Backlinking...can Hubpages incorporate the feature?

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  1. IzzyM profile image87
    IzzyMposted 13 years ago

    First of, I don't really know what I'm talking about, or to be more specific, I don't know the name of what I am talking about.
    But thanks to a few hubbers on here, I have taken to backlinking the easy way. You backlink a hub to...for example...shetoldme...or blurbalicious...one of them anyway.
    Then you hit the share button and loads of options open. You can then backlink the link to delicious, Facebook, or a thousand other previously unheard of sites that sometimes you need an account for, and sometimes you don't.
    Bu it is so easy - because for the most part your url and hub title is already filled in, so all you need to input is a bit of text to say what the hub is about, and your tags.
    Why doesn't Hubpages incorporate the same function here?
    And, on the same vein, why is it impossible to directly link with many of these sites, that tell you Hubpages is banned if you try, but you can do with the link from the backlink from another, lesser, site?

    1. Marisa Wright profile image85
      Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Because people like you have gone click-happy backlinking their own Hubs, that's why!

      Not having a go - I understand why it happens!  There's so much advice about using this method, it's not surprising people overdo it.

      The thing is, all social bookmarking sites were created as a way of collecting "the cream of the internet" in the days when search engines weren't as good. Their purpose was for members to highlight the highest quality sites on any topic, and share them with each other.

      Unfortunately people quickly cottoned on to the idea of promoting their OWN sites, regardless of quality, which destroyed the purpose of the bookmarking site. So they had to make rules prohibiting members from bookmarking their own stuff. 

      In practice, provided you bookmark around 10 other sites for every one of your own, you won't get caught and banned.  Unfortunately when it comes to shared sites like HubPages, it only takes 40 or 50 members each backlinking 2 or 3 Hubs for it to become bleeding obvious, and the bookmarking site reacts by banning the whole domain.  Sometimes forever, sometimes temporarily.

      1. IzzyM profile image87
        IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Right I can understand that Marisa. But it's easy for someone with just a couple or a handful (or even just one) actual website to backlink loads of others too. It's much more difficult for the the likes of us who churn out hundreds of articles! My internet is really slow these days, sometimes I can go and make a up of tea waiting for a page to load. How much more time consuming would it be to go find another 10 pages of good content to link when I only wanted to link mine. That's OK for folks on high speed access, its only a few more seconds.
        Actually I did the bare minimum backlinking all along, but it sickens me to go to google and see loads of pages ranked higher than mine, not for better content, but because they have loads of backlinks that I don't.
        Since I have started backlinking seriously, many of my pages are on the first page of google, and that is why I continue doing it.

        1. Marisa Wright profile image85
          Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          ....that must be frustrating, Izzy, but if you keep bookmarking just your own Hubs and nothing else, you will get banned from a lot of these sites - then you won't be able to add any more, ever.  And you may get the whole of HubPages banned, too.  That's why I'm trying to explain it's an irresponsible thing to do.

          1. IzzyM profile image87
            IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Yes well I avoid Digg, Reddit and Stumbleupon for this reason. I don't want to be banned and I don't want others to be banned. And there are so many of the smaller sites that come and go. I didn't mind pressing the Random button on these sites until they started sending me an inordinate amount of videos and other heavy loading things.
            I'm maybe not understanding things fully although. What is the point in all the smaller sites that are there for backlinking if they don't want your backlinks? What do they want? Don't they make their money from the likes of us putting article up?

            1. Marisa Wright profile image85
              Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              It depends on what sites you mean.  Some, like SheToldMe, state upfront that they're for webmasters to create backlinks.  They're OK - but at the same time, they're so full of spam, the backlink probably isn't worth having anyway.

              The backlinks you need are by commenting on forums on your topic, on other people's blogs and websites, and by writing linked articles on other revenue sharing sites.  Have you read Sunforged's Hub:

              http://hubpages.com/hub/Get-Website-Tra … -earn-from

              There's a piece of software called Comment Kahuna that finds do follow blogs on your topic.

              http://hubpages.com/hub/Free-SEO-Tools- … n-Software

              1. Pcunix profile image91
                Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                And if you use my Ten Thousand Monkey approach, you will always have something to link back to :-)

                Seriously, I've done some of that.  It's like having a full time job.  Again, just plain old writing and letting the seeds grow if they can may be inefficient and no way to run a railroad, but it is a lot more fun. I haven't bothered with any of that in years.

