To Buy or Not To Buy Text Link Ads
A few weeks back I blogged some advice here for business bloggers who might want to consider text link advertising as part of their blog marketing mix.
Well, there’s been a lot of controversy as of late about buying text links. Blogger Phil Ringnalder published a scathing post accusing publishing house O’Reilly of being a search engine spammer. O’Reilly’s founder, Tim O’Reilly, responded to the accusations on his own blog. Google engineer Matt Cutts posted a comment to Tim’s post admitting that Google has decreased the voting power of sites like perl.com and xml.com and downgraded the reputation of some of their outbound links. Ouch!
Matt’s (and presumably Google’s) position was loud and clear:
If you don’t want your own site to suffer the same fate as O’Reilly, you better tag your link ads with a rel=nofollow attribute so that you don’t pass any PageRank score to your advertisers.
In my mind, that doesn’t seem quite fair. Website owners and bloggers work hard to build a content-rich site with good PageRank score. Google’s black-or-white stance on this equates to a diminished earning ability for these websites by insisting webmasters cut off the flow of PageRank to their advertisers. This of course decreases the value of the link ads to those advertisers, and consequently the revenue likely to be realized from them. Granted, no savvy advertiser is going to buy a text link ad solely based on PageRank score, but PageRank does factor into the equation.
This makes me wonder what Google’s position is on BlogAds.com is, which is part banner ad, part text link ad. A good blog ad contains useful content. Why shouldn’t the blogger be allowed to “vouch for” (by not tagging the link with nofollow) the links contained within that ad if they so choose?
Most “white hat” SEOs such as Christine Churchill believe text link advertising is a legitimate practice. I agree with her.
I wonder what Google would do if all the websites across the Internet decided to take all their banner ad inventory they have and bypass the click-tracker redirect that counts all the clickthroughs. Suddenly all these new votes would start counting all over the Internet for commercial advertisers and sponsors. Wouldn’t that throw Google for a loop!
So what is the bottom line here for bloggers who are looking to advertise? It’s basically this: be discriminating in your link buying. Text link advertisements are not inherently evil. Just don’t buy ads on sites where any of the other advertisers on the site are misleading, deceptive or misrepresentative. By that, I mean things like the following:
- Setting the ad’s link text to some keyword-rich phrase that doesn’t accurately reflect the page that is linked to.
e.g. An ad on SeacoastOnline.com proclaims “The North Face” but that isn’t The North Face! - Linking the ad text to a landing page that is built for search engines and not for people.
e.g. the “Discount Vacations” ad on DailyItem.com points to one of Orbitz’s many “doorway pages”. - Hiding or obscuring the link so human visitors can’t see it, only search engines.
e.g. Doing a “View Source” on the home page of PRNewswire.com reveals these hidden links:
</noframes>
<a href="https://www.icrossing.com">Search Engine Marketing</a>
<a href="https://sev.prnewswire.com">Search Engine News Release Optimization</a>
</frameset>
And it goes without saying that you should refrain from such practices yourself when you advertise.
This post is based on material taken from on my own blog across three separate posts: Link buying – ethical or unethical?, Buying links – Google’s perspective, and Buying link ads – the ethical debate rages.
Chapter 6:
Keyword Research
From the fundamentals of link building to the nuances of natural linking patterns, virality, and authority.
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