Link Building Strategies: Tapping Your Suppliers for a Fresh Supply of In-bound Links

September 7, 2007 | In Best Practices, SEO/SEM | 7 Comments

Today’s Y!Store blog is another guest column by long-time Yahoo! Store owner and developer Rob Snell of Snell Brothers, still located in sleepy Starkville, Mississippi. Rob blogs about Yahoo! Store, speaks at search conferences about Yahoo! Store, is the author of a new book on Yahoo! Store: Starting a Yahoo! Business For Dummies, and is about to turn 40 later this month.

Howdy! Just back from speaking at 2007 Search Engine Strategies in San Jose. I did site reviews and we all had a good time! I even got to review a Yahoo! Store or two: Wedding Favors from American Bridal.

In the middle of a site review I was picking on one site that needed some links, so I tossed out Store SEO Tip #79, “How to Get Free Links from your Suppliers.” A little later, Paul asked me to go into a little more detail in a guest blog post, so here goes…

Links are important (well, duh!)

Long story, short? Links are important for Web traffic and for search engines. Every Yahoo! Store owner needs links, and an easy way to get free links is to ask your suppliers to link to you. A really good way to get a list of all your suppliers is to export all your accounts payable from QuickBooks (or whatever accounting software you use), and start shaking these folks down for some link love.

OK. Links are really, really important to your Yahoo! Store because:

  • Links get your store some foot traffic. Other Web sites send human visitors (a.k.a potential customers) to your Yahoo! Store.
  • Links get your store pages in the search engines’ databases. When your Yahoo! Store gets a link from a page the search engines already know about, a search engine spider follows that link, crawls and indexes your page, and then follows any links on your page to the next page. And it happens over and over again.
  • Links count as votes for your store. Search engines count up all the pages that link to your Yahoo! Store. The more relevant, high-quality links you have, the more important you are to the search engines.

Warning: If you don’t have any links, you don’t get traffic from other sites, you don’t get spidered or indexed by the search engines, and you don’t get free traffic from the search engines because your site must not be important if no one links to you…

Nowadays, most of the search engines place more weight on your reputation with others than on what you have to say about what your page is about. Pretty smart, folks…

Okay, so now you know you need links. Even before finishing this post, I know I’ll get an email from Tom from Surf City, CA, asking “Who do you get links from? What kind of links do you want? How can I get these links?” Well, Tom, great questions as always…

You want what some folks call organic or natural links. These links are from Web sites, somehow related to your site, who would link to your store as a resource for their visitors, without taking into consideration search engine benefits of a link.

Vendor links: An easy way to get free links

Almost every Yahoo! Store owner I know knows they need links, but they don’t know how to get them. One of the easiest ways I’ve found to get free, on-topic, relevant links to your Yahoo! Store is to ask all your vendors for back links. Every month you send money to all these folks. They should do you the small favor of linking to your Yahoo! Store.

Like my momma always says, “If you don’t ask, you don’t get,” so let’s start asking!

Looking at QuickBooks, I have 127 different organizations that our retail company sent money to last year that I think I can shake down, I mean, respectfully ask for some links. I chunk these folks into one of four buckets:

  • Product Suppliers: Most of our checks went for “purchases” to product-related vendors like wholesale suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, drop-shippers, book publishers, dog experts/authors, etc. If you’re even halfway on your game, you probably have some links from these folks, but you need to make sure you have all the links you can get! See if they’ll link to the product page or section page rather than the home page. Also, see if they’ll use keyword rich anchor text in the link, like “oversized red widgets from YourCompanyNameHere.com” rather than “YourCompanyNameHere.com”
  • Marketing Vendors: The next big group of vendors by $$$ was made up of marketing vendors including magazine publishers, Web site owners, advertising networks, email marketing lists, and so on. You’re buying traffic from these folks, but it doesn’t hurt to ask for (more) links.
  • Service Providers: The third group was service providers like Web hosting, e-commerce services, e-mail services, online software, and consulting. Most of these folks have thousands of clients and are “too big” to link to you, but there are some other ways to get links! The best way I’ve found is to write testimonials for these folks or participate in case studies (which works wonders). I won’t sell out for a link, but if I truly believe in a vendor, I’ll write a killer testimonial and snag me a good link…
  • Other Vendors: The last group of vendors are folks you don’t spend a lot of money on, but you could if you wanted to! On this list are organizations you support through subscriptions, dues, donations, and membership fees. This is probably your best bet for links you don’t already have. These non-profit groups need your support though cash and/or product donations. I have literally gotten hundreds and hundreds of relatively cheap or free back links. Do not underestimate these sponsorship opportunities.

WARNING: The following may be extremely difficult for big, broad brushstroke folks like myself. This is the part that truly makes my head hurt. It’s tedious and can be mind-numbingly boring. If you’re not a details-oriented person, you might need to delegate this to someone who is.

Make an Excel Spreadsheet

I open up Microsoft Excel and create the following columns:Vendor Name, $ Spent, Web Site URL, Links Page URL, Dealers Page URL, Links to Me?, Vendor Contact, Vendor Email, Date of Request, Best Relationship, Notes

First, eliminate folks you know won’t link to you. You probably won’t get a back link from Uncle Sam, or the electric department, or VISA, or Yahoo! Search Marketing, Google Adwords, or your state sales tax collector, but it doesn’t hurt to ask.