                1. Marisa Wright profile image85
                  Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  I don't do any of that for my Hubs, either.  I do for my dancing websites, because I find that being an active member of dance forums attracts real live customers - so while I'm doing that, I may as well be getting a backlink at the same time.

                  Like Izzy says, getting backlinks on individual Hubs is a huge job and I honestly can't see how it's really practical.  I like Sunforged's idea, which is basically to spread your articles across several revenue-sharing sites instead of concentrating on one - which is a good idea anyway, and then you may as well create a link wheel from them.

              2. IzzyM profile image87
                IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                I downloaded it weeks ago and forgot to look it up...er..thanks for the reminder!
                As a lot of my hubs are gardening related, I have actually joined a few forums recently and its been great fun answering gardening problems, but that feels to me like I'm time wasting because I'm enjoying it so much!
                My traffic is going steadily up, likewise my adsense, but its so slow compared to what others say they are earning here.
                My latest kick is trying to get to google #1. I currently have about 20 hubs on the first page. Not forgetting my garden blog which is currently sitting at #8 but could go to #1 if I got my finger out and updated it. My other bog is at #5 and is worth a small fortune if it got to #1!
                Just so many thing to do and so little time. I also have another 50 or so hubs 'in the making'. I need to take a vacation and chill out!

                1. Pcunix profile image91
                  Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  It's funny.  Everybody wants to earn money so that they can have fun, but if you have fun and earn a little money, that gets seen as a little bit wrong :-)

                  1. IzzyM profile image87
                    IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    Can still laugh though!
                    Everyone here thinks I'm a hotshot internet writer because a few of them have read my blog which basically just slags the Spanish off something terrible, but they do not realise how little money I'm actually making.
                    My partner insisted on buying me a Spanish hand-held fan the other day. It cost 1 euro.
                    That was a day's wages gone!

                2. Marisa Wright profile image85
                  Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  So long as you've got a backlink to a Hub or your blog in your signature on every post, it will pay off. 



                  Has it ever occurred to you that if you stopped faffing around trying to promote individual Hubs, you'd have time to work on the blogs? 

                  Hubs will do well eventually, even without promotion.  True, they'll do better with promotion, but they'll do pretty well without, too.  Your blogs are a different matter.  So assuming you're happy with your niches, it's a no-brainer which you should be investing time in improving and promoting.

                  If you take a clear look at successful promoters like Mark Knowles, Misha etc, most of their effort goes into promoting their websites, not their Hubs.  It's just not time-efficient. 

                  I'm hoping you have a link to your blogs in every related Hub.  Remove your HubPages widget from your blogs - reciprocal links have less value.  Write more articles on other revenue-sharing sites, all with links back to your blogs and links to each other using Sunforged's system. 

                  There is some benefit in backlinking your backlinks, which is why it's good to have some backlinks to your Hubs - but it's not worth knocking yourself out for.

                  By the way, your sidebar ads on your garden blog are overlapping the text in my browser, and your font looks way too big.

                  1. IzzyM profile image87
                    IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    I know sad
                    I saw they had that new thingie you could pay around with and added it, and it looked terrible and knocked everything out of line. I just need to go back and put it back the way it was.
                    Plus a certain person sent me a theme and a lot of great information to fix things and I'm so sorry but I haven't got round to it yet - too busy backlinking and writing new hubs.
                    Tomorrow, I'll sort it, and add new content.

              3. sunforged profile image72
                sunforgedposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                I should preface the SEO tips link above by pointing out that I did write a revised version of that process for the original 60Dc

                in short - those sites are good if you can be in and out - if you find yourself writing forum posts - then you have expended too much time and effort

                http://hubpages.com/hub/Better-Search-E … ring-Sites

            2. schoolgirlforreal profile image78
              schoolgirlforrealposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              how the hell am i gonna backlink (pardon my french!) if this is the case?
              I hate ezines, should I blog and blog and blog and create websites? and then what if they are not popular??

              I just don't understand all of this. :[

              1. Marisa Wright profile image85
                Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                Did you read the links in my post, schoolgirl?

          2. rebekahELLE profile image84
            rebekahELLEposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            I didn't realize people use Digg and similar sites for their own hubs?  I thought they are for readers to promote on these sites.
            I can understand how some of these sites would not like HP if a lot of hubbers are promoting their own hubs.

