Wish to know how can you use 'White Hat Link Building in 2016'. You will find this deck presented byKaranam Srikanth, Digital Marketing Manager at Dilate Digital during Webinar for Digital Vidya. Interested in attending similar Webinar Live? Register Now at http://www.digitalvidya.com/webinars/
1. White Hat Link Building in 2016
Karanam Srikanth, Digital Marketing Manager, MGAW.in
July 8, 2016
2. I’m
Head of Digital Marketing for SpectraForce
Lead Digital Marketing Consultant For MASI Enterprises AU
Founder of MGAW.in (Marketing Genius At Work)
Founder of DigitalSrikanth.com
9 Years of SEO, SEM & SMO Experience
Has Conducted Over 500+ Audits
Managed over 500+ Clients Across 3 Continents
Trained SEO teams in Three continents
Man City fan for life
SEO & SMM trainer at Digital Vidya
3. Intro to link building: why is it important?
• Link building is the process of getting other
websites to link to yours
• Google looks at links like a popularity contest or
votes
• The more reputable votes your website has (i.e.
links), the higher you will rank
• At a very high level, the key to link building is:
• Quality of the domain providing the link
• Relevancy of the domain providing the link
• Links are still the #1 ranking factor with
• Google, i.e. they’re important!!!
4. Intro to link quality: authority
• Not all links are created equal
• We want to aim to get links from websites that
have high “authority” with Google
• Authority is built with Google through quality links
• So in a sense, we want to get links from websites
that have a lot of links themselves
• 2 tools we use to instantly tell the authority of
websites are the Moz and ahrefs (we will cover
them later)
5. Intro to link quality: relevance.
• In equal importance to authority is relevance
• As a marketing agency, I want to get links from
websites about marketing, business, web design,
etc.
• A link from a website about home improvement
wouldn’t do much good because it’s irrelevant
• In fact, Google actually looks at this as spam and
could potentially harm my website
Blog About
Web Design
Blog About
SEO
Blog About
Hair
Extensions
Marketing Site
6. Intro to link quality: Quality.
• Because links are such a powerful ranking signal,
SEO marketers have learned how to hack the
process of acquiring links
• This “hacked” process generally involves buying
links from low quality, irrelevant websites
• These low quality links are the #1 reason websites
get “penalized” by Google
• This is also known as “black hat” SEO
• Black hat SEO is generally short lived and not as
effective as white hat SEO
7. Intro to link quality: white hat SEO.
• Link building done right is all about the exchange of value
• If you want to get featured on someone’s website, you have to add value
• Value comes in a number of forms:
• Guest posting – providing value through adding awesome content to their website
• Blogger outreach – providing value through a relevant pitch / value proposition
• Reporter outreach – providing value through offering a news tip or quote for an article
• Everything we do is based on research and outreach:
• Researching the prospects website, understanding their content
• Outreach via email with a value proposition / pitch
8. IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LINK.
• At the end of the day, all that matters is securing a link on the target website
• This is what we get paid to do
IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LINK!!!
9. Meet the link building team.
Lead SEO (LS) Link Prospector (LP) Outreach Manager (OM) Content Creator (CC)
• Website analysis
• Content analysis
• Keyword analysis
• Current link analysis
• Set up project tracker
• Set up Analytics
• Set keyword tracking
• Set project plan
• Web research
• Find link opportunities
• Use “search operators”
• Use social media
• Basic understanding of
link quality
• Record opportunities in
Excel
• Set up Gmail for outreach
• Build outreach persona
• Set up outreach templates
• Contact prospects
• Negotiate with prospects
• Work with content creator
to get needed value
• Freelance writer or
designer (or in house)
• On call to write content as
needed
• On call to create
infographics as needed
10. Intro to the link building process.
Setup Workbook
(LS)
Client Site Analysis
(LS)
Assign Targets &
Keywords
(LS)
Build Project Plan
(LS)
Find & Record
Opportunities
(LP)
Setup Gmail
(OM)
Send outreach
templates to
prospects
(OM)
Communicate
content needs to
creators (if needed)
(OM)
Create content,
send back to OM
(CC)
Send content back
to prospect, Make
edits if needed.
(OM)
Get Link Live
(OM)
Track and Record
(OM)
11. Hiring a link prospector.
• Lower cost staff, generally in the $4 - $8 / hour range
• Look on sites like Upwork, Fiverr and iwriter
• Our personal writers are in Indonesia and Philippines
• SEO knowledge is ideal, but not necessary
• Rather look for a lower cost worker with good
communication skills to train (ahem, give them these
videos)
• Can get good use out of 1 well trained staff, upwards
of 12 clients at a time (if managed properly)
Link Prospector (LP)
• Web research
• Find link opportunities
• Use “search operators”
• Use social media
• Basic understanding of
link quality
• Record opportunities in
Excel
12. Hiring a link prospector.
• I need a white hat link building expert. Tasks will include:
1. Prospecting - I need you to go out and find niche relevant opportunities. This will include:
• Link round up opportunities
• Guest posting opportunities
• Sponsored post opportunities
• Resource page links
• Broken link building
2. Organization – Ability to use Excel, communicate with team members and manage multiple tasks at one time.
Skills required:
• English - Reading
• Editing – Proofreading
• Customer Service & Admin Support - Content Moderation
13. Hiring a Outreach Manager.
• Mid cost staff, $15 - $30/hour depending on skill
set
• Communication skills are key, writing is a plus
• Editing skills is a huge plus as well
• Look on sites like Upwork, Fiverr and iwriter
• I use all US & AU based outreach managers
• SEO knowledge is ideal, but not necessary
• Can use across 5 – 7 clients depending on how
they’re trained and managed
Outreach Manager
• Set up Gmail for outreach
• Build outreach persona
• Set up outreach templates
• Contact prospects
• Negotiate with prospects
• Work with content creator
to get needed value
14. Hiring a Outreach Manager.
• Fast growing digital agency is looking for someone with excellent writing, communication and organization skills. This position
will be managing a number of client projects and a small team of freelancers to make sure everything gets done on time.
• This person must be:
• Based in the US or Australia
• Have tremendous communication skills
• Be able to perform email outreach and manage dozens of emails a day
• Be able to manage small virtual teams
• Be able to communicate with clients via email
• You will be responsible to perform email outreach to a list a prospects and respond when they email you back.
• You must be able to manage dozens of email conversations in a short period of time and still meet the end goals.
• We will need you to build a database of writers you can contact to have content written on request (we will help you do that).
• It will be your job to read through their content, proofread it, edit it if necessary and submit to the blog for consideration.
15. Intro to the link building process.
Setup Workbook
(LS)
Client Site Analysis
(LS)
Assign Targets &
Keywords
(LS)
Build Project Plan
(LS)
Find & Record
Opportunities
(LP)
Setup Gmail
(OM)
Send outreach
templates to
prospects
(OM)
Communicate
content needs to
creators (if needed)
(OM)
Create content,
send back to OM
(CC)
Send content back
to prospect, Make
edits if needed.
(OM)
Get Link Live
(OM)
Track and Record
(OM)
16. The process of finding content writers.
New client comes onboard Hire new content writers
Post jobs needs to freelance
sites
Post jobs needs to Social
Networks
Find writers from the
industry leading websites
Record writers in the client’s
excel workbook
17. Content writers overview
• A large part of link building will come from guest blogging
• To guest blog at scale, we need at least 3 writers for each new client
• Each of those writers must not only write well, but have knowledge on the subject matter
• We need writers of 3 calibers and pricing:
• 1 for lower quality blogs. Ideally we can get articles for $20 - $30
• 1 for quality blogs. Ideally we can get articles for $30 - $70
• 1 for top quality blogs. Ideally we can get articles for $70 - $150
18. Evaluating writers for quality.
• First, we only want to work with freelancers, NOT writing services (the quality sucks)
• We need to review writers to place them in 1 of the 3 categories
• Ask for samples and read them – straight up, are they any good?
• Ask for samples live on websites – is it a reputable site? Did the post generate comments? Social shares? The
more, the better
• How much do they charge per word?
• Look at these factors and decide which category they fall into
19. Record your authors in client workbook..
• In the “writers” tab of the client’s workbook, record
their name, email and rate per article
• In the tag column, assign them a # between 1 and 5
based on the quality of their writing
• If they are the lower cost writers, assigned them a
low number
• The high cost, high quality writers get a higher tag
• The tag is used to determine which blog each writer
should write for when guest blogging
20. 1. Posting jobs to Upwork.
• Upwork is a platform where you post a job and freelancers bid on it
• As soon as a new client comes on board, post a job on Upwork for niche
specific writers
• Upwork writers tend to fulfill our content needs for lower quality /lower
cost writing
21. Elance job template
• We have a client in the [insert client’s niche] vertical who needs 1 - 2 blog posts per week.
• These blog posts will be between 700 and 1,200 words, depending on the post.
• You MUST have in depth knowledge of [insert industry terms] OR be able to write about it highly
intelligently.
• In your proposal, please provide:
- Writing samples (finance related only)
- Rate per word / article
- How many articles you could write per week
22. 1. Posting jobs to iwriter.
• iwriter is a platform where you post a job and writers bid on it
• As soon as a new client comes on board, post a job on iwriter for
niche specific writers
• iwriter writers tend to fulfill our content needs for high quality
/higer cost writing
23. iwriter job template
• We have a client in the [insert client’s niche] vertical who needs 1 - 2 blog posts per week.
• These blog posts will be between 700 and 1,200 words, depending on the post.
• You MUST have in depth knowledge of [insert industry terms] OR be able to write about it highly
intelligently.
• In your proposal, please provide:
- Writing samples (finance related only)
- Rate per word / article
- How many articles you could write per week
24. 1. Posting jobs to Fiverr.
• Fiverr is a platform where you post a job and writers write articles for $5
(Custom gigs offered)
• As soon as a new client comes on board, post a job on Fiverr for niche
specific writers
• Fiverr writers tend to fulfill our content needs for low quality writing for $5.
25. Fiverr job template
• We have a client in the [insert client’s niche] vertical who needs 1 - 2 blog posts per week.
• These blog posts will be between 700 and 1,200 words, depending on the post.
• You MUST have in depth knowledge of [insert industry terms] OR be able to write about it highly
intelligently.
• In your proposal, please provide:
- Writing samples (finance related only)
- Rate per word / article
- How many articles you could write per week
26. Finding writers on top websites.
• To find world class content writers, we need to attack
the source
• If you don’t know off the top of your head, do a
simple Google search for keyword + blogs
• Click through on a handful of results
• Run SEM Rush and ahrefs to test the quality of the
website
27. Finding articles with a lot of engagement.
• Once you find some quality websites, search the site by
client keywords (i.e. stock market, etc)
• Look for articles with high engagement (comments and
• shares)
• Locate the author of the article and click on their name
28. Contact the writer.
• More times than not, you can find the author’s email
• If not email, find them on social media (preferably
LinkedIn)
• Send them either an email or message on social media
asking if they freelance
• (Outreach template is to the right)
Hey [Name],
I came across your article on [insert site name]
and really enjoyed it.
I’m in the market for talented writers like yourself
– do you freelance at all?
If so, I’d love to hire you!
Thanks!
29. Record your authors in client workbook..
• In the “writers” tab of the client’s workbook, record
their name, email and rate per article
• In the tag column, assign them a # between 1 and 5
based on the quality of their writing
• If they are the lower cost writers, assigned them a
low number
• The high cost, high quality writers get a higher tag
• The tag is used to determine which blog each writer
should write for when guest blogging
30. Deep dive into the link building process.
Setup Workbook
(LS)
Client Site Analysis
(LS)
Assign Targets &
Keywords
(LS)
Build Project Plan
(LS)
Find & Record
Opportunities
(LP)
Setup Gmail
(OM)
Send outreach
templates to
prospects
(OM)
Communicate
content needs to
creators (if needed)
(OM)
Create content,
send back to OM
(CC)
Send content back
to prospect, Make
edits if needed.
(OM)
Get Link Live
(OM)
Track and Record
(OM)
31. Record your authors in client workbook..
• We use Google Drive, Sheets and Docs for everything
• It has an open workflow
• Easy to manage freelancers
• Integration with Gmail, Calendar
• Communication
• When a new client/project comes in, create a new folder for that
client
• Name the folder after the client Within that folder create a folder
and call it “content”
• Within that folder, create a new “Sheet”
• Name it Client – Link Tracker
32. Intro to Google Sheets.
• Within that Folder, create a new Sheet and add 6 tabs. Title them as follows:
• Project Plan Writers
• Live Links Targets
• Opportunities Passwords
33. Tab 1: the project plan.
• Serves as command central for
campaign
• Outlines each task line by line
• Outlines date for completion
• Dictates who (internally) does the work
• Lets clients know which projects are on
track, delayed or completed
34. Tab 2: live links.
• As we progress through the campaign and links go live, we record them as such here
• Record the date it went live and the URL of the live post
• Cost = how much we (internally) paid for the link (i.e. cost of content, sponsored post, etc)
• Landing page = the page on the client site that the link points to
• Anchor text = the text of the link (i.e. Example link, anchor text = Example link)
35. Tab 3: opportunities.
• This is where we track link opportunities (aka where the link prospector records their work)
• Status = dated contact updates from link outreach manager (emailed, live, submit, etc)
• Type = type of link (guest post, link roundup, forum, etc)
• Site URL = link to home page
• Guidelines URL = link to more info page (guest post guidelines, advertising info, etc)
• Contact = how to get in touch with the site (ideally email address over contact form)
36. Tab 4: writers.
• In order to do guest posting at scale, we need content writers on call
• Tag = quality of their work. 5 is best, 1 is lowest. We use this to understand which sites to
• submit their work to
• Name = their name
• Contact = their email
• Rate = cost per article or per word
• later in the webinar, I will show you methods to finding writers of various skill sets
37. Tab 5: targets.
• This is where we assign landing pages and keywords for link building
• The lead SEO will be responsible to build these out
• The outreach manager will be responsible to communicating these needs to the
• Priority = which pages to emphasize and target first
• Later we will discuss how to build this out in depth
38. Tab 6: passwords.
• This is where we record any information we need across the team
• Logins to email, logins to tools, etc
39. Deep dive into the link building process.
Setup Workbook
(LS)
Client Site Analysis
(LS)
Assign Targets &
Keywords
(LS)
Build Project Plan
(LS)
Find & Record
Opportunities
(LP)
Setup Gmail
(OM)
Send outreach
templates to
prospects
(OM)
Communicate
content needs to
creators (if needed)
(OM)
Create content,
send back to OM
(CC)
Send content back
to prospect, Make
edits if needed.
(OM)
Get Link Live
(OM)
Track and Record
(OM)
40. Website assessment: content.
• Content makes link building much easier because it allows us to target different types of links
• Clients that aren't willing to invest in content are missing opportunities
• We need to get an understanding of what the client site has available.
• What do we have to work with?
• Are they actively creating content?
• Do they have someone to create content?
• How many social shares does each piece of content get?
• Do they have distribution channels built out (i.e. email list, social following, etc)?
• Are they willing to invest in content creation?
41. Website assessment: content.
• Create a list of quality available to us:
• Blog posts
• Free guides
• Videos
• PowerPoint documents
• Anything!
• In the “targets” tab, record the URLs of the GOOD content available
• In the “type” column, note it as “content”
42. Deep dive into the link building process.
Setup Workbook
(LS)
Client Site Analysis
(LS)
Assign Targets &
Keywords
(LS)
Build Project Plan
(LS)
Find & Record
Opportunities
(LP)
Setup Gmail
(OM)
Send outreach
templates to
prospects
(OM)
Communicate
content needs to
creators (if needed)
(OM)
Create content,
send back to OM
(CC)
Send content back
to prospect, Make
edits if needed.
(OM)
Get Link Live
(OM)
Track and Record
(OM)
43. Picking which pages we want to rank.
• For the most part, the client will tell us which pages they want to rank
• However, sometimes they are wrong and need a little push from us
• The best way to increase organic traffic is to push up pages that are already ranking well
• We want to find pages that are ranking between spots 6 and 25 and focus on them
• These pages are “low hanging fruit” because Google already likes them (i.e. they are ranking), they just need an
extra push.
• 9 times out of 10 that extra push is links
• We use a tool called SEM Rush to find which pages are ranking by keyword
• We find the pages we want and add them to the “targets” tab in the client workbook
44. Accessing SEM Rush
• Head to http://www.semrush.com/
• Enter the client site into the search bar,
• click “search”
• Click “organic research” on the right
hand side
• Click “positions” under organic research
• Scroll down, click “export” to pull the
data into a CSV / Excel file
45. Pulling down keyword rankings
• Open the CSV file and add filters to the top
row
• Filter by position – remove anything under a 7
• Then, filter by search volume – remove
anything under 400
• You’ll be left with the top ranking keywords
with the most search volume
• Take these and add the keywords and landing
page URL to the “targets” tab
46. Deep dive into the link building process.
Setup Workbook
(LS)
Client Site Analysis
(LS)
Assign Targets &
Keywords
(LS)
Build Project Plan
(LS)
Find & Record
Opportunities
(LP)
Setup Gmail
(OM)
Send outreach
templates to
prospects
(OM)
Communicate
content needs to
creators (if needed)
(OM)
Create content,
send back to OM
(CC)
Send content back
to prospect, Make
edits if needed.
(OM)
Get Link Live
(OM)
Track and Record
(OM)
47. Building the project plan.
• Serves as command central for
campaign
• Outlines each task line by line
• Outlines date for completion
• Dictates who (internally) does the work
• Lets clients know which projects are on
track, delayed or completed
• Builds a long term strategy for month
over month
48. The plan is dictated by the client’s needs.
• No 2 websites are the same so each client gets their own plan
• We do the project plan last because we need to understand which types of links we will be targeting based on the
client
• Content heavy sites will allow us to get creative
• Non content heavy sites will be a lot of guest blogging and link BUILDING type activities
49. Setting up Gmail account
• How to set up a new Gmail address
• Setting up Canned Responses (aka templated emails)
• How to properly set up a Gmail account to maximize time spent in there
51. “Followed” vs “No Followed” links
• Google “crawls” from website to website through links
• There are 2 types of links:
• “Followed” links
• “No Follow” links
• If a link is “Followed”, search engine spiders WILL crawl it and it WILL pass SEO ranking power
• If a link is “No Follow”, search engine spiders WILL NOT crawl it WILL NOT pass SEO ranking power
• ALL social media links are “No Follow”
• WE DO NOT WANT TO WORK WITH SITES THAT GIVE OUT “NO FOLLOW” LINKS BECAUSE IT WILL NOT HELP US
OUT!
52. “Followed” vs “No Followed” links
• Install a simple browser plugin that will alert you if links on the page are
• “Follow” or “No Follow”
• https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/nofollow/dfogidghaigoomjdeacndafapdijmiid?hl=en
• If a link is outlined in red, it is “No Follow”
• That means we DO NOT want to reach out to that site
• Example of a site that “No Follows” links:
53. Using SEM Rush to determine link quality
• Not all links pass the same ranking
power – we use SEM Rush to determine
the potential ranking power of a link
• Head to http://www.semrush.com/
• Copy and paste the URL into the search
bar
• Click on “Organic Research” in the left
hand navigation bar
54. Using SEM Rush to determine link quality
• First, look at how many keywords, traffic and traffic cost
the website has
• This tells us how much traffic that website has
• The more traffic, the better
• We want to build links that drive traffic – traffic is the #1
sign that it’s a good, quality link
• If it drives traffic, it drives rankings!
55. Using SEM Rush to determine link quality
• Second, look at the graph to the right
• We want to work with sites that are trending up and to the right
• Big drop offs are a bad thing – this shows the website has had quality issues in the past
56. Using SEM Rush to determine link quality
• If a website shows a progression of “up and to the right”, it’s a high quality site
• These are the sites that should be the TOP targets for link outreach because they will have the most impact on our
rankings
57. Using SEM Rush to determine link quality
• If a website has low traffic or shows signs of traffic
drops, we still want to work with them
•However, we want to note website quality so we can
prioritize outreach efforts
•We want to target the high quality websites first because
they will have the most impact on SEO rankings
58. Using SEM Rush to determine link quality
• So, we assigned a number between 1 and 5 to each opportunity
• 1 is the lowest, signifying the link isn't as powerful
• 5 is the highest, signifying the link is powerful and we want to target it first
• Record the number in the “Tag” column in the Link Book
61. 1. What is a resource page?
A resource page is a blog post or dedicated page that links out to their favorite
stuff or things they think their audience will find helpful (AKA resources).
• We are going to pitch them for inclusion in their post
• Resource pages are a tough pitch, you have to have CONTENT to pitch Them.
• That content has to be relevant to their resource page – if it doesn’t align, it’s a waste of a pitch
• That’s why the client site analysis is so important – we need to understand the content we have available for us to pitch as a
resource
62. 1. What is a resource page?
Example of resource pages….
http://indianbloggers.org/
63. 2. What is a broken link (BLB)?
When a website is linking out to a website that
no longer exists on the web (AKA 404 page).
• A broken link is bad for the user experience – no website
wants to send traffic to a page that doesn’t exist, its not a
good look
• We can play on this by alerting the website they have a
broken link – this is a huge value add
• Within the outreach email, we can also suggest a
replacement link (ours) to replace the dead link
• We target resource pages ONLY for BLB
64. 3. Website assessment.
Does the client have GREAT (resource worthy content) on their site?
• In order to get a link on a resource page, you must have resources on your
• website
• NO home pages, NO product pages
• UNLESS the resource page is things like “best email marketing
• software”
• What makes a good resource?
• Ultimate guides: https://moz.com/google-algorithm-change
• Informative blog posts:
• https://moz.com/beginners-guide-to-link-building
• Free (non gated) PDFs, ebooks, videos, etc
• If your website DOES NOT have content, DO NOT waste time with resource page outreach
• OR, find a bunch of good opportunities and create content around it
65. 3. Website assessment.
• The content will drive the link prospecting
• For example, if they have a great guide to conversion optimization, we will tell the link
prospector to use keywords based on CRO to find resource pages
• This is extremely important, the resource pages have to align with the content we’re pitching,
otherwise we will have NO success
• I.e. we can’t pitch a CRO guide to a resource page on SEO, not going to happen Buddy
66. 4. Finding opportunities.
• In the “Search Operators” Excel file, filter for “Resources”
• Enter 1 of the client’s keyword in the orange cell
• Copy the first “search operator”
• Open up a browser tab to Google.com
• NOTE: prospecting for resource pages AND broken links are the same. We do NOT need to find different
opportunities for them, we use the same targets
67. 4. Click through, assess results.
• Paste the first “search operator” into Google, click search
• We are looking for websites that are linking out (NOT linking internally)
• Make SURE to click on the links to make sure they are taking you outside of the website
• Analyze the page to make sure it’s relevant to the site we’re targeting
• Verify that it’s truly a resource page
68. 5. Check the page for broken links.
• Before we record the result, we need to check if there are
broken links on the page Install the following browser plugin:
• Chrome:
• https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/check-my-
links/ojkcdipcgfaekbeaelaapakgnjflfglf?hl=en-GB
• Firefox:
• https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/linkchecker/
• Run the plugin on the page
• We’re looking for broken links within the
• BODY of the article, i.e. we’re looking to see if any of the
resources they are linking out to are no longer live
• Broken links will show up as red, good links will show up as
green
69. 6. Record what you found.
• IF THERE WAS NO DEAD LINK ON THE PAGE:
• Under type, record “Resource page”
• Record the website URL
• Record the URL of the resource page
• Record the contact email (use http://email-checker.net/)
• IF THERE WAS A DEAD LINK ON THE PAGE:
• Under type, record “Broken link”
• Record the website URL
• Record the URL of the resource page
• Record the contact email (use http://email-checker.net/)
• In the notes, record the anchor text of the broken link so we can find it
• Go to Yahoo, Bing and Duck Duck Go and use the SAME search operator. Remember, each search engine will bring back
different results
70. 7. The resource / BLB value proposition.
• Remember, link building is about the exchange of value. We need to figure out that value exchange before pitching
• Resource pages:
• We’re pitching them the value of content we created
• This can be a tough pitch, so we need to find an extra way to add value
• Do we have a good social following? Email list? We can add value by offering to drive traffic to the page
• Broken links:
• We’re helping them fix a bad user experience and offering a replacement.
• For this reason, we ALWAYS check resource pages for broken links because the value proposition is so much
higher
• We also tell them where it is on the page and how to find it
• A suggestion to replace it (since they’re already there…)
72. What is guest posting?
• A number of websites actively accept guest posts
• This is when they seek out writers to create content for their
website
• From their point of view, it’s free content and social sharing
from the author
• From our point of view, it’s the best way to build backlinks
because within the guest post that we write, we can link to
whatever we want
• This is also the best way to build authority backlinks, as some
of the world’s most powerful sites (HuffPost) accept content
73. The Guest posting Process
Link prospector
goes out and finds
websites that
accept posts
Link prospector
evaluates the
prospect for quality
and records it.
Outreach manager
sends an email pitch
to the prospect.
If accepted,
outreach manager
assigns content to a
writer.
Follow up as
needed. Stay
organized!
Land the link! Track,
record and move
on.
74. 1. Finding guest post opportunities.
• In the “Search Operators” Excel file, filter for
“Guest post”
• Enter a keyword into the orange cell related
to the client site
• Copy the first “search operator”
• Open up a browser tab to Google.com
75. 1. Finding guest post opportunities.
• Paste the first “search operator” into Google, click
search
• We’re looking for results from sites that accept
content, contributors, guest writers, submissions,
etc
• Click through on anything resembling this to verify
76. 1. Finding guest post opportunities.
• Read through the page – do they accept posts?
• If they do, open up the client Workbook
• Record the type as “guest post”
• Record the root site URL
• Record the guidelines URL (aka write for us or
contributor page URL)
• Record the contact info
• Always try and find the email address first
• If not, find the contact page URL and record it
• Leave the tag blank (for 2 seconds), we’re going
to talk about it in the next slide
77. 2. Testing for quality.
• Check their blog to make sure they actively update it –
we don’t want to contact dead sites
• Run the follow vs no follow plugin to make sure body
text links are FOLLOWED
• Dump the website URL into SEM Rush and gauge the
traffic
• Write down the value between 1 and 5 for recording in
the spreadsheet
78. 3. Contacting guest post opportunities.
• Make sure that the guest posting canned response is set up
• Start by sending 7 – 9 outreach emails to the top priorities
• We want to stagger the outreach emails so we don’t get
overloaded with responses
• If we aren’t getting a lot of responses, then we can up the
amount of emails sent (and vice versa)
• If/when they respond, we need to manage the inbox (this is
where it gets tricky)
• Record your progress in the “status” tab of the workbook
79. 4. Managing positive responses – content
ideas.
• When we get a response, we want to make
sure we answer in a timely fashion (ideally
same day)
• Most responses will ask for a pitch or a draft
• That means we need to come up with content
ideas on the fly to either pitch them or give to
a content writer to create:
• Study their guidelines page
• Study what is live on their site
• Study similar sites to see what people are
writing about
• Use Topsy to get more ideas
80. 4. Managing positive responses – content
ideas.
• After we pitch the editor or they’ve asked for a draft, we need to assign a content writer to create it
• We should built out a list of content writers before hand, in the project setup
• This is located in the “writers” tab
• Each writer will have an associated tag
• Match the tag from the guest post opportunity to the tag with the writer
• If the guest post was tagged with a 4, assigned the writer who is tagged with a 4
• Simply send them an email requesting a draft. Also send them the guidelines URL and any other things we need done
• Make sure to tell them to WRITE the link into the content
81. 5. Stay organized!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
• Make SURE you are recording which step in the process you are
• Under no circumstances can you EVER LOSE TRACK of an opportunity
• Your main job is to make sure you are managing the relationship with
the editor
• Respond to emails on time, meet deadlines
• Record EVERYTHING in the project workbook
• Make sure you are recoding live opportunities, etc
82. 6. Land the link, do it again.
• It’s all about the link
• If/when a link gets stripped, you need to email the editor and ask why
• If we don’t get the link live, we’ve lost time and money
84. Intro to Sponsored Posts
• I generally use sponsored posts as a last ditch effort to score links
• This isn’t borderline, it’s black hat – we’re buying links
• However, it’s still a safer and more effective method than buying links from links farms or PBNs
because they are real, active, clean sites that just happen to make money from advertisers (just
like Forbes, Inc, etc)
• This method can also get expensive, a lot of bloggers will ask for anywhere between $40 - $500
per post, mostly in the $200 range (I will show you negotiation tactics)
• The key to these is to evaluate the link thoroughly for quality – you have to be overly careful
that this isn’t a link farm before
• We want to look for bloggers that are looking for monetization options and give them a simple,
native solution
85. The Guest posting Process
Link prospector
builds list of
opportunities
Outreach manager
sends an email pitch
to the prospect.
Outreach manager
negotiates pricing
and details with
prospect.
Land the link! Track,
record and move
on.
Follow up as
needed. Stay
organized!
If needed, outreach
manager gets
content written.
86. 2. Finding sponsored post opportunities.
• In the “Search Operators” Excel file, filter for
“Local Blogs” AND “Sponsored Posts”
• Enter your keywords
• Copy the first “search operator”
• Open up a browser tab to Google.com
87. 2. Finding sponsored post opportunities.
• Paste the first “search operator” into Google, click
search
• For the “local bloggers”, we’re just looking for bloggers
related to our niche (that’s it)
• For “sponsored posts”, we’re looking for sites that
actively accept advertisements
88. 2. Recording sponsored post opportunities.
In the client’s Excel workbook:
• Record the website URL
• Record the URL of the most recent blog post
• Record the bloggers contact email
• Go to Yahoo, Bing and Duck Duck Go and use the SAME search operator
• Remember, each search engine will bring back different results
• The goal is to find AS MANY opportunities as possible
• I’ve given you HUNDREDS of search operators – I expect hundreds of results!
89. 3. Evaluating sponsored post opportunities.
• Before we pitch, it’s important to evaluate to make sure it’s a legitimate prospect
• I’m giving this to the outreach managers because I don’t want to slow down the link
prospectors
• It’s your job to look at each opportunity for a number of metrics:
1. Overall domain authority, trust flow
2. Content quality (are they spamming links)
3. Sponsored posts (do they say “sponsored post”? Do they “no follow” links?)
4. Quick SEM Rush check
• If it’s no good, mark it as no good in the sheet and move on to the next one
• If it’s good, send them a pitch
90. 3. Pitching sponsored post opportunities.
• Open up Gmail, insert canned response.
• We are pitching people the value
proposition of money. You are going to get a
ton of responses, be prepared to go back
and forth and negotiate.
91. The link reclamation method process.
Lead SEO sets up
Google Alerts.
Outreach manager
monitors mentions
for opportunities.
Outreach manager
sends an email pitch
to unlinked
mention.
Follow up as
needed. Stay
organized!
Land the link! Track,
record and move
on.
92. Intro to Link Reclamation Method
• This is method is geared at picking up brand
mentions across the web and turning them
into links.
• This generally works better for “brands” or
businesses engaging in PR.
• However, if you are doing a good job on
social media or creating content this can
work for you as well.
• Essentially, we are finding other sites that
mention us but do not link and sending an
outreach email to include a link.
93. 2. Finding Mentions: Setting up Google Alerts
• Go to: https://www.google.com/alerts
• Create new alert for brand/client.
• Set frequency based on preference, I like to
get them weekly.
• Set email that you want alerts sent to.
94. 2. Finding Mentions: Setting up Google Alerts
• Start with your search queries, also commonly your keywords. Some examples of alerts I would and have set up for myself:
• ”DigitalSrikanth" –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• ”karanamsrikanth" –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• ”Karanam Srikanth" –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• ”Karanam Srikanth" Founder OR Digital Marketing Manger –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• " Karanam Srikanth" Digital Marketing –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• " Karanam Srikanth" link building –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• " Karanam Srikanth " SEO –site:digitalsrikanth.com
• " Karanam Srikanth " Site Audit–site:digitalsrikanth.com
• " Karanam Srikanth " Founder OR CEO –site:digitalsrikanth.com
95. 3. Pitching link reclamation opportunities.
• Monitor email for good opportunities.
• A good opportunity is when a mention
comes from a website but there is no
link.
• When that comes up find their email and
send them a pitch asking for inclusion in
the form of a link.
97. The Guest posting Process
Link prospector
builds list of
opportunities
Outreach manager
evaluates each
prospect for pitch
type.
Outreach manager
sends an email pitch
to the prospect.
Land the link! Track,
record and move
on.
Follow up as
needed. Stay
organized!
If accepted,
outreach manager
assigns content to a
writer.
98. Intro to Synonym Link Building Method
• This method works great in competitive verticals like
SEO or legal
• The goal is to target websites that:
• Are relevant to our client’s niche
• Are relevant to our client’s location (if applicable)
• OR websites that are in a “synonym” niche
• The value proposition in the pitch is to:
• Offer to create content (guest post) and promote
it via social and email
• Offer to do a guest post exchange (you write for
me, I write for you)
Niche
Relevancy
Local
Relevancy
Rankings
99. 2. Finding synonym opportunities – same
niche.
• In the “Search Operators” Excel
file, filter for “Synonym Method”
• For these link types, you DO
• NOT need to enter a keyword
• Copy the first “search operator”
• Open up a browser tab to
Google.com
100. 2. Finding synonym opportunities – same
niche.
• Paste the first “search operator” into Google, click search
• We’re looking for results that are in the same niche as the client’s site, but not in direct competition
• For example, if the client site is about immigration law, we would stay away from immigration websites and we would target
defense law, criminal law, etc.
101. 2. Recording synonym opportunities - same
niche.
• In the client’s Excel workbook:
• • Record the website URL
• • Record the URL of the most recent blog post
• • Record the bloggers contact email
• • Go to Yahoo, Bing and Duck Duck Go and use the SAME search operator
• • Remember, each search engine will bring back different results
• • The goal is to find AS MANY opportunities as possible
• • I’ve given you HUNDREDS of search operators – I expect hundreds of results!
102. 2. Finding synonym opportunities – same
location.
• In the “Search Operators” Excel file, filter for
“Synonym Method”
• For these link types, you DO NOT need to
enter a keyword
• Copy the first “search operator”
• Open up a browser tab to
• Google.com
103. 2. Finding synonym opportunities – same
location.
• Paste the first “search operator”
into Google, click search
• We’re looking for results that are
in the same location as the target
website
• For example, if the client is located
in Hyderabad, we would want to
work with any blogs about
Hyderabad
• This also extends to other
Telangana cities or regions
104. 2. Recording synonym opportunities - same
niche.
• In the client’s Excel workbook:
• • Record the website URL
• • Record the URL of the most recent blog post
• • Record the bloggers contact email
• • Go to Yahoo, Bing and Duck Duck Go and use the SAME search operator
• • Remember, each search engine will bring back different results
• • The goal is to find AS MANY opportunities as possible
• • I’ve given you HUNDREDS of search operators – I expect hundreds of results!
105. 3. Pitching synonym opportunities – same
location.
• Open Gmail, insert canned
• response.
• We are pitching a guest post based on
local relevancy.
• Try and relate your pitch based around
your city, but also include some
mention of their niche.
106. 3. Pitching synonym opportunities – same
niche.
• Open up Gmail, insert canned
response.
• We are pitching people that do the
same thing, but are not in direct
competition with us.
• Pitch either a guest post or a guest
post exchange. We want to come off
as mutually beneficial and not in
competition.
107. Intro to Press / Media Links
• I’m not talking about press releases, I’m talking about real coverage, from real media websites
• I’ve done a lot of networking in the PR space and to land press in major publications, there’s 3
ways to do it:
1. Having an incredible story
2. Relationships with writers, editors, PR people, etc
3. Find someone who writes, pitch them and pay for it
• This training module will touch base on all 3, but will focus mainly on finding regular
contributors and tipping them off
• This is an expensive route to take, but it’s far better than paying some service $2,000 for a
random placement from a no name overseas writer on Forbes, that’s not the way to go
108. 2. Finding PR opportunities.
• Start by going to the site you want to get featured on (i.e. Forbes, Inc, ABC, etc)
• We want to find sites that publish a lot of content and leverage “contributors”, not just staff
writers
• Contributors don’t get paid to write, they do it for their own reasons. Staff writers have morals
• Find the niche on the site related to your target site and find contributors
• Click through on their bios to their personal sites to see if the freelance. Also, follow them on
social
109. 3. Pitching sponsored post opportunities.
• Method 1 – the safe way
• Try and connect on social first, follow them on Twitter, LinkedIn, etc
• Try and add some value to their lives first before pitching
• Once you do, send them a pitch asking if they freelance write (NOT BUYING A POST)
• Pay them to write 2 – 3 articles and get their trust, let them know you’re a good client and can give
them good work
• Then, have them write a post and let them know you have nowhere to publish it. Make SURE to pick a
topic that’s relevant to what they write about on the site you want to get published on (i.e. if they
write about Startups on Forbes, get them a really good topic related to startups)
• “We were going to submit this as a guest post, but it fell through”
• Let them know they are free to submit it to a site they write for AND you will still pay them for the
article (make SURE your link is secure in there)
• This adds value to them because hey, you paid them to write AND helped them meet quota
110. 3. Pitching sponsored post opportunities.
• Method 2 – the straight up way
• Use the same method of getting their trust by hiring them to write a few posts
for you
• Then, after you’ve given them some good work, just be honest with them
• “We get paid to post for clients. If you’re interested, I can give you a steady
stream of income just posting for us”
• This situation has a better result but it’s harder to maneuver
111. 3. Pitching sponsored post opportunities.
• This pitch is very simple – we don’t come right out and say “hey we will pay you to post and
link to our shit!”
• Offer value to them by hiring them as a freelance writer
• They may be expensive, but you need the content anyways, use it to submit as a high authority
guest post to almost any site you want
• After you have their trust, you can negotiate posting on the sites they write for
112. Intro to Local Blogger Outreach
• This isn’t just a local SEO technique (although is kicks ass)
• It can be used for national campaigns – it’s really just a great way to open up for thousands
more opportunities
• Every city has local bloggers – food bloggers, travel bloggers, fashion bloggers, art bloggers, the
list goes on
• They won’t register with traditional search engine operators, so we use local modifiers to track
them down. We pitch them 1 of 2 value propositions:
• Sponsored posts
• Paid link insertion
• Guest post exchange
• Local bloggers create content for the sheer love of it – they’re ecstatic to get pitched for money
or to help promote their blog through exchanges / collaborations
113. 2. Finding local blogger opportunities.
• In the “Search Operators” Excel file, filter for “Local Blogs”
• The keyword should be a city, town, state, etc (LOCATION)
• Copy the first “search operator”
• Open up a browser tab to
• Google.com
114. 2. Finding sponsored post opportunities.
• Paste the first “search operator” into Google, click search
• We’re looking for local relevant bloggers, that’s it
115. 2. Recording sponsored post opportunities.
• In the client’s Excel workbook:
• Record the website URL
• Record the URL of the most recent blog post
• Record the bloggers contact email
• Go to Yahoo, Bing and Duck Duck Go and use the SAME search operator
• Remember, each search engine will bring back different results
• The goal is to find AS MANY opportunities as possible
• I’ve given you HUNDREDS of search operators – I expect hundreds of results!
116. 3. Pitching local bloggers – intro.
• There’s a number of value propositions we have with local bloggers.
1. Money – offering to sponsor a post OR insert a link into a relevant post on their website.
• This works better with younger bloggers in less competitive niches (food, fashion, travel).
2. Cross promotion – offering to exchange guest posts. This works best if you/your client has a
relevant audience (good traffic, social media following, email list, etc). This works better in
competitive niches (real estate, legal, SEO) or ANY professional services, as they aren’t going to
take money on their website for content.
• You need to evaluate their website, content and presence to get a sense for which of these you
will pitch.
117. 3. Pitching local bloggers – Sponsored posts.
• This is a standard sponsored post pitch, with an emphasis on being local business (if
applicable).
• This works best in non competitive verticals like fashion, food, travel and similar niches. It
doesn’t work well in competitive or service based verticals (real estate, etc).
118. 3. Pitching local bloggers – Paid link
insertions.
• Find an old post on their site that’s relevant to your site.
• Send them a pitch offering to pay for link placement.
• This helps to save money and cut to the chase.
• Success rate is lower, expect to explain yourself further/
119. 3. Pitching local bloggers – Guest post
exchanges
• Similar to the synonym method, we’re playing the mutual exchange of promotion for each
other’s blogs.
• This works best in service based industries.
• You can also increase your success rate by having the content written BEFORE and include it in
the pitch.