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View Full Version : Get an Alert When a New Link to Your Site is Found! - Free


Gatorade
Jul 27th 2007, 11:10 am
Here is a way to get a private email alert sent to you when a new link to your site is found. This is a "how to article" I found that I thought many webmasters would certainly enjoy and benefit from!:)

Imagine this scenario: Anytime a new link to your site is found, you receive a private email alerting you to it and showing you the exact page where the link to you can be seen. Now imagine this fabulous service not only exists, but also is free. With a little ingenuity, you can create such a service on your own, right now, in five minutes. I'll show you how in a moment.

As a Webmaster or Web marketer, you like to know when another site has linked to your site. With a billion Web pages out there, that's a pretty tall order. Many times you will be linked to without even knowing it. Not everyone sends you an email when they link to you. For example, directories, link lists, topical Web guides, and even Web-based newsletters that review other sites do not send out an email notifying every site they have set up a link to.

While there is no perfect notification solution, there is one way to be alerted of new links. In fact, any site owner or Web marketer can cobble together a service that will send them an email anytime a new link to their site is found. It's this simple: Use one of the many Web-page-change-alert services.

Instead of providing a site with a static page to examine daily for changes, go to your favorite search engine. Once there, do a link search, take the resulting URL(s) (with your search results), and then have the tracking service track those URL(s) every day. It sounds harder than it is, but I know it works. How do I know? Well, every morning I receive an email report that shows me the new links pointing to my site.

What? Don't believe me? Let's try it together right now. The following simple steps make it really easy:

Step 1: Open Two New Browser Windows

First, open two new browser windows along with this column. In the first new browser window, paste in (and then go to) this URL: http://www.trackengine.com (an excellent free service called TrackEngine). Take two minutes to create a new account. (It's free.)

Now go back to your second new browser window and paste in this URL: http://search.yahoo.com/.

You should have a total of three windows open: this article, the TrackEngine site, and the search engine Yahoo.

Step 2: Do a Link Search to Your Site

Next, do a search at Yahoo for links to your site by typing the following URL in the search-box link:http://www.yoursite.com OR link:http://yoursite.com
(make sure to put your domain name in place of the word yoursite)

Once you click the search button and get your results, you are looking at the number of pages within the Yahoo database that have links on them to your site. Depending on the quality of your content and the length of time your site has been around, you could have as many as a couple hundred links or just a couple.

Step 3: Create a Bookmark and Track

Here's where we get clever. The Yahoo search results have a very long URL string (over 70 characters long) in the location area of that browser window. The long URL looks like this
http://search.yahoo.com/search?p=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.yoursite.com
+OR+link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fyoursite.com&prssweb=Search&ei=UTF-8&fr=FP
-pull-web-t&fl=0&x=wrt

This long URL is what we want to track because it is actually nothing more than our original query (i.e., the original URL we typed in, now included directly in the location area along with our search results.

Go back to the TrackEngine site, and once your account has been opened, click on "Create bookmark." Using your mouse, copy the long URL from AltaVista's search results into the "Track this page" box at TrackEngine.

Follow the directions at TrackEngine for the other two fields, and viola! You've successfully created a free link-alert service.

In a nutshell, what you have done is instructed TrackEngine to go to Yahoo every day, run your links search, and email you the results only when those results have changed from the previous day. And an added bonus is that these changes will be highlighted in blue by TrackEngine automatically. You have just scored a shiny, new links report in your inbox on a regular basis.

Article Source: EricWard.com (http://www.ericward.com/)

vicdigi
Jul 27th 2007, 11:11 am
Unless Google is telling me I have a link to my site then it simply does not count!

adamjthompson
Jul 27th 2007, 11:32 am
Unless Google is telling me I have a link to my site then it simply does not count!

Google doesn't display most of the links for your site (unless you verify your site in Webmaster Central). Even if Google doesn't display the link, it still counts, though.

Gatorade
Jul 27th 2007, 12:21 pm
Unless Google is telling me I have a link to my site then it simply does not count!

I'm not sure what you mean... I think you're saying that you will not be alerted unless the link shows up in the Google query link:www.site.com, right? You can also do the same with yahoo and msn although if your link never shows up in any search engines it's not going to help you with seo regardless.

trichnosis
Jul 29th 2007, 1:43 am
it looks intresting.

but i'm using google alert to tell me the changes on link:sitename.com results:)

zexy
Jul 29th 2007, 4:29 am
This could be fun, thanks :)

twin
Jul 29th 2007, 11:07 am
interesting, I'm gone try

Sockmoney
Jul 29th 2007, 7:25 pm
Google Alerts will notify you when your site appears in news, blogs or anywhere else on the web.

Gatorade
Jul 31st 2007, 8:50 pm
it looks intresting.

but i'm using google alert to tell me the changes on link:sitename.com results:)

This works with Yahoo and MSN also.