            1. Pcunix profile image91
              Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              Oh, they do.  Boy do they ever.  And they engage in trading schemes and voting up your buddy schemes and all the rest of the dumb social games that make it all very distasteful.   I detest people who do that and have no interest in the sites for exactly that reason.

              1. rebekahELLE profile image84
                rebekahELLEposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                really?? I know nothing about that. it seems like a huge waste of time if everyone going there goes for similar reasons.. I prefer google and the search engines bringing in traffic specifically for the content.

                1. Pcunix profile image91
                  Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  Do a Google search for "swap stumbles" and then  "swap diggs" (put 'em in quotes just as I did here).

                  You will be Enlightened :-)

                  Personally, I think Google should track those folks down and give them a big Google Slap (you can Google "google slap" too).

    2. Misha profile image63
      Mishaposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Izzy, here is the rub - the more sites Hubpages add to the "share" button, the more sites will ban hubpages because of overuse. smile

      1. IzzyM profile image87
        IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Guess this is because we are not web sites, we are pages, but each page gets treated like a web site and we are pretty unique out there on the web. The solution then is maybe for several sites to be set up purely for backlinking to, with rules that you can't post more than one a day or whatever?
        I dunno. Glad of the answers on this thread so thanks everyone for contributing:)

  2. WryLilt profile image87
    WryLiltposted 13 years ago

    IzzyM could you clarify some things - what do you mean by "Why doesn't Hubpages incorporate the same function here?"
    Do you mean the forums? Because at the base of hubs there is already a "Share" button that allows all that...

    I believe that because lots of "newbies" are told to backlink and they do so with zeal - and because they only digg or stumble their own hubs, instead of throwing in some other sites as well, the whole of the hubpages domain gets blocked as spam. (This is a rephrase of an answer given by Marisa Wright but I can't find the original thread!)

    1. IzzyM profile image87
      IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      No not the forums. Yes there is the share button on the hubs, but it only links to a few sites. I'm talking about the share function that lets you share with maybe 50 or more sites, not just the six or so that Hubpages features.

  3. MPG Narratives profile image59
    MPG Narrativesposted 13 years ago

    Hi IzzyM, I tried backlinking when I first started (with zeal as Wrylit said) and all that seemed to happen is I received more spam from Nigeria. My clicks went up slightly but the spam overtook that quickly.

    I have found that writing useful articles has given me more clicks than backlinking. I use what hubpages provide + shetoldme and find that is working ok.

    You could spend lots of time backlinking and really only achieve a little. That's my experience anyway, maybe I did something wrong initially.

    1. IzzyM profile image87
      IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Really? Your spam went up? I can't say I've had that problem, even though I have given my email address out to a lot of unknown sites. Maybe gmail's spam filter is good, I don't know!
      As for shetoldme, I wonder at the usefulness of that particular site. They have never sent a visitor or registered a backlink for me. All my content there is either archived, or queued. But I do use their link to link to other sites that won't accept a Hubpages URL.

      1. MPG Narratives profile image59
        MPG Narrativesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Yep spam went up and I wasn't used to it as I use a mac at home. I'm used to spam on my work PC though so I know what it looks like. It doesn't affect the mac, I just delete it.

        Now that I concentrate more on writing good hubs the spam is becoming less of a problem.

        1. thisisoli profile image70
          thisisoliposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          Just so you know over 20% of viruses out there can infect macs. They are usually the most invasive ones as well, so you really should be careful!  The Mac OS is in some part open source, and Mac users are used to saying that Macs's dont get viruses, which makes life a lot easier for those trying to rip you off or turn your Mac in to a spam terminal!

          1. MPG Narratives profile image59
            MPG Narrativesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Thanks for the heads up. I'll check with my Mac store how to get rid of them or I might reformat and see what happens. Appreciate the help.

            1. thisisoli profile image70
              thisisoliposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              Heh their sales guys are pretty arrogant.  Instead search for free mac antivirus or somehing, should be enough to protect you from becoming one of the ever increasing Zombie Macs.

              1. Pcunix profile image91
                Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                Note that Apple has been quietly adding a/v and spamware scanning right into the OS, which has not pleased the a/v vendors.  Microsoft has their very nice Security Essentials d/l, which probably doesn't overjoy them either.

                1. thisisoli profile image70
                  thisisoliposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  yeah both Windows and Apple OS now have inbuilt AV with release, however they are both pretty average at best from what I have heard.

              2. MPG Narratives profile image59
                MPG Narrativesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                The guys where I go are ok, been a customer of theirs for years. What do you mean by "Zombie Macs"

                1. sunforged profile image72
                  sunforgedposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  Bot net

                  But..your still a zillion times less likely to be a "zombie" on your mac

                  Have firewall , good Av, and stay out of freeky porn and warez sites w/ russian hosts and you have very little to worry about

                  1. MPG Narratives profile image59
                    MPG Narrativesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    thanks sunforged, will do. Appreciate all this help guys.

  4. thisisoli profile image70
    thisisoliposted 13 years ago

    To be honest I don't really visit those sites too often anymore. They simply give me too little benefit for too little in return. I have found much more successful ways of generating do follow backlinks.

    1. IzzyM profile image87
      IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Tell us what then? Write a hub about it? Email me? Please???

  5. WryLilt profile image87
    WryLiltposted 13 years ago

    I'm generally too lazy to backlink. I might have 30 backlinks on all my hubs... I find if it's good enough visitors will link back to it themselves.

    And google picks up most of my stuff anyway so I just write more instead of spending time on promotion. I'd rather have to wait an extra three months for 30 hubs to mature than be too busy promoting and have one hub mature (traffic wise) in three weeks.

    1. Pcunix profile image91
      Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Years ago, I used to do a lot of linking from forums.  The purpose wasn't actually for promotion (there was no Adsense then), I got tired of answering the same questions over and over so I wrote articles and linked to them out of laziness.

      That had the side affect of getting me a lot of traffic and other people linking to the same articles because THEY were tired of answering the same questions, so when Adsense came around, I was sitting in a good position.

      But - I sopped doing that long ago - stopped linking on forums, that is, not stopped writing.   I found that Google happily picked up my content and people found it anyway.

      Once in a while somebody would Digg or Stumble or Slashdot something.  I hated those days.  Thousands of useless visitors interfering with the rest of us.  I put up a "Please do not Digg etc." notice some years back just because of that.

      I have been tweeting and FBing the stuff I have done here, but the more I think about it, why bother?  Google finds the stuff anyway and it just makes it harder for me to find something I really wanted to tweet or FB if I want it later.

      As of today, I am not going to bother with any outside promotion.   As WryLit notes, if it is good enough, people will promote it for you and if it is not it really doesn't matter what you do:  sows ear, silk purse, all that.

    2. IzzyM profile image87
      IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      I've got some hubs with loads of backlinks that just appeared themselves. Unfortunately, I still haven't written a hub that's went even a bit viral. The only hubs I have doing well are those that are vying for first place in google without a huge volume of searches.

      1. Pcunix profile image91
        Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        There are two ways to approach that.

        One is niche and keyword  research.  You can find plenty of good advice on that from Misha, Sunforged, Peter Hoggan and others.   It doesn't interest me because it is work and then it is being forced into writing about something you don't care a twit about.

        My way is called the "ten thousand monkey" approach.   Write like mad about whatever you like.   Write as much as you can as often as you can.  Some of it will become wildly popular for reasons you and I don't understand (but those other guys could probably explain to you if they looked at it).

        I suspect the first method might get you more money, at least until Google figures out how to stop it.  My way is definitely a lot more fun, though :-)

        1. Paula Andrea, MA profile image78
          Paula Andrea, MAposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          I love this reply. Although I have been writing for Hub Pages for about 20 months, I know absolutely nothing about promoting, backlinking, or other internet based terms such as these.I still am unaware of how to effectively build a Hub Page, except to write the articiles I love and move them to other places for more people to read(Right or wrong, that's what I do.) It has not caused me to make money, but I am passionate about the esoteric subjects I tackle. Therefore, I happily achieve my primary objective. I really like what you have written regarding this paricualar topic. "Write like crazy." Sounds like great advice to me!

          "Best to you" Pcunix,

          1. Pcunix profile image91
            Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Best to you also.  But remember, that's advice for those of us not concerned about money.

  6. Randy Godwin profile image61
    Randy Godwinposted 13 years ago

    I do very little backlinking and am quite happy with the way some of my hubs are continually gaining traffic.  One has over 1500 links according to a Yahoo link check.  I don't know if this is a lot of links or not but I make a few bucks and sales from it.

    Like Pcunix, I had rather spend the time writing.  I feel that if the content is good enough, there's no need for all of the backlinking.  But to each his/her own!

