Linkability
- Why do some sites have it while others don't?
Teacher:
Eric Ward
Linking from one
web site to another and from one web page to
another is the fundamental essence of why the Web
was invented. In a nutshell, researchers needed a
way to link between similar documents, and before
any dot com even existed, the Web was helping
academics and scientists do just that.
Having built and
executed content linking campaigns for 7 years for
consumer oriented content sites, I've found that
most brand web sites fail to provide the type of
content that engenders, inspires, or encourages
other site to link to them, or online editors to
write about them. I call this concept
"linkability". Some sites have a lot of it, others
have very little. Linkability can be thought of as
a continuum.
The National
Library of Medicine web site has over 6,000 links
pointing to various pages of their site. Why?
Because they have great content and easily located
and short URLs. They are on the high end of the
linkability continuum. On the low end are sites
with little content or with content that's hidden
within databases or behind pull down menus or
within Flash design elements.
Ironically, I
have also had cases where I worked with sites that
did have excellent content, but whose sites were
designed in such a way as to make linking to that
great content impossible. Like locking away an
encyclopedia in a safe.
One major print
magazine had a web site where they posted all their
articles from the print magazine to the web site
after the print issue was 60 days old. Doing this
makes sense for them. The problem was that all the
articles were buried within a database that could
not be linked to in any way, thus negating one of
the web's greatest powers; linking from one page to
another. The URLs for these articles changed with
every page load, further limiting the chance for
pass along of the URLs from one person to another
via email, discussion lists, etc., since the URL
you sent for that great article you were reading
would not work for me when I clicked it.
These and other
linkability problems are both important and
correctable. There are some key site architecture
issues to consider from a linking perspective, just
as there are from a SEO (Search Engine
Optimization) perspective.
But before
focusing on site architecture issues, remember that
the key driver of links is and always will be the
quality of the content. People run web sites, and
those people make linking decisions every day.
Some sites don't offer links, others do. Some sites
want money for links, others don't. Some sites want
links back to them in return, others don't. For
every web site, there are a collection of online
venues (search engines, directories, web guides,
topical link lists, discussion lists, writers,
etc., that may link to it, based on the subject
matter and content quality. The challenge is
finding them and contacting them
properly.
About
the teacher:
Eric
Ward founded the Web's first
service
for announcing and linking Web sites back in 1994,
and he still offers those services today. His
client list is a who's who of online brands. Ward
is best known as the person behind the original
linking campaigns for Amazon.com Books, The Link
Exchange, Microsoft, Rodney Dangerfield,
WarnerBros, The Discovery Channel, the AMA, and The
Weather Channel. His services won the 1995
Tenagra Award For Internet Marketing
Excellence, and he was selected as one of the
Web's 100 most influential people by Websight
magazine. Eric also writes columns for ClickZ and
Ad Age magazine, and is the editor of
LinkAlert!