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nichevalue
Apr 27th 2006, 8:39 am
Since all of my sites are fairly new (the oldest is 4 months old) I have been putting a lot of effort into building backlinks. I have used directory submission, link exchanges, and article submissions to build up my backlinks.

All of these require a lot of time and effort and I was wondering at what point do you stop actively developing links for a site?

Any thoughts or comments would be appreciated.

Thanks :)

ahkip
Apr 27th 2006, 9:06 am
PR10??? I wouldn't stop doing link exchange.. but won't buy link once it is out of sandbox

jawinn
Apr 27th 2006, 9:12 am
I'm glad you started this thread. I recently read an article in Revenue magazine about this very subject. The author's philosophy was to basically not go after backlinks at all and focus on creating quality content. He stuck home with me when ho pointed out how much of a time vortex getting backlinks was.

When I think about all the time I spent going after links I have to agree, to a point. Recently I have abandoned getting backlinks in exchange for building quality sites. I can't say that it paying off, yet, but I will say that when people finally do come to my sites they will be getting higher quality content instead of just some crap I threw up there and has a ton of moderately relevant links.

My new strategy is to build kick ass sites first and then buy high PR and traffic links. We’ll see if that works.

My 2 cents.

daboss
Apr 27th 2006, 9:14 am
to me, the answer is "never"... but the time taken to get the links should not be the main priority... getting content is more important... :)

forum-index.com
Apr 27th 2006, 9:18 am
Dont stop. Links mean traffic. But not only links, you must have fresh content , and update regular your content. Write new articles etc.

Or its come anytime and your user say. It's haven't new thing.

nichevalue
Apr 27th 2006, 10:18 am
Thanks for all the replies so far.

I am beginning to think that it is time to switch gears and use my time to develop fresh content for my sites.

How often should I add new content to a site (i.e. 1 new page a day)?

QiSoftware
Apr 27th 2006, 10:31 am
nichevalue --

What a great idea for a site -- web hosting rebates. Have you had any success? Are there any legal ramifications?

Q...

ontheweb
Apr 30th 2006, 6:38 am
The author's philosophy was to basically not go after backlinks at all and focus on creating quality content. He stuck home with me when ho pointed out how much of a time vortex getting backlinks was.Not to mention how boring it is requesting linkbacks! ;)

Personally I've had more quality backlinks from writing good articles and having them published elsewhere with credit.

wazimm
Apr 30th 2006, 7:16 am
never stop just do both. Get higher quality content and others will want to link to your site.

amitpatel_3001
Apr 30th 2006, 7:57 am
Ever Never stop thats it!

TheDebacler
Apr 30th 2006, 8:00 am
I'm glad you started this thread. I recently read an article in Revenue magazine about this very subject. The author's philosophy was to basically not go after backlinks at all and focus on creating quality content. He stuck home with me when ho pointed out how much of a time vortex getting backlinks was.

When I think about all the time I spent going after links I have to agree, to a point. Recently I have abandoned getting backlinks in exchange for building quality sites. I can't say that it paying off, yet, but I will say that when people finally do come to my sites they will be getting higher quality content instead of just some crap I threw up there and has a ton of moderately relevant links.

My new strategy is to build kick ass sites first and then buy high PR and traffic links. We’ll see if that works.

My 2 cents.

Yea, that makse sense. I mean if you have quality links and are somehow getting some good traffic, if your content sucks then it probably doesn't matter much.

netwhip
Apr 30th 2006, 8:49 am
Great thread!!

My philosophy is to outsource the backlink work & concentrate on writing good quality content & articles. The money you spend outsourcing is peanuts compared to the revenue you make by writing great content.

Write good content + outsource backlink work = great ROI

chandubhai
Apr 30th 2006, 10:15 am
Keep building links.. or alse find a solution to your problem by building a automated link exchange system... Ask me if you want one.

netwhip
Apr 30th 2006, 12:44 pm
Keep building links.. or alse find a solution to your problem by building a automated link exchange system... Ask me if you want one.

I am interested in hearing more of what you offer.

ahkip
May 1st 2006, 7:50 pm
yup, ppl always shy on spending money..they just don't understnad you have to pay to get more;)

Great thread!!

My philosophy is to outsource the backlink work & concentrate on writing good quality content & articles. The money you spend outsourcing is peanuts compared to the revenue you make by writing great content.

Write good content + outsource backlink work = great ROI

happy home
May 4th 2006, 5:43 am
Keep working hard it 'll give you chance to have great site

diamond008
May 4th 2006, 11:25 pm
Link building is very important at the early stage. After that, you should spend more time on the content bulid.

Pammer
May 5th 2006, 1:11 am
Since all of my sites are fairly new (the oldest is 4 months old) I have been putting a lot of effort into building backlinks. I have used directory submission, link exchanges, and article submissions to build up my backlinks.

All of these require a lot of time and effort and I was wondering at what point do you stop actively developing links for a site?

Any thoughts or comments would be appreciated.

Thanks :)

Simple Best formula.

Then you want to pretended urself now that you have do not nothing at the moment. One day leave the computer, sleep well , enjoy with your family, gf. Go for shopping. and then next day Again put all double efforts for promote your sites which you already know .

LazySEO
May 5th 2006, 2:11 am
I don't know if there's ever a point where I completely stop building links, but I do cut back once a site becomes established. I usually start a new site with a burst of submissions and link exchanges, then focus more on getting quality related links instead of quantity as the site ages.

Nick_Mayhem
May 5th 2006, 3:43 am
I mostly do it for one month for one site. And whenever I get bored with development and want to pass the time then I would start building links :D

Cheap SEO Services
May 5th 2006, 3:56 am
Out of all the sites I have built and SEO's and managed, the one with over 2000 backlinks gives me the most traffic by far. Hence, keep building. Works for me.