  7. profile image0
    Nelle Hoxieposted 13 years ago

    IzzyM the best advice I have ever been given to make money online, is to write alot EVERY day - every day. It's your job. Find what you can do a lot of easily - and do it. If I couldn't hub easily, I wouldn't be doing it - because I know that there's so many ways to make money online, I keep looking for things that work for me.

    So if it's blogging, then just simply blog a lot and keep finding out how to blog to make money - or do both. But again do a lot of it.

    1. Research Analyst profile image73
      Research Analystposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Great advice smile

  8. akirchner profile image91
    akirchnerposted 13 years ago

    All good advice - but I can see why folks start just sharing their hubs and don't give a second thought to the repercussions.  It is because (in my very humble opinion) the share button is there and people think that that is what they are supposed to do.  There is no disclaimer that says 'if you share this and don't participate in the sites listed, you may be banned forever - and by the way - so will everyone on Hubpages'. 

    Something needs to be done about making that clearer to folks - especially new people who are struggling to just learn the mechanics perhaps.  I know we are all supposed to 'know everything' but I've found that gee, gosh and darn - I don't! It is refreshing to find out that other folks don't as well though it is very frustrating to figure out what you 'should do' to get the best returns.

    When I was embroiled in the cooking hubs contest and did not have time to promote my hubs so to speak and backlink except to maybe my facebook account, I did not notice any increase in anything so that did kind of tell me something important and I don't worry about all the rest anymore.  I am concentrating on key words and trying to just write well and on a variety of subjects to see what works for me. 

    Bottom line though - I think we need more direction or less choices maybe on that share button! It's not as 'innocent' as it looks!

    1. IzzyM profile image87
      IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      I didn't even find the share button until bout 3/4 months ago, and when I did I was thinking "how come I never noticed this before? I did share for a while my new hubs till I got banned by both Reddit and Digg, because neither made it clear you couldn't post your own stuff. I learned my lesson, made new accounts with both of them (I have a dynamic IP address) and rarely use them.
      It's the new crowd of backlinking sites I am interested in now - Mixx, Blurbalicious, Bukmar, PostOnFire etc - these are all high PR sites that give out dofollow backlinks through the share button on many sites including shetoldme. There are so many of them it wouldn't matter if one or two banned you.
      Why does Hubpages not reach an agreement with them to let you post all your own stuff?

      1. Marisa Wright profile image85
        Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        If they're inviting you to post your own links then you won't get banned.  However, some people think Google will get wise to those kinds of sites - they're only one step up from traffic exchanges, after all - and slap them hard, so your efforts will eventually not be worth it.  In fact I'm kind of surprised Google hasn't slapped them already, they're so blatant.

        BTW I thought I'd try the "share" button on SheToldMe for some of the stuff I'd already put on there (I posted all my 60 Day Challenge Hubs as part of the Challenge).  The ones I tried shared a link to the She Told Me post, not directly to my Hub.  That's what I would expect, and I'm not sure I see the point?

        1. Pcunix profile image91
          Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          I too am surprised that Google hasn't whacked all of 'em up the side of the head.  I am sure they will get to it.

          1. Mark Knowles profile image59
            Mark Knowlesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            Why? They are a legitimate source of traffic outside of search engine traffic. Some of them send huge amounts of traffic and Big Daddy G respects that. wink

            1. Pcunix profile image91
              Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

              Because linking back to yourself (which is most of what goes on there) is not a "quality signal".   You may very well be linking to quality, of course, but a link you made should be suspect.   As most of this stuff is just people promoting their own links or trading two, three or four way links with others, it is all suspect and Google really should ignore them all.

              1. Mark Knowles profile image59
                Mark Knowlesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                But you are ignoring the legitimate use of these sites. I tend not to submit my own work, but I have had other people do so and gotten as much as 250,000 views in a day from a couple of them. One of my posts got almost a million views from a mixture of these sites. Why on earth should Google ignore that?

                1. Pcunix profile image91
                  Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                  Google doesn't care about views.  They care about providing the best answer to a search.

                  If they are NOT providing the best search results and someone else is, Google will lose market share.

                  1. Mark Knowles profile image59
                    Mark Knowlesposted 13 years agoin reply to this

                    Rubbish. Google does indeed care about views and it is one of the metrics they use to determine what is the best answer to a search.


                    What does that have to do with this?

    2. Marisa Wright profile image85
      Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      You're absolutely right!  I don't blame newbies for misunderstanding, because you see the advice handed out all over the place with no qualification. 

      There are only three sites on the Share button on HubPages that could be a problem - Reddit, Digg and Stumbleupon. They need to be there so ordinary readers who like your Hub can bookmark them. 

      It's been a problem on every site I've been a member of, I dont know what the solution is really.

  9. IzzyM profile image87
    IzzyMposted 13 years ago

    Thanks Nelle smile
    I wrote a huge amount of hubs during June and July and my traffic dropped. Probably seasonal. I love writing, but the guys who are serious on here (and yeah that includes you) already knew about keyword research and SEO. I've been trying to find niches that pay well without realising that the niche I was writing in paid well, if I'd optimized the pages properly.
    It's all a huge learning curve, but I'm getting there.

    I was going to post my stats for the last few months to show a steady rise in income but decided the better of it.

    Tomorrow I'm, going to fix my blogs, write some new content for them, then start working on the hubs I've already started and not look any more at my google rankings, and get back to writing.

  10. IzzyM profile image87
    IzzyMposted 13 years ago

    Well, I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong, but if your link to Hubpages is in the shetoldme post, the google spiders will pick it up no matter where else you post it. And you can still get an actual backlink through it.
    It's just so much easier, click a button (the 'share' button), and your url and hub title gets displayed. All you add is your description, tags and subject heading, and even they come up in memory after the first one.
    If it's not doing any harm and its not spamming, then why not make it easier from here instead of being limited to only Digg, Stumble etc who don't like spam.

    1. Marisa Wright profile image85
      Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      That's what I'm saying - it was the SheToldMe URL, not my Hub's URL, that got displayed.  So that would count as a backlink to my SheToldMe entry, not to my Hub.  That does help, because it will raise SheToldMe's page rank, which will make my backlink on SheToldMe more valuable - but it's not a backlink to my Hub.

      1. IzzyM profile image87
        IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Unfortunately,(and it had nothing to do with me) many of these places you can't post your links to directly because Hubpages is banned. I know because I tried.
        Through Shetoldme or any other site offering this service is fine. If its not a backlink, its something better than nothing.

        1. Marisa Wright profile image85
          Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          ....but since it's not a real backlink, only a backlink to a site that contains a backlink, it comes down to priorities again, doesn't it?

          I'd love to see what Sunforged, Misha or some of the other gurus think about whether it's worth the effort.

          1. thisisoli profile image70
            thisisoliposted 13 years agoin reply to this

            SheToldMe seemed good when it first started, but now there is so much spam, and so many legit users getting archived because of overspamming and self promoting articles to front page through multiple accounts, that I really don't see it as being worthwhile at all.

            You just have to take one look at other articles appearing on there now to see that the site has failed, when there is a lack of interesting stories in the top ten articles, you know things are going wrong.

            *Edit* I think this may have been a little harsh, have developed a killer headache which has put me in a bit of a bad mood!

            I think my point stands though, if you can look at a site and see it is low quality, then Google can do the same. The spam filling She Told Me is one of the reasons I have avoided implementing a referal scheme to my article directory.

    2. thisisoli profile image70
      thisisoliposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Digg, stumble, etc use no follow links, which are not registered by Google.  At one point I did look in to those who say that a proportion of no follow links help make a site look more natural, but I am still trying to figure out whether this is true or not!

  11. englightenedsoul profile image59
    englightenedsoulposted 13 years ago

    It is not uncommon for bookmarks at Shetoldme and Xomba to rank higher than your actual hubpage, but that is temporary.  Once your page is indexed and settled, it will automatically show before your bookmarks at shetoldme and xomba.  Infact you will hardly see any bookmarks in the top 5 pages.  And yea, even if the shetoldme link is placed higher or indexed before your hub, the link would always be a backlink to your hub.  At shetoldme, it occurs as the links are promoted and make it to the front page, which  gives them the benefit of PR5 link and so temporary google places them higher than the hub.

    I hope I have got the question correct.

    1. Marisa Wright profile image85
      Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Not quite!

      Izzy is using the Share button on SheToldMe to post on other backlinking sites.

      She thinks that's helping get a backlink to her Hub.  I'm saying it's not a backlink to her Hub, it's a backlink to SheToldMe. 

      I'm sure it has some value because it's a backlink to her backlink - but this is in the context of making best use of your time, and I'm not sure that creating backlinks to SheToldMe is a good use of time.