Sort by $$$ Spent last year. Especially with product vendors, how much you spend shows how important the product line is to your Yahoo! Store. And the more you spend, the more leverage you have with that vendor.

Organize your vendors by bucket. I use the Notes field to tag all my product vendors first, and then tag the others as Marketing, Services, or Other.

Start with your product suppliers. Product folks are likely to have a Web page, likely to have a “resources” page if not a dealers/buy online page. Since they’re always adding new products, these folks are also more likely to have a Webmaster on staff. The cool thing about getting links because you sell a certain product is that sometimes you can get two links for the same product: a link from the manufacturer’s dealers page and a link from your distributor’s page. Sweet!

Find each vendors’ Web site. Grab the URL, see if they have a links page or a dealers page. Make sure they don’t already link to you! Nothing more embarrassing than asking for a link you already have.

NOTE: You probably know your top 10 manufacturers’ domains by heart, but when you start seeing how many of your vendors and manufacturers don’t have a Web site (or have a site last updated circa 1997), you’ll swear you’re on the cutting edge of Internet marketing.

Once you have all your vendor information, then it’s time to plan your link request attack!

Prioritize your link requests. Start with links that are easier to get. You’ll get so excited about getting your first links, and that will give you the patience to make it though the long slow, agonizing process that is a link building campaign…

Ask yourself these questions: Does the vendor even have a Web site? If so, does the vendor link to dealers (like your competitors)? Does the vendor have a links page? Does it look like the vendor updates their Web site often?

Figure out who SHOULD ask for a link (at your company) and who TO ask for a link (at the vendor). Who in your company has the best relationship with your vendor? Usually it’s the person who deals with them on a day-to-day basis, either the owner or the buyer. Honestly, a vendor’s salesperson is your best friend in motivating the vendor’s Web guy to hurry up and link to you. Be nice, but firm! Put the squeeze on if you have to. You must have that link!

Know what you want and ask for it. Specificity here is a plus. Make life easy for your vendors. Tell them the URL of the page you want a link from, the URL you want the vendor to link to, and provide them with whatever text, logos, or other information they need to make your link look like everyone else’s link. Sometimes phone calls to your sales rep are better than email requests, but email is better for all the gory details.

Sometimes the link will just be your URL or domain name. Sometimes the link will be your business name. Sometimes the link will be some version of your logo. Have multiple sizes available if they ask. Make it easy for the vendor’s Web monkey to link to you:

Frank — Howdy! Thanks for getting that last order out so fast. Quick question: Can we get a link on your dealers page at http://www.vendorsdomain.com/dealers.asp ?

And can y’all link to my page at http://www.mystoredomain/vendor.html? I noticed you use dealer logos and there’s a pretty good version of my logo here:
http://www.mystoredomain/lib/myaccountname/logo.gif — Thanks and hope to see y’all in Vegas for Pubcon! — Rob

Remember to say thank you. Once you get that link, remember to say thank you. A little “happy” in the mail is a great way to show how much you care, too.

Links are important for both free qualified traffic to your online store and for good SEO. SEO is always changing, but it’s a zero sum game: There are only 10 Web pages listed on the first page of search results. Your competition is always chewing on you, and trying to steal your biscuit. One of the best ways you can fight back is by making sure that you have all the links you can possibly have. Asking the folks you pay month in and month out to link you is a pretty easy way to get some good (and free) back links!

Please reply to this post with your link stories and ideas on how to get more links!

Rob Snell–Somewhere in rural Mississippi
guest blogger for Yahoo! Small Business


7 Comments »

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  1. Are links from your affiliates valuable in this regard? I guess that those affiliate links that redirect don’t count, but some affiliate networks (such as Link Connector) offer naked links whereby the affiliate site uses the merchant’s URL directly.

    Comment by Michael Whitaker — September 7, 2007 #

  2. Rob, thanks for the tips and as always I need to get after the links that are available. One quick question… where the heck is my link in your story. Names are great but a little link goes a long way. Thanks

    Comment by Surf City Tom — September 7, 2007 #

  3. Pure genius, as usual. Thanks Rob.

    Seem obvious now, but if it was, then why didn’t I ever think of it before?

    If you’ve ever talked to Rob in person or on the phone about Yahoo Store strategies, it’s like trying to drink from a firehose!

    He can take one glance at your site and tell you 15 things to do off the top of his head. (Meanwhile, you’re busy trying to write them all down before they go into one ear and out the other and are lost forever.)

    Comment by Clean Air Gardening — September 10, 2007 #

  4. Michael
    Rob’s checking with his SEO contacts on this question. Naked links would seem to pass some value but then again it may depend on how the links are presented–in other words if it looks spammy it may be interpreted as spammy. In terms of links with redirects, the answer may be it depends. There are likely ways that wouldn’t be seen as shady but also a chance the links may be seen as such.

    Tom
    If we let Rob link to everyone he knows, then every other word in his posts would be a link likely.

