write a really good guest post that’s up to the standards of the blog you’re writing for. This is a tactic you have to be prepared to commit some serious time and work to. But it can double as a way to get a link and to reach a new audience with your content, while also starting a relationship with the blog you write for. 5. Broken Link Building This is another tactic based on the idea that you can provide the website owner value at the same time that you ask for a link. Broken links cause a bad experience for a site’s visitors and make them lose trust in a website that looks sloppy or outdated. If you can identify broken links on websites that once pointed to content that’s relevant to what you cover on your website, congratulations: you’ve found a link building opportunity. You can either create new content based on the broken links you find that addresses the same topic that the outdated link had been about, or you can try to spot broken links on topics you’ve already covered. In either case, by contacting the website owner you’re accomplishing two things that can make their life easier: Alerting them to a broken link on their site that they likely didn’t know was no longer working. Providing them an alternative link to replace the old one, so they don’t have to do the work of finding a new resource. As usual, take a minute to visit their website and make sure that the content you’re suggesting will make sense on the page you’re recommending they add your link to. As long as your content is helpful and high quality though, there’s a decent chance your recipient will consider giving you that link. Developing Your Link Building Strategy As you can see, when you get down to the particulars, link building can mean a lot of different things. You don’t have to try every tactic suggested here to start building links. Each brand can pick and choose which tactics seem to make the most sense for you. But if you want to compete in the search engines, doing some form of link building is an important part of achieving that goal. For expert help with your link building and other SEO initiatives, contact HostGator . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
10 White-Hat Link-Building Strategies for Local Business
The post 10 White-Hat Link-Building Strategies for Local Business appeared first on HostGator Blog . 10 White-Hat Link-Building Strategies for Local Business When you own a small local business, you have to find the most affordable options for promoting and marketing your brand. Unfortunately, when it comes to SEO, that need can put you at risk. Many of the cheapest SEO companies employ black-hat techniques based around trying to game the system – for example, building hundreds of low-quality links on spammy sites or publishing keyword-stuffed pages that don’t make much sense to humans. While some of those techniques worked in the early days of the internet, search engines have continually updated their algorithms over time to ensure that black-hat techniques not only aren’t rewarded with high rankings, but are now punished with search engine penalties . This is one area of business where cutting corners can have big consequences . You’re a lot better off employing a few white-hat link-building strategies on your own or hiring a legitimate SEO company than taking on the risks that come with black-hat SEO. 10 Link-Building Ideas for Local Businesses Here are ten legitimate link-building strategies that local businesses can benefit from. 1. Partner With Other Local Businesses. A lot of link building is ultimately about relationships. People are much more likely to add a link to your website on theirs if they have a genuine connection to your business. Research other local businesses in your area that do something related to what you do. For instance, if you sell dog treats, that could include pet groomers, dog walkers, veterinarians, and dog trainers. Reach out to the business owners to discuss ways you can help each other out. You could offer referral discounts for customers you recommend to each other or plan events together. Working together with other businesses will lead to natural linking opportunities, along with any other benefits you get from the relationship. 2. Sponsor Local Events or Organizations. In addition to local businesses, start looking into relevant local events and nonprofits that seek out business sponsorships . For event sponsorships, look up conferences, festivals, or professional events in your area and consider which of them are likely to attract people who are potential customers. Any event with a relevant audience of attendees is one that could be a good fit for sponsorship and, in most cases, your sponsorship will come with a link on the event’s website. For nonprofit sponsorships, consider the values your typical customers have and look for nonprofits that are a good match with the message you want to send to them. If you own a health food restaurant, then organizations that focus on improving healthy food access or sustainable food practices would be a natural fit. 3. Join Local Professional Organization with Directories. Most cities have a chamber of commerce and some have a number of different chambers focused on certain business owner demographics (e.g. an LGBTQ chamber of commerce, a Hispanic chamber of commerce, etc.). In addition, you can often find a number of professional organizations specific to certain industries. Identify any relevant professional organizations in your area and see if membership comes with inclusion in a directory. If so, it’s another good way to earn a local link. 4. Host a Charity Drive or Fundraiser. This tip doubles as both a way to do good and a way to earn links. When you work to help a cause other people care about, they have every reason to help spread