      1. englightenedsoul profile image59
        englightenedsoulposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        I am sorry and I get it now.  And you are right it would be a backlink to backlink, but personally I don't think it is best use of time.  The links from shetoldme are PR5 only when they are on the front page and they don't last there long and all the pages within the site are PR0 or PR n/a.  Though it still has value but most of the successful hubbers here automate it and I also sometimes use Imautomator to backlink my backlinks.

  12. jaymelee23 profile image66
    jaymelee23posted 13 years ago

    http://hubpages.com/forum/topic/50303 see that thread. I posted a free automatic backlinker "bookmarking" site. I'm just trying it out.. seems promising from what a few webmasters have told me.

  13. blackhatworld profile image61
    blackhatworldposted 13 years ago

    The saga continues with back linking strategies.  What works and what doesn't. Allot of this is trial and error.  The key in my opinion is to this kind of stuff responsibly.  Don't spam and respect the blogs you post on.  If you contribute and provide useful information your Hubpage, website or any other blog will rank higher.

    We all want others to see our posts and our blogs.  Linking strategies are just one part of the SEO equation.  Don't over do it.  Like most things in life use moderation.

    I have clicked awesome for this blog voted it up and followed you.  Thanks so much.

    1. jaymelee23 profile image66
      jaymelee23posted 13 years agoin reply to this

      Hiya, BlackHatWorld! Good to see you on Hubpages . smile  It's kind of like seeing a celebrity, haha

  14. gracenotes profile image90
    gracenotesposted 13 years ago

    Izzy,

    If gardening is one of your niches, that's good, especially if you're a forum participant.  I do a few gardening hubs.  My experience is that gardening forums are kind of laid back, and don't mind links in either the signature or the body of the post, as long as you don't spam.  So I'd encourage you to continue to place them.

    I have another niche.  The subject area has one of the best forums out there.  Highly ranked by Google, and all.  And I participate there.  But putting in links is not tolerated.  Too bad.  So I backlink those articles elsewhere.

    1. IzzyM profile image87
      IzzyMposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      I used to post on gardening forums all the time,before I found Hubpages and started writing, and yes you are right, a lot of them allow links in signature etc, it's just that's its very time consuming when I should be writing smile

      1. Pcunix profile image91
        Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

        Yes, it is, especially if you are an honest person who only leaves honest, useful comments.  It is easy to say "Great Post!" but it takes much more time to leave a thoughtful response.

        And yet the thoughtful response is the one most likely to attract real visitors.  And although the linkmeisters will tell you that all that matters is the Google love, that isn't all of it. Those real visitors are the ones who can cause you to go viral.

        Moreover, I constantly delete comments like the first at my site.  They never get seen by Google.  Only the honest ones end up getting any kind of love.

        1. Marisa Wright profile image85
          Marisa Wrightposted 13 years agoin reply to this

          You are absolutely right, Pcunix.  That's why I continue to post on the belly dance forum.  I have no idea whether my signature link on the forum is "do follow" or not, but I've gained many natural backlinks there, from other dancers who have mentioned my site on their blog.  I've also been asked to write guest articles on other blogs (more backlinks).  Not to mention the direct visitors who have clicked on my link, whom I see on Analytics all the time.

  15. starme77 profile image77
    starme77posted 13 years ago

    uh oh , can I get in trouble for listing my faves on my profile?  I'm learning alot from this thread - Thanks guys - but really , can I get in trouble , cause if so I'll take em down

    1. Pcunix profile image91
      Pcunixposted 13 years agoin reply to this

      No.

  16. starme77 profile image77
    starme77posted 13 years ago

    Thanks, I feel better now smile

  17. gracenotes profile image90
    gracenotesposted 13 years ago

    Well, I do not see anything wrong with dealing with "what is".  Nothing wrong with using existing knowledge to help us market our writing in niches that we developed.  Some of us are present-oriented.

    But some of us are more future-oriented.  We're always looking around the bend, and trying to forecast the next wave.  We're impatient with the status quo, and can't wait to see what will develop.

    Either personality can adapt, and they will if they are serious about their web publishing efforts.  I'm confident that they will be facile and nimble enough to change when it's time.

    I don't worry about either of those types.  The kind who worry me are those people who constantly dwell in the past and beat themselves up about every prior mistake.

    By the way, I'm a long-range planner to a degree, and in some very important areas like finances and health.  But I'm probably a little more comfortable in the present.

 
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