SEO Blog

Can Affiliate Links Help With SEO? - October 13th, 2008

As any SEO specialist knows, on of the main areas of search engine optimisation is linkbuilding. Links leading to your website from another act as a ‘vote’ to your site, building up its relevancy and strength in Google’s rankings.

The type of link is equally important - a one way link from a well-respected website to yours acts as a much more powerful vote than a reciprocal link from a website in a completely unrelated industry. But what about affiliate links?

An affiliate link is a one way link from one website to another, but with a parameter passed across in the URL that earns the affiliate money if the person following the link performs a particular action on the merchant’s website e.g. buy a product. It’s long been assumed by affiliates that such a link would not be seen positively by Google, as you could almost consider it a paid link, and so adding a nofollow attribute or something similar to block the flow of “link juice” is quite common.

However, a recent Search Engineers session from SMX East revealed that many search engineers working for the major search engines agree that an affiliate link from a relevant and trustworty source should be considered and assist the passing of link juice, and in turn the search engine rankings.

…In no uncertain terms, that if affiliate links came from valuable, relevant, trust-worthy sources - bloggers endorsing a product, affiliates of high quality, etc. - they would be counted in link algorithms. Aaron from Google and Nathan from Microsoft both agreed that good affiliate links would be counted by their engines and that it was not necessary to mark these with a nofollow or other method of blocking link value.

Rik
Head Of Web Development

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Google Adwords Content Network Advice - October 13th, 2008

One of the most frequent questions asked on forums and discussion lists concerning Google Adwords is should the content network be turned on or left off and how to manage it. Below are our recommendations:

  • Always start with it turned off. You need to be careful because the default when you start a campaign is on. So go into your “edit campaign settings” and un-tick content network after you have setup a campaign. This is really important because if you start a campaign today and are bidding £1 per click on the search network you are automatically bidding £1 per click on the content network. Many Adwords advertisers have lost hundreds of pounds by mistake on the content network.
  • After you have a campaign running profitably on the search network, meaning that you have the right keywords and categories that are converting to your satisfaction, then and only then test the content network.
  • We advise setting up a separate campaign with a definitive group of best performing keywords form the search network campaign/s. It is important to separate out the conversion tracking from the search network to make it easy to monitor. Just ensure this campaign is only set up for the content network within the campaign settings. We would advise starting with £0.50-£1 as your initial bid.
  • Let it run for a day and see what position you are getting and if you are receiving any clicks. In many markets £0.50-£1 will get you adequate exposure. Do check and if needed increase the bid to ensure exposure.
  • Monitor your conversions. As this is in it’s own campagin it is easy to see how you are peforming. If you are profitable, you can increase your cost per click for better positioning and more clicks. Repeat this process until you hit your target traffic and return on investment. If you are not profitable, turn off the content network all together.

If you follow the above steps, you can better anaylse the effects of the content network and at the same time position yourself to take advantage of the extra profit the content network can bring you in some markets.

O Yousaf - PPC Manager

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