the word to get more people involved. The nonprofit that you support will help promote it on their own site. Local journalists and bloggers are likely to cover the story as something newsworthy. And any followers of the nonprofit or publications that cover the story may be inspired to share news about it to their own followers as well. 5. Write and Promote Local Content. Content marketing is a big part of white-hat link building because when you create really great content, it gives other websites something worth linking to. A lot of businesses are doing content marketing , which means this tactic can be pretty competitive. But you don’t have to compete with every business in your industry in the search rankings, just those that serve the same local audience you do. Local businesses can therefore often gain some real traction by creating useful content that focuses on local issues. Try to find topics that are relevant both to your business and to the local community. If you own a bike shop, you could write blog posts about the best biking trails in town and provide coverage of local legislation that adds new bike lanes. 6. Connect with Local Bloggers. Many communities have local bloggers that write about things to do around town or issues relevant to residents. These blogs are often a good opportunity for earning local links. Reach out to see if the blogger is open to a relationship. Maybe they’ll provide a review in exchange for a free visit to your business, or you can set up an affiliate-style arrangement where they make a little money every time one of their readers comes to your business because of hearing about it through the blog. If you can work out an arrangement that you both consider beneficial, they’ll have a good reason to mention you on their blog and you’ll earn a new link. 7. Look for Relevant Round-up Pages. A lot of websites that have a local focus will write round-up posts highlighting the best businesses of different types – think titles like “The Best Brunch Spots in Chicago” or “The Best Coworking Spaces in Austin.” Think of different categories your business could fall into and see if there are any local round-up blog posts you could be a fit for. For any you find, reach out to the author to see if they’re aware of your business and willing to consider an addition to the list. Don’t expect this strategy to have a huge success rate. The blogger would have to choose to do extra work in order to include your business, and also may not honestly see you as belonging on the “best” list by their standards. But if they are willing to give your business a try and see if you belong, it could earn you both a link and be the start of a relationship with a new local blogger. 8. Write Guest Posts. Guest posting is one of the most common white-hat link building tactics because it provides value both for you and the other website. Instead of asking another stranger with no investment in your business to do the work of adding a link to their website, you’re offering to do something for them that benefits them and their audience. Research the blogs in your industry and in your city to identify ones that are relevant to your business and accept guest posts. Brainstorm topic ideas that are relevant to the blog’s audience while also providing a natural opportunity for you to include a link back your website. Then start pitching. For every blog that accepts your pitch, make sure you write a really good piece and include a link or two to pages on your website where it fits naturally (don’t awkwardly force it in). 9. Do Broken Link Building. Broken link building is another common tactic that combines doing something useful for the website owner at the same time that you ask for a link. The goal here is to find examples of broken links on relevant websites that point to something similar to a page on your website. Then contact the website owner to let them know there’s a broken link on their site and recommend yours as a good replacement. It’s alerting them to a problem with their website they may not have been aware of while offering an easy solution (that just happens to benefit you). Spotting broken links on the web may sound like an unrealistic undertaking, but a number of subscription SEO tools have features that make that part of the process easier. Once you’ve identified the broken links, it’s just a matter of crafting a solid email that explains why your webpage is a good replacement. 10. Create and Give Out Awards. People love getting awards and are quick to share about it whenever they’re recognized. If you start giving out local awards to individuals or businesses in relevant categories, it’s a good way to get the positive attention of the people you honor who are then likely to share about the award to their own audiences. If you own a local gym, you could create awards for business types your customers are likely to value such as healthy restaurants, natural food stores, or vitamin brands and open up voting to your members. It provides your customers a way to engage and provides you an entry into connecting with the businesses that win (see also, tactic #1). The winning businesses are likely to link back to your awards page and the people who love those businesses may share news of the award as well. White-Hat Link Building for Your Business A lot of these tactics won’t just earn you links; they’ll help you become a more valuable and appreciated part of your local community. That’s one of the nice things about white-hat tactics – they’re not about being sneaky or taking advantage of weaknesses in the system, they’re all about doing things that are genuinely beneficial for the websites you reach out to, their audience, and your own business all at the same time. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading