View Full Version : Why You Need Outbound Links


SEOforGoogle1
01-14-2005, 04:18 AM
Just in case you've forgotten, an outbound link is a url that you have on your site that points to another website.

In today's Google PR obsessed Internet world, everyone is completely focusing on getting in bound links to your site. While you should always be on a mission to get more sites to link to yours, you must not forget their polar opposites.

Remember, by having outbound links from your site, you are in essence "voting" for the site you link to. This is part of the entire ranking algorithm process for all the search engines. The idea is, that if two sites are similar in content and design, a site with more links pointing to it would be considered more important by the search engine.

So then, why should you help out any other site? Actually, by carefully linking to other relevant sites, you are increasing the relevancy of your own site.

Pretend I have a pizza shop, and I am located in Anywhere, USA. It's a typical site that displays types of pizza, store location, hours, and coupons. I also know the power of outbound linking. For this case, I am going to link to 10 sites: Domino's, Pizza Hut, Little Ceaser’s & Papa Johns. Next, I link to 6 sites that are physically located in Anywhere, USA. (And their physical addresses are listed on their sites.)

Now, I will switch roles and view the site as a search engine spider. I navigate through the site, and determine that this site is about pizza. Then I find a resource page and discover some well-known links (Domino's, Pizza Hut, Little Ceaser’s & Papa Johns - and as the spider I know that these are major players in the realm of pizza). Next, I find 6 links to sites located in Anywhere, USA.

So, as a happy spider leaving the site, I now know that the site I just visited is about pizza (site content and links to the major players of the pizza industry), and that it is located in Anywhere, USA.

Next, I visit one of the 6 sites listed as a resource in Anywhere, USA. I find the local address, and it has the same zip code as the pizza site I was just at. Now I know how these two sites are related to each other.

Taking into account the fact that this local pizza shop has also linked to the major pizza chains, as the spider, I am lead to believe that this shop has relevancy to the zip code of Anywhere, USA.

So, as the spider returns the information to the database to be processed in the algorithm, it has pre-sorted some search results based on the links your site points to.

Another benefit of outbound linking is Geo Targeting, or Local search. There is a lot of speculation that local search is the next big trend in Search Marketing. While only time will tell, it won't hurt to have your physical address listed on your website for those who will be embracing local search.

As an experiment, I created a site with a very unique url (to avoid the possibility of people finding it by accident), and I made it only 1 page long. The only thing the page consisted of were 80+ outbound links to relevant sites in the SEO industry, tools, forums and some tutorials. When the PageRank was first updated for the site, it came out of the box with a PR of 3. It has since fallen to a PR of 2 (now that I’ve pointed a few sites to it!).

The whole point of this experiment was to see how outbound links affect your own rankings of your site. I was able to generate a PR of 2 based entirely on linking to authority sites in the SEO industry. So, take the time to link to some relevant sites, the big names (if any), and enjoy the power of the easy, outbound link.

-To your online success!

Paul Bliss

jlknauff
01-14-2005, 09:17 AM
You also help your visitors by giving them links to other relevant sites. For anyone afraid that they will be loosing visitors that way I offer 2 tips

1. Have enough usefull content so that they want to stay. When I'm on a site I like I usually open links out of the site in a new window.

2. Have links that go to other sites open in a new window.

Plus, if you start sending some visitors to a site the person/people that manage that site may find yours through their logs and become one of your customers down the road. I guess you could call it karma ;)

dilligaf
01-14-2005, 09:43 AM
What did you find with SERP's, and it appears that you were indexed/cached without any incoming links?

SEOforGoogle1
01-14-2005, 10:18 AM
dilligaf -
[quote]
What did you find with SERP's
[quote]

- nothing. In fact the site still does not even come up at all for any phrases.

[quote]
it appears that you were indexed/cached without any incoming links?
[quote]

Yes - I submitted to the google add url page.

And as I mentioned, when the site first got a PR, it was a 3. So I added 2 IBL's pointing to it (1 relevent, 1 un-relevent) and on the next PR update it dropped to a 2!

mattfe
01-14-2005, 04:22 PM
I suspect the main article is based on suposition.

I'd imagine Google would not be able to tell the differnece between a zip code and a part number, nor the mention of a place name., What if you ran an accommodation site - you will have dozens of zips and place names for al the properties on the site....

Nice theoritical article though...

CMA
03-05-2005, 01:58 AM
Hello!
Thanks for the article, I just translated it into German. Quite interesting ideas;)
You could for example try if it ranks you better when you link my german information wiki;):D

Srivvy
05-19-2005, 04:34 PM
You cant "generate a PR ... based entirely on linking to authority sites".

You may be able to improve your ranking for certain themes, but PR is a measure of the importance of a page relative to all the pages indexed by a search engine. This importance is determined by the link structure of the web ie - links to and from your page. If you could generate your own PR, what would be the point of it?

Toolbar PR is supposedly based on mathematics. Left unchanged and with no new incoming links, any page will experience a fall in PR over time as more pages are picked up by the search engine and the relative importance of the page is smaller - the fish stays the same, while the pond gets bigger.

kinghavoc
05-29-2005, 12:17 PM
I noticed a high ranking competitor with little content linking to major information pages under the same KW he ranked well in. This site just had one page of content, the outbound links on the same page, and at the bottom he linked to a couple of sites he made targeting different keywords under the same category.

But for him to place well with the site he has is incredible for how competitive this keyword term is. Because of that site and another i noticed doing well doing the same thing, im going to add it to my site.