Lately it seems to be quite fashionable to be on the linkbait bashing circuit. I came across a story on Digg which ties into my belief that you can make practically anything cool if you try hard enough.

See that image to right that’s a nudibranch or particular family of sea slugs. I became acquainted with them when I owned a saltwater fish tank many moons ago, but most people have never heard or seen them before. They come in a dizzying array brilliant, vibrant and awe inspiring colors, but the point is if you look hard enough you can find exciting, interesting and cool things all around even sea slugs.
What does all this have to do with linkbaiting? Well I’m continually coming across people who don’t think linkbaiting can be used to their boring clients such as carpet cleaners, when I came up with five ideas in less than 15 minutes. Lots of people are taking this position. In fact I was listening to Eric Ward on SEO Rockstars yesterday who echoed similar sentiments. Now don’t fire up the blogs with title’s like “Graywolf vs Link Moses in Smackdown” cause I’m so not going there.
In that episode of rockstars Eric talks about a lot of “traditional” link building strategies, while extremely “unsexy”, they are to be ignored at your own peril. However the point he brings up, which is brought up by others, and that I disagree with is how to effectively do linkbait for B2B based businesses. Not everything can be linkbaited, but there are very very few of those unabaitable sites. Example, how would I do linkbait a funeral home? Maybe we’d find a way to put an apple logo on coffin, or do sick PC case mod tutorial with a real coffin, maybe a photo based content piece with headstones of computing pioneers who’ve passed like Alan Turing or Seymour Cray. What about the example from SEO Rockstars of industrial ball bearing lubricants? Girls in Bikini’s wresting in anything slippery is a safe bet, but maybe your client doesn’t like things that risqué. Lets grease up a tarp with your lubricant and have a contest video taping college kids trying to get across without falling for a $500 prize? Need another, put your lubricant on hill and push things like a Yugo or Gremlin down the greasy hill and have them smash into a brick wall. How about something with less production value, coat everyday items in your slippery goo and ask people to grab/hold/pickup those items outside your local Starbucks for a $10 gift card.
Now to the question are any of those links going to directly result in sales, probably not. However what they will do is get you links from places your clients competitors sites don’t have and will have a harder time duplicating. Lastly in an age of the data mining Google borg and increasingly personalized SERP’s if you don’t think there’s any value in getting your URL flowing through as many toolbars and into as many Google bookmark accounts as possible I don’t know what to tell you.
So let’s wrap this all up, linkbaiting is not a substitute for developing a good foundation of solid, on topic, relevant, traditional links. Ignoring things such as trusted directories, reputable trade groups and organizations, or complimentary business partners is foolish. Instead think of linkbaiting as icing on the cake, that little extra bit on top that makes everything that little bit more attention grabbing and exciting.
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New things have a tendency to get bashed, new new things even more so.
Anyone remember how people had to be dragged kicking and screaming to blogging. Me included.
If you have a winning strategy bringing in buckets of dosh, why try something new?
The thing about Linkbait is that it’s ancient. When Caligula ordained his horse as a member of the Rome Senate, that was linkbait.
You gotta create the spectacle.
Michael,
On the contrary, I never said you couldn’t link bait certain types of content. I’d be wrong and that would be silly for me to say, since that’s how I got started in 1994 when a local boat company with a vanilla web site took my idea to give away a boat for free via a web based contest. Bingo. Link bait circa 1994. Then I suggested to a local coffee company that they put a searchable coffee recipe database on their site, which back then was unheard of.
Like anyone, I can sit here and think up endless types of link bait. Girls in bikinis for ball bearings. Yep, no brainer. That’s what Ridgid tools has done forever with those calendars. They make an unsexy topic sexy. Do that online, and shazam, links happen.
Again, I NEVER said you couldn’t do it. I said it may not be the best approach for every site, and if you DID do it, remember it’s just one piece of an overall link building strategy.
I’m not out to bash anyone or any tactic. But please don’t put words in my mouth. Yes, you can link bait for any type of site. Step one, create site, step two, add bikinis.
But don’t pin your hopes for business success solely on this one tactic. Use it as part of a larger strategy.
Thanks for the chance to reply,
Eric Ward
>But don’t pin your hopes for business success solely on this one tactic. Use it as part of a larger strategy.
Yep I completely agree, it’s all just more pieces in the puzzle.
And sorry if I came off as an dufus trouble maker, I seem to have a problem with that this week.
I’m so unsubscribing from your blog now.
>I’m so unsubscribing from your blog now
I’d be worried except I know you don’t use and RSS reader to subscribe
I very much appreciated you coming over and adding your ideas to the mix. I guess it’s an eduction process for the client as much as anything. As you rightly say, the return generated from direct sales is going to be pretty much zero but the increase in the SERPs is worth it’s weight in gold. It’s about translating that benefit to the customer.
Anyway, I would stop and chat for longer but I’ve got to do the storyboards for “Debbie Does Dalton”…
I actually had a story hit the front page yesterday about this exact topic:
http://www.digg.com/general_sciences/photo_Dragons_do_exist_coolest_slug_EVER
I saw that story it actually helped form this post
You can find the weirdest things on digg =)
Yea, great ideas for the carpet cleaner guy. I’m sure they’d have the blogosphere abuzz, with all the A list carpet cleaner blogs lighting the web up with their new inbound linkage.
I doubt anyone knows how to linkbait porn, but I’m open to suggestions =D
Yes, linkbaiting porn must be really difficult as it’s so unpopular
Oh, I don’t know Halfdeck, I bet there’s more porn bloggers than carpet cleaner bloggers.
Some of those nudibranch’s can be purdy….but some are deadly too.
Awesome comparison though. Thanks for the motivation!
Your example of a coffin PC mod case is actually a very cool idea. I’m surprised no one’s done that. I suppose Steve Jobs might be buried in an Apple-branded coffin. Nice nudibranch picture. I’m working on a species tank for them at the moment.
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