Post by account_disabled on Dec 11, 2023 12:53:12 GMT 2
They will find your stuff. They'll say, Oh, this Landfish guy looks interesting. I want to see his content. His content looks interesting too. I could use some of these things, or I'm going to quote this or I'm going to write something and then I'm going to quote something, mine competitors for backlinks. I'm not going to say: Don't do this again. I still think it's valuable stuff, but if you just browse your competitors' backlinks and try to get all of them.
A lot of times, especially in heavy industries left. A lot of people had a lot C Level Contact List of these links back in the day and that's how people got links back then. Now, the new thing that I always think about is opening up Site Explorer or and looking at what's the content that's getting the most links from my competitors or people who are competitive in my niche? They do not necessarily need to be directly overlapping businesses. Look, look at what's the most shared content socially, what's the most popular content on this website.
On this blog, on this research, on this market leader, whoever it is, and then do it better, oh, that's beautiful. And while you're doing that, I think it's worth checking out, Hey, who's linking to the interesting content that this site produces? Therefore, there is value in mining this way. There was a practice in the past where people would set up private networks of websites that were sometimes called link farms. Or they build public networks known as link rings, link circuses, and blog carnivals. I remember Blog Carnival wasn't always spammy, but then was used in a very spammy way for SEO.
A lot of times, especially in heavy industries left. A lot of people had a lot C Level Contact List of these links back in the day and that's how people got links back then. Now, the new thing that I always think about is opening up Site Explorer or and looking at what's the content that's getting the most links from my competitors or people who are competitive in my niche? They do not necessarily need to be directly overlapping businesses. Look, look at what's the most shared content socially, what's the most popular content on this website.
On this blog, on this research, on this market leader, whoever it is, and then do it better, oh, that's beautiful. And while you're doing that, I think it's worth checking out, Hey, who's linking to the interesting content that this site produces? Therefore, there is value in mining this way. There was a practice in the past where people would set up private networks of websites that were sometimes called link farms. Or they build public networks known as link rings, link circuses, and blog carnivals. I remember Blog Carnival wasn't always spammy, but then was used in a very spammy way for SEO.