SEO Link Building
SEO link building … is it all it’s cracked up to be?
Articles like this can be tenuous at the best of times, but even more so when the author’s background (and by that merit; credibility) is left undisclosed. For that reason I’ll include a very short introduction about my background in the SEO industry, to give you an idea of where I’m coming from.
I started doing my first bits of SEO in late 2004, and in 2007 I was hired by one of the UK’s top SEO firms, working directly alongside (not under) industry leaders such as Ammon Johns.
In 2008 I started an SEO blog called EggRage, which was recently acquired by another large UK based SEO firm called SEO Positive, after building up a significant audience.
Later in 2008 I was hired by an international extreme sports company to be their head of website development and internet marketing, before leaving in 2009 to incorporate and put all of my time into my own company; Lyrical Media.
Link Building Services
I’ve seen all sides of the industry – and while I certainly wouldn’t claim to know even close to everything… I’ve got a pretty good view of the big picture.
An Introduction to Link Building

If you already know what link building is and how it works, then you can safely skip this brief introduction if you so desire.
In a nutshell, the reason Google became so large and successful is because of the way in which it treats links on websites. Google was the first search engine that didn’t just look at site content, and meta tags, it also looked for relationships between websites. It located and analysed these relationships through links.
As an example, if you have a small online store selling socks, then Google will look at which sites are linking to you, in order to establish the importance and relevancy of your site. If you are linked to by other small sock websites then you won’t be seen as very important… but if you are linked to by Wikipedia, the BBC, CNN, and Amazon – then your site will be seen as extremely important.
In order to record the relative importance of websites, Google introduced a scale of 0 to 10 called “PageRank”. PageRank is named so not because it’s short for “Web-page Rank”, but because it was named after Google founder Larry Page (a common misconception). If you’re interested in finding out the PageRank of the sites which you visit, try installing the Search Status plugin for FireFox – which will display both PageRank and AlexaRank in the bottom right corner of the browser for every page that you visit.
Link Building Basics & Ethics

The way in which Google analyses relationships between sites is one of the largest factors present in determining rankings – which unfortunately is the reason for “link spam” being so prominent. Many people (wrongly) assume that many low quality links to their site (PR0 – PR4) are as good as a few high quality links (PR5-PR10).
There are SEO companies out there right now who do nothing but link building. You pay them a few thousand a month, and they have outsourced people in Asia spam thousands of websites with links back to your own site – the worst part is that the SEO companies frequently fail to tell clients that this is 100% against Google terms of service, and can result in a permanent ban from all search results. Mark my words, these types of SEO companies will not be around for much longer.
Right now the industry is coming to the end of a gold-rush period. In the last 5 years SEO has suddenly becoming recognised as something real, and important. As a result, thousands of individuals and companies have started selling it. There are three main problems with this:
- Around 80% of the so-called “SEO experts” around at the moment learned everything they know by reading tutorial articles online.
- The SEO industry is closed. People in don’t help each other in the same way web designers do. It’s all smoke, mirrors, and closely guarded ‘secrets’.
- Even if people did help each other, SEO is an art, not a science – there is no global proof or evidence of what works. If you post a piece of SEO advice on a forum, you can expect at least 2 people to vehemently disagree with you.
Knowing what I know about the industry and the companies working in it – I would never hire an SEO company, especially not for link building.
Why Traditional Link Building Doesn’t Work Anymore

A traditional link builder will tell you to leave comments on blogs, submit entries to online business directories, buy links on paid directories, buy links from other websites, participate in link exchange programs, and the list goes on.
They will also tell you that links from .edu and .gov sites are worth more than others, as well as links from white-listed sites such as Wikipedia.
Their next big seller is linkbait. Linkbait is defined as an article written and published solely for the purpose of generating inbound links. For example: You write some controversial article about (insert celebrity name) having (insert sexual act) with (insert species of animal), and try and get it featured on the homepage of StumbleUpon, Digg, Twitter, etc etc. All those links, and the further links from people who retweet and reblog are meant to be “good for SEO”.
But we haven’t yet touched on why none of these things work anymore. There are two simple reasons:
- The people at Google are not stupid (seriously)
- Even if it did work in some way, none of this stuff is in any way relevant. Let’s go into each one of these in a little more depth (it’s difficult to cover all this stuff without writing a novel).
Google is a 32 billion dollar company. It’s bigger than Intel, Toyota, and Disney. It employs some of (literally) the smartest people in the world. The techs at Google are aware of every single link building tactic, every single “trick” and “technique” to improve rankings, and every single exploit out there. They’re knuckling down on spam, and they’re doing it every day.
Over the years the algorithms have developed, and in my opinion, now a PR2 link from a relevant website to your industry is far more valuable than a PR6 link from some random directory. Why? – Because it makes sense.
So What Does Work?