    Lars
    Glad to hear this tip was useful. I asked Rob to write it up knowing that it sounded like a novel starting place for link building and given that off-page factors are very important.

    Paul

    Comment by pboisver — September 10, 2007 #

  5. Great article Rob. What a talent you have for finding practical solutions to important problems.

    The links from these vendors are especially valuable because they are among the most relevant types of links you can get. Think of all of the people who link to the manufacturer as the authority on a certain product. Well, if that manufacturer then links to you, you start becoming an authority as well. At least that is how Google works… Google looks at these relationships (who links to the people who link to the people who link to you). Don’t get me wrong – in the link game quantity is important, but quality and relevance is paramount. When “quantity” converges with “quality” seo rankings go through the roof.

    To the questions above – naked links matter, but all links are not equal. Some links matter more than others and for different reasons. Evaluate who links to the site that will link to you. Evaluate their site content. Evaluate HOW they link to you. All of those factors should be considered when answering the question – are “affiliate links valuable.”

    Comment by BostonScott — September 10, 2007 #

  6. Thank you, Rob, for such a great review on link building! As a beginner in this thing, I do have one question – is it really true that low quality links could actually hurt the ranking?

    Comment by The Dog Clothing Company — September 11, 2007 #

  7. Howdy, all! Thanks for your comments!

    Are links from your affiliates valuable in this regard?

    1) Mr. Whitaker — Howdy! I think ANY affiliate links would help. If the links point directly to your domain, or Y! URLs, Y! redirects or not, I think there would be SEO benefits.

    CJ.com? Not so much because they go through proxies and don’t look like links to search engine robots.

    Right now I’m looking into SEO-friendly Yahoo! Store affiliate programs/networks. Anyone know any programs we should know about?

    One quick question… where the heck is my link in your story. Names are great but a little link goes a long way.

    2) Surf City Tom — See? You get it. If you don’t ask, you don’t get. Your link is forthcoming.

    If you’ve ever talked to Rob in person or on the phone about Yahoo Store strategies, it’s like trying to drink from a firehose!

    3) Clean Air Gardening — Thanks, Lars! I like to talk about this stuff!

    Sad thing is that Yahoo! Store-centric Internet marketing is pretty much all I think about almost all the time nowdays!

    Just tonight my girlfriend was giving me a hard time about how excited I get about advanced operators for search engines, (”What’s so cool about the SITE: operator?”), but as you will see in a moment…

    Tom, If we let Rob link to everyone he knows, then every other word in his posts would be a link likely.

    4) Paul — Well, maybe if they bought multiple copies of my book.

    OK, how ’bout this IDEA: I think Y! should have a Y! Merchants’ Association where we CROSS PROMOTE each others’ stores, not just trade links. I mean, other than a pretty much bullet-proof platform, toll-free customer support, and an army of dedicated CSRs what do we get for our revshare $$$? ;)

    Say we all pick 20 noncompetitive but somehow related stores and integrate links within our CAPTIONS where it makes sense. I do that already on some of our stores. Not swapping links, per se, but for example, saying we carry one muzzle, but our friends at Morrco.com have 27 different varieties…

    For example, a quick search on Yahoo for site:stores.yahoo.net dog reveals about 23,700 pages of folks selling stuff for dogs.

    http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=A0geu5sEdudGwQ0BgbVXNyoA?p=site%3Astores.yahoo.net+dog&y=Search&fr=yfp-t-501
    And these are just the folks NOT using the 301 redirect! (Shame!)

    It would be pretty easy for Y! to set up a marketplace of 5-Star or established merchants and each have a list of the 10 things THEY want promoted.

    5) Scott — Thanks, dude! Just channeling a little redneck magic. Give me a holler, sometime.

    As a beginner in this thing, I do have one question – is it really true that low quality links could actually hurt the ranking?

    6) Dog Clothing Company folks — Thanks! Disclaimer: This is just my opinion here, but I think that if a majority of links to a site are “low quality” (whatever that means!) they certainly won’t help that site. What percentage of your links have to be high quality to earn you “trust” from Google? I would say more than half.

    I define “low quality links” as links from sites with no authority, no pagerank/link juice, no unique content, no value to site visitors, etc. Think: scraper sites reurgitating search engine results pages, spammy blog comments, trackback spam, or guestbook links, etc.

    Quick do’s and don’ts: Do get buy a link in the Yahoo! directory ($299 a year). Do submit your site ONCE to the proper category in the DMOZ.org, but don’t sweat it if you don’t get in at first. Sponsor forums and affinity sites. That’ll get you some links. Participate in forums and answer questions. Ask everyone you know who has a related site if they’ll link to you.

    Don’t start a huge reciprocal link campaign where you swap links with everyone and everyone. Don’t buy links where you’re paying more for the link than the direct traffic would be worth. Don’t get links from sites that link to porn, pills, or casinos.

    Mr. Matt Cutts across the street over at Google has always said that what OTHER sites do can’t
    hurt you, so if you believe that (and I pretty much do), I think you’ll be okay if your site has some low quality links.

    Always be getting those links!

    Rob Snell

    Comment by Rob Snell — September 12, 2007 #

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