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Backlink Ideas for My Business Site

Feb 29th, 2020
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  1. Backlink Ideas for My Business Site
  2. Hey everyone. I am a freelance translator and I've got a website which ranks between 4-8 for my target keyword. I've built some organic backlinks so far but I after a point it stopped naturally. Can you recommend anything? My website is en-tr dot net . thanks in advance ;)
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  14. For your business, first is to list on my google business list then reach your popular influencers in the field to propose your interesting content.
  15. Whatever you do, do not purchase banklink gigs online. It may get your site penalized. I went ahead and promoted your site via my Twitter and LinkedIn accounts.
  16. How about writing some language tutorials, then guest posting those articles on blogs of schools etc? Each post can get you one quality back link, and hopefully work too.
  17. U can check your concurrents backlinks. I`m use https://ahrefs.com/ for finding concurents link. There are 7 days free trial period. Check your concurrents backlinks , find some sites and try to add your website to this site.
  18. I agree with @JEET : Guest posting is a good option.
  19. Searching for relevant keywords for your website and google for sites which allows you guest posting with URL.
  20. Eg Google dork: <keywords> +"Email" +"Reply" +"Website"
  21. Try refining search with blog | Comment | URL | Submit | "Leave a reply" and so on.
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  23. You can also try hosting some useful stuff that can be shared by others.
  24. What keywords are you trying to rank for? have you research the competition?
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  26. PS: I have checked your website.
  27. You have to engage with your niche, so wherever your niche is, engage. Brand mentions are more important now than ever.
  28. You may also like to check my signature.
  29. Hey everyone. I am a freelance translator and I've got a website which ranks between 4-8 for my target keyword. I've built some organic backlinks so far but I after a point it stopped naturally. Can you recommend anything? My website is en-tr dot net . thanks in advance ;)
  30. Click to expand...
  31. Before to start off-page activity on your website you need to complete your On-page work on it. On-page activity is the best thing to improve your visibility in search engine.
  32. You can try with guest posts. Unfortunately many websites do not accept guest posts so easily or ask money for publishing a guest post.
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  34. To make these pages more relevant to your keyword, you’ll need to test copy and page changes.
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  36. Start by trialing keywords in the page copy to make the landing page more relevant, or consider having final URLs directing to pages pre-filtered for relevant products, as below.
  37.  
  38. The more specific the keywords, the more filters you can test to see their impact on conversions.
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  40. Bear in mind: you might not want to filter according to your customer’s demographic characteristics.
  41.  
  42. It’s not “black magic” – it’s consistently brilliant execution of sound SEO strategy.
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  44. The corollary to this is the sad tale of woe spun around how certain businesses can be materially impacted by changes to Google’s algorithm.
  45.  
  46. This is 100% true – but it ignores the fact that:
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  48. No company is entitled to organic traffic from Google (or any other search engine); organic traffic is earned through the hard work detailed above.
  49. If a business is that reliant on organic traffic from Google, it’s probably a good idea to address that risk factor via other marketing investments.
  50. Google makes it relatively straightforward to stay current via their webmaster guidelines and Quality Rater guidelines.
  51. Myth 2: To evaluate its search results, Google employs thousands of low-paid contractors whose purpose the company says is to assess the quality of the algorithms’ rankings. Even so, contractors said Google gave feedback to these workers to convey what is considered to be the correct ranking of results, and they revised their assessments accordingly.
  52.  
  53. If one were to read that statement without context or knowledge about how Google works and the role Quality Raters (QRs) play, it sounds pretty bad.
  54.  
  55. Let’s start with the facts:
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  57. Google indirectly employs ~10,000 QRs (who are paid ~$13.50 an hour, for the record) all over the world at any given time via a network of contracting firms.
  58. Google has been running this program since at least 2005.
  59. QRs are basically no different from reviewers or quality-controllers, who assess results using a publicly-available set of guidelines. They do not have access to or control over any components of Google’s algorithms – QRs are just testers who validate that the product (the search algorithm) is working as intended.
  60. But what of the claim that Google tells QRs how to rank pages for its own nefarious reasons?
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  62. Assume, just for a moment, that it’s true. How do the logistics of that work?
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  64. Over the 15-year history of the program, Google has likely employed millions of QRs. The tenure of most QRs is short (the individual included in the WSJ article was there for just 4 months), which limits loyalty and complicates any efforts to interfere.
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  66. So, Google is engaged in a vast conspiracy to manipulate the feedback that they are paying hundreds of millions of dollars each year to obtain?
  67.  
  68. Two problems with that:
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  70. The math behind keeping a conspiracy of that size secret for this long is problematic.
  71. It seems to run headlong into myth #3.
  72. Myth 3: ‘…In at least one case made changes on behalf of a major advertiser, eBay Inc., contrary to its public position that it never takes that type of action.’
  73.  
  74. This claim actually contains three false claims weaved together – so let’s take each in turn.
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  76. The first is that Google’s Ads & Organic teams are not independent of one another, which is demonstrably false.
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  78. As with many of the claims made by the WSJ, this claim is dangerous to the entire search industry, which has continually battled to dispel the myth that companies can pay for organic rankings (a myth that is often propagated by less-than-reputable companies who take their clients’ money with the promise that they “know someone” at Google who will help).
  79.  
  80. This isn’t the case. It has never been the case.
  81.  
  82. Assertions like this one continue to give bad actors in the search industry grounds to prey upon the companies that hire them.
  83.  
  84. The second is that something improper occurred in the 2020 eBay situation, which is also not true. If you’re curious, you can read about it here.
  85.  
  86. The third is the fact that this claim – that Google adjusted its search rankings for eBay in order to retain their $30 million in annual ad spend – isn’t really compatible with Myth #2 (that Google pays hundreds of millions of dollars for QRs, only to engage in a massive conspiracy to alter the QRs’ rankings to suit Google’s own, sinister purposes).
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