In short – being real works. Not trying to game the system is the best way to make it work for you. Yes, inbound links are an important part of the ranking algorithm, but they aren’t the be-all and end-all. If you have a great site, with great content, and you interact with people in your industry, then not only will you get links that improve your rankings, but you’ll develop real relationships to help your business.
Write good blog posts, not as linkbait, but because you genuinely have something that you want to say. Talk to people on Twitter, not because you want to spam your website link, but because you genuinely want to connect with others. Participate in forum discussions, not to further spread the link in your signature, but to demonstrate your knowledge and expertise by helping others.
All these things will lead to links. The good kind of links. And from the right sorts of places.
I have high PR links from The Web Squeeze, Web Designer Depot, Smashing Magazine, SitePoint, WooThemes, The Envato Network, Noupe, DesignMoo, Spoon Graphics, Other Web Design Agencies, and Other Web Design Freelance Blogs. What more could a web designer want?
As a result, whenever I publish a new blog post – Google indexes it within 10 minutes and I’ll rank on the 1st page of results for any keywords that I use in my title.
Link building is dead. We are now in the era of reputation building.

Mr. Nolan you can’t request nor inspire comments to an article and then question the faith or legitimacy of the responses it receives! Are you sure that you’re not the one who’s confused?
In any case Mr. Nolan, before determining what Google knows and doesn’t know, it may be best to spend some time researching the tactics of Google Corp through the informational meetings with its shareholders or SEC reports. Perhaps then we can determine if you’re really being fair or just being a Google Corp fan. The more I read your article the more I feel that your hoping the field or industry you found yourself will become privatized.
Also if I may, the article itself was not expressive towards the fact(s)presented, but more of your expression towards competition. More to the point, you seem frustrated that (as you put it)
Right now the industry is coming to the end of a gold-rush period. In the last 5 years SEO has suddenly becoming recognised as something real, and important. As a result, thousands of individuals and companies have started selling it. There are three main problems with this:
Around 80% of the so-called “SEO experts” around at the moment learned everything they know by reading tutorial articles online.
The SEO industry is closed. People in don’t help each other in the same way web designers do. It’s all smoke, mirrors, and closely guarded ’secrets’.
Even if people did help each other, SEO is an art, not a science – there is no global proof or evidence of what works. If you post a piece of SEO advice on a forum, you can expect at least 2 people to vehemently disagree with you.
What are you talking about?????
@Mario WTF!?! Seriously, what you’re saying is far from coherent.
@John Great article, you made excellent points! I see so many “SEO companies” that for “x” amount will get you 400-800 back-links to your website! How is that helpful if the links aren’t related to your industry? Why would I want back-links from spam sites?
If you want to do “link building” and want to build your reputation in Google, then write good content. If you write content that people find useful, or value as a resource then that content will be talked about. People will write about it, link to it…etc.
“Link building is dead. We are now in the era of reputation building.” – I love that!
Thanks again John!
It’s refreshing to read some common sense about SEO, rather than the usual mumbo-jumbo. Well done, John.
Great article, John I have for a while believed the most important thing to do was just write good content and the rest was a waste of time except for making a sitemap. Like you I am amazed at how quick my articles will get into the Google index.
Traditional link building still works like a charm and every mid-seo knows that. It’s not theory, it’s the results that say it all.
Though it shouldn’t be misinterpreted as a SPAM. That’s the other thing. You can’t call somebody a spammer (like “seo girl” in this case) just because he doesn’t want to leave his name on every blog he’s up to. Since when do I have to use my real name? Funny..
You had some good points, but those points have already been written on every other seo blog. And your article title is kinda spammy.. are you saying, that you just now realized that SPAM link building is not that useful after all? Or you’re just looking for some more people interested in “some seo truth revealed”?
You didn’t answer the question about the numbers (“Around 80% of the so-called “SEO experts” <..>”) – is it normal, that a seo expert is making up some numbers, but not interpreting real statistics? Is it proffesional to do so?
And the last thing is your attitude to commenters (“Mario, <..> or if you’re just totally crazy”) – is the worst of all.
Have a nice day.
i need to know more tips & tricks on creating websites,now i am just developing my own website.
Knowing what I know about the industry and the companies working in it – I would never hire an SEO company, especially not for link building — thats funny coming from a web designer lol!!!
Mark my words, these types of SEO companies will not be around for much longer — if i was a gambler id take the money right out your hands
I love seeing all the link-building spam SEO companies commenting here, it’s extremely obvious who you are
I agree it is all about relationships yet there is no other way to rank for a very competitive keyword other than links. Google cannot even come close to keeping paid links and bad blog commenting spamming from ranking sites. They’re definitely changing how they filter links and determining the quality of them.
But still, links are king…you can write all the content you want but if nobody really views it or links to it, you ain’t gunna rank for anything worth while.
With due respect, labeling everyone a spammer who uses a keyword phrase in their comment link is a bit like a puritan bashing people over the head for even considering a beer on a Sunday afternoon. This blog gives a link. If commenters are trying to rank for their names, use their names in that link. If they are trying to rank for another phrase, use those words. That is not spam; that is good SEO practice. Now if they leave useless comments that mean nothing (I did not understand that one comment either), then that is spam regardless of what words they us in the link. You have identified what I would normally consider spammers on my own blog (some maybe borderline), but you miss the entire reason why their comments are spam — because they add nothing of value to the conversation, not because they call themselves SEO girl or SEO consultant. So, just because I can sometimes be a pain in the you-know where, I’m calling myself David SEO Consultant in this comment.
(I actually agree with most of what you espouse in the article, although I have less faith than you in build-it-and-the-links-will-come. But the comments and your responses to them made for an even more interesting read.)
Hi David,
If the purpose of a comment was to leave a link with a keyphrase, then the form label would say “keyphrase” not “name”.
Agreed, John. And if the purpose of a cow was to be come a hamburger, it would say “Would you like fries with that?”, not “moo”.
If I own a cow it is up to ME wether I allow you to turn it into a hamburger or not. If I want to allow you to do this then I’ll advertise my cows as being for sale for slaughter.
If I own a blog then it is up to ME whether I allow you to turn it into a spam-wridden keyword linkfest instead of your name. If I want to allow you to do this then I’ll advertise the “name” field of my blog as “keyword”.
A blog is something that is man-made, therefor man decides its purpose without any need for modification. An animal is God (or nature) -made, and its purpose is often modified by man.
You’re clutching at straws, you know very well that what you’re doing is spam, and you won’t get an ounce of respect for doing it.
Great Article! I really believe it’s more important to build relationships with real people in your field or are interested in your field. In which case you are encouraging people to connect to you because they find you useful or helpful to them instead of you invading or interfering their space. I guess this is what you can call organic SEO because it grows by itself by careful nurturing, not by spamming… and I really did love your article
This was the most important piece of advice in this post, “The people at Google are not stupid (seriously)”. Many link spammers, er I mean link builders, forget this mantra and lose sight of the bigger picture, which is to stay and maintain rank for long term.
Great article. Thanks for sharing.
Still, Mr O’Nolan, I agree with David the consultant that adding a keyphrase in his name is more good SEO practice than anything else. You can blame a cab driver for driving like a fool, you can’t blame him just for driving.
I understand what you’re getting at about the link spam (if my post would only be the first sentence, it would be link spam as well), but despite the fact David calls himself an SEO consultant, he still delivers useful content.
And the cow and the burger, that’s just very funny.
Regards,
Klaas
ye I agree with you .many people design their marketing plan with respect to search engine robot and they forget that theu are should serve to people not search engine.
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hi,
i think you re almost there. the truth is seearch engines proposed a standard called rel=”nofollow” a couple of years ago. it cought wind, because thats how gradualy people got rid of spamlinkers,.. and now linking from any blog, social media profile, major website (i.e. comment link) etc. gives you nothing for ranking.
so link building is really of no effect unless you get to high PR sites to link to you, and even so only if they link from a site that doesnt use rel=nofollow standard for their links.
However i could make sense of lets say google preffering websites that are populare amongst *people*. This would mean, real people signaling google there is some interesting(=very popular) content.
Best
A