View Full Version : Link Partner Locator


dilligaf
05-23-2004, 01:46 PM
I just ran into this while submitting to directories on Spherica. Looks interesting, I just have about 45 more directories to sort through before giving it a go. Search For Link Partners (http://www.divergentlines.com/resources/link_development_tool.php)

seo guy
05-23-2004, 02:21 PM
Interesting, it just uses an advanced operator searching the titles of the pages for
intitle:add+url OR intitle:submit+your+site OR intitle:add+your+site and your keyword

intitle:add+url OR intitle:submit+your+site OR intitle:add+your+site "seo"

I could probably program a more comprehensive app in 20 mins, :-) perhaps a new tool Id say! Hmm but is it really worth it for a shortcut to operators?
What say yeee me hardy's?

dilligaf
05-23-2004, 04:26 PM
SEO Guy, It may not be too helpful for the veterans, but for those of us new to the game, we can use all the help we can get (if you think it could be productive). I finally finished Spherica submissions so I may go back and have a closer look.

While I'm on it, thanks SEO Kid & Sunny for the references. It was quite the pain but I'm thinking I got a number of good one-ways (PR 4-6) for a couple hundred$ (most were free or $10-20, but there were a couple more expensive that seemed worthwhile) and a whole bunch of PR1-3's. I'm gonna be repeating the process for a web design site and an education site. I'll keep some notes next time so that others don't have to wade through the ________ (fill in the blank).

Regarding SEPS, would it help to add Mangeur de cigogne (on this or other forums) to our posts? Unfortunately the sites I'm working on will be carrying very little weight for awhile longer.

seo guy
05-23-2004, 04:52 PM
on this forum it wouldnt help as I get tons of backlinks for it from footers etc, but on other forums it would be cool. Honestly though if your going to put anything in your sig at other forums I would rather it promoted this forum then the mangeur competition.

seo guy
05-23-2004, 04:57 PM
Oh and btw I wasnt saying the tool isnt worth it, I was just saying its cool and could be improved, its only going for things mentioned in the title via he operator allintitle, but there are many other advanced operators that could be added to make it even better, such as allinanchor: allintext: and many others Google doesnt list them all but here's some http://www.google.com/help/operators.html

jocelyn
05-23-2004, 05:04 PM
[QUOTE=seo guy]on this forum it wouldnt help as I get tons of backlinks for it from footers etc, but on other forums it would be cool. Honestly though if your going to put anything in your sig at other forums I would rather it promoted this forum then the mangeur competition.[/QUOTE]
http://www.seo-guy.com/forum/showthread.php?p=3271#post3271

ABS659
05-25-2004, 02:47 PM
what does allinanchor: really do?

jocelyn
05-25-2004, 03:36 PM
[QUOTE=ABS659]what does allinanchor: really do?[/QUOTE]
I have to let this one to dilligaf... right !

jocelyn
05-25-2004, 03:54 PM
He was not online... ok

[QUOTE=dilligaf]

From "G":

allintitle:

If you start a query with [allintitle:], Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the title. For instance, [allintitle: google search] will return only documents that have both "google" and "search" in the title.

This functionality is also available through Advanced Search page, under Advanced Web Search > Occurrences.

intitle:

If you include [intitle:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the title. For instance, [intitle:google search] will return documents that mention the word "google" in their title, and mention the word "search" anywhere in the document (title or no). Note there can be no space between the "intitle:" and the following word.

Putting [intitle:] in front of every word in your query is equivalent to putting [allintitle:] at the front of your query: [intitle:google intitle:search] is the same as [allintitle: google search].

allinurl:

If you start a query with [allinurl:], Google will restrict the results to those with all of the query words in the url. For instance, [allinurl: google search] will return only documents that have both "google" and "search" in the url.

Note that [allinurl:] works on words, not url components. In particular, it ignores punctuation. Thus, [allinurl: foo/bar] will restrict the results to page with the words "foo" and "bar" in the url, but won't require that they be separated by a slash within that url, that they be adjacent, or that they be in that particular word order. There is currently no way to enforce these constraints.

This functionality is also available through Advanced Search page, under Advanced Web Search > Occurrences.

inurl:

If you include [inurl:] in your query, Google will restrict the results to documents containing that word in the url. For instance, [inurl:google search] will return documents that mention the word "google" in their url, and mention the word "search" anywhere in the document (url or no). Note there can be no space between the "inurl:" and the following word. Putting "inurl:" in front of every word in your query is equivalent to putting "allinurl:" at the front of your query: [inurl:google inurl:search] is the same as [allinurl: google search].
[/QUOTE]

seo guy
05-25-2004, 10:04 PM
in lamons terms in ranks sites in order of who has the most backlinks with the "exact" keyword phrase that you enter

Julian
05-26-2004, 09:46 AM
I would always go with manual search. If you do it manually, you can search for the links in the source code, the parent or sister site, the Alexa info, those webmaster at something (dot) com, etc. something that a software can't do. This can cost you lots of links sometimes.

It's all about hunting :shoot: