Cooperative Reciprocal
Linking Networks - A Critical Analysis
by Philip Liu
Every webmaster who has personally tried promoting his or her
site understands in some sense the value of reciprocal linking.
Reciprocal linking refers to the agreement between website owners
to mutually link to each others’ sites in order to increase
both exposure to each others’ visitors as well as link popularity
to search engines. Traditionally, this process has been very labor-intensive
involving a number of steps to initiate contact, establish acceptable
link parameters, and verify and police the reciprocal linking arrangement.
Now, a controversial new linking tactic has emerged called “the
cooperative reciprocal linking network.”
The purpose of these reciprocal linking networks is ostensibly
to utilize "unused advertising space available on the web."
Here's how it works: the site owner puts a bit of code on each page
of his or her site and it serves up hyper-linked text or graphic
ads promoting the sites of other cooperative members. Each time
a coded page is loaded, the ads change. This is much like how Google
Adsense ads work except there is no correlation between the pages’
topics and what ads are served--in other words, the ads are not
contextual.
Although dynamically generated, these text ad links can be crawled
by search engine spiders. In this sense, the ad linking network
can be thought of as an automated method of reciprocal linking capable
of providing a boost to each member site’s link popularity.
Participation in the reciprocal linking network is generally free
(hence the term “cooperative”) and what one gets out
of it depends on what one gives into it. If a webmaster agrees to
display five ads per page and his or her site has 100 pages indexed
by Google, then that webmaster’s site is given a weight of,
say, 500 (5 x 100). The higher one’s "weight," the
more often one’s ads will show on other sites in the network.
In order to be an eligible page, the page has to be indexed. The
reciprocal linking network checks this using Google's application
program interface or API.
So what's the controversy? Reciprocal linking network critics contend
that because the links are crawl-able by search engine robots and
the fact that ads may be irrelevant to the page's topic area, this
is akin to having some sort of reciprocal link farm or scheme designed
to influence the web page’s link popularity and search engine
ranking. Indeed, one well-known individual’s web page showed
up for a while in Google at No. 4 for the term, "eBay"
purely because he designed his link ads so that the anchor texts
had the word "eBay" in them. Carried across thousands
of reciprocal linking participants in the network, it had automated
the reciprocal linking process and, at the same time, boosted his
page’s link popularity for that particular term.
One would think that this is a bad thing from the search engines’
perspective, right? Not quite. GoogleGuy, the unofficial Google
spokesman who regularly posts to website marketing forums, responded
to a thread at one forum on this topic. GoogleGuy said he was concerned
about linking out to "bad neighborhood" participants in
the network (like some Polish site that was apparently cloaking
the cooperative ads). GoogleGuy did not say that the network was
bad because it had the potential of manipulating rankings, rather
he said the worry was "bad neighborhoods." So, does that
mean that if the bad neighborhood problem was under control then
the reciprocal linking networks are sanctioned? Maybe...
Here's how I look at these cooperative reciprocal linking networks:
what if Google didn't exist? What if no search engine existed? What
would I do to advertise my site? I would have to participate in
reciprocal linking with other sites. But reciprocal linking willy-nilly
would not cut it; it would have to be targeted, topic-based reciprocal
linking. I would link reciprocally with other like sites. Would
I participate in reciprocal linking networks if there were no search
engines? Absolutely! It would greatly ease my reciprocal linking
time. But the reciprocal linking networks are untargeted as they
are currently configured—-this is clearly something the operators
need to address.
In conclusion, reciprocal linking via cooperative ad networks is
a great idea. Google and the other search engines should not have
any issues with them in concept. But concept is not reality; in
reality, people are joining these networks and trading "weight"
to influence link popularity and rankings in the search engines.
So, it's not a perfect solution to the busy webmaster’s reciprocal
link management problems. Is participating in a reciprocal link
network spamming the search engines? I don't believe so because
the search engines have not clearly defined exactly everything that
is or isn't a spamming technique, and in this business, whether
a technique constitutes spamming or not often comes down to a question
of degree.
(c) 2005 Philip Liu - All Rights Reserved Worldwide
Philip Liu is a freelance author and publisher currently based
in New York City. Philip publishes regularly on his websites, Cell
Phone News + Reviews (focusing on cell phone news, rumors and
reviews from around the world), and DTVScoop
- Plasma, LCD TV Reviews + News (focusing on digital television
news and reviews).
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
Return to the Resources
Archive
|