January 11th, 2009A Note To Blog Network Owners Offering Contextual Link Building Service
I’ve just got to write this post in a rush as I noticed a major ban on blogs by Google recently. I was experimenting something since last PR update and got some nice points. Needless to say, many of my blogs are banned too. LOL. But experiment worked. This post goes to the blog network owners who provide contextual link building service or selling text links/blogrolls. Google simply hates text links ads or any paid links. It has even started recognizing paid links within the content; what we call contextual links. Of course we’re going to face a quick ban sooner or later if we violate Google terms but we cannot deny the importance of contextual link building as one of the most effective one-way link building strategies either. So, just to help blog network owners, here are some pointers that can avoid the ban or penalty.
1. Try to start blogs on freshly registered domains. PR matters but not much. What matters is quality of the blog. Registering fresh domains is a much better idea than setting up new blogs at dropped domains with PR. It is nowhere going to help your buyers who are purchasing links from you.
2. Set up all your blogs in the network on Unique Class C IPs.
3. Give your blogs 15-20 days time before you start selling links. In this duration, make 3 posts a week and social bookmark them to most popular and do-follow sites. Do some 100-200 directory submissions for these blogs. After 15-20 days, your blogs will have some nice content, well-indexed with few backlinks too (that makes a blog a quality blog).
4. After 15-20 days, you start selling posts at your blogs. Make sure you keep a post minimum of 250 words within NOT more than 2 backlinks with different anchored texts.
5. Even after you start selling posts at blogs, don’t forget to make 1-2 posts without any links per week.
6. Don’t sell more than 2 posts a day on a single blog.
7. Don’t interlink the blogs in your blog network. Google will sniff and finds it fishy.
8. Try not to sell more than 2 blogrolls or text link ads. They’re anyway not working much. Selling such ads will not ban your blog but may lower your PR in next update.
9. Try writing at least 2 articles on blogging or contextual link building with backlinks to your blogs. Syndicate them on EzineArticles.com, Buzzle.com, Goarticles.com, Google Knol, and ArticlesBase.com. It’ll help you connect your blog to some high authority sites.
10. Sell only unique posts. Don’t make any duplicate post that is already published elsewhere.
I started few blogs with these steps in mind, and good news; all of them have attained PR2-3. These steps may cost you a bit more, but they’d lead your blog to a better PR, high quality and good link value to your buyers. Only then, their search engine rankings can go up real quick. There would be no problem if you raise the cost of your service little bit but you’re giving a value for the buyers’ money. And they won’t mind paying you if they’re getting quality backlinks from legitimate and high quality blogs that get them encouraging improvement in the rankings. It is much better to get the post deleted from the banned blogs later; of course they pass the penalty to your buyers’ websites too.
However, I understand that some buyers are concerned with PR of blogs. For that, you can purchase domains with ready PR but make sure you implement step 1-10 to impart a quality to them.
SEO is ever-changing and Google is getting smarter everyday. Yahoo and MSN are not very frequent with their algorithms, so it’s better to please Google with a fair approach. Play safe, play well and be a better seller.
Cheers!

