Pelland Blog

Social Networking Using LinkedIn

June 20th, 2008

Everybody is familiar with MySpace, Facebook, and the other social networking sites. One that I use and recommend is the more business-oriented LinkedIn. If you are either not using LinkedIn yet or are using it but know that you are not realizing its full potential, I hope to offer you the stimulus to get moving. Here are a few reasons to use LinkedIn and ways that it can work for you:

  • LinkedIn offers you the opportunity to provide one more direct link to your website, from your profile page on an established site which is considered important by the search engines. In addition to providing a route for new traffic to reach your site, the inbound link in itself will contribute toward the enhancement your site’s search engine ranking.
  • LinkedIn provides multiple opportunities to grow your business and to reach out to both old and new contacts. The contact network which you build can help you to get in touch with decision-makes across the full range of industries. You can start to grow your network by unleashing LinkedIn’s robot to search through your address book (in Outlook, Outlook Express, Thunderbird or other e-mail client) for people who already have their own LinkedIn profiles. For most of us, this is an instant means of inviting hundreds of your existing associates to join your network. By listing the schools which you have attended and former places of employment, you will also generate lists which might include fellow students and co-workers who have also moved on in new directions and might be willing to re-kindle the contact.
  • By building a list of contacts, you also have indirect access to their networks of contacts, as well as the contacts of those contacts. Sort of like second cousins. If you need to get in touch with the CEO of Echo Industries International, you can search for someone who is connected, either directly or indirectly, to a person within your network, then ask that contact for a formal introduction. Ideally, the connection is just one degree away (from someone to whom you are directly connected). Think this is far-fetched? The fact is that all 500 of the Fortune 500 are represented on LinkedIn, either through their CEO’s themselves or upper level management. Through your listing on LinkedIn, they can also, in turn, find you.
  • You can use your LinkedIn profile as a virtual resume, particularly if you request and receive recommendations from associates, former employers, and co-workers. In fact, if you are in the job market, you should include your LinkedIn link as part of your e-mail signature and include it on your primary resume. The best way to generate recommendations is to start by recommending people yourself. You will then feel no hesitancy about asking for your own recommendations in return, either from the same people or others. Most people are more than happy to provide recommendations if they are asked.
  • Finally, use LinkedIn Answers to either gain business advice from experts throughout the LinkedIn community or to establish yourself as an expert within your field. Either way is a fast and efficient way to expand your network.

For more information on using LinkedIn to your advantage, I highly recommend the LinkedIn blog, particularly the “Tips & Tricks” category of posts. I also recommend the “Ten Ways to Use LinkedIn” post on entrepreneurial guru Guy Kawasaki’s blog.

Finally, here is a link to my own LinkedIn profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/pelland

This post was written by Peter Pelland

The Importance of Maintaining Your Site’s Outbound Links

June 13th, 2008

So much emphasis is placed on the SEO value of inbound links (also known as backlinks) these days that it is often easy to neglect the importance of outbound links on your site. Outbound links, first and foremost, serve to make your site a more useful and comprehensive resource for its users. As an example, let’s presume that you are a small manufacturer of bicycles, your visitors would certainly expect to find a list of local dealers where your products can be purchased. By providing this information, you are also helping to establish the value of your site as an informational “hub”, one of several factors that come into play in determining your site’s overall search engine positioning.

To maximize the value of the links (and, consequently, the impact upon your search engine ranking), any such outbound links should follow certain rules of thumb:

  • The outbound links should be relevant to the content of your site and the page upon which they appear.
  • The links should be anchored to keywords within the text within the page. For example, either “Pelland Advertising provides website development services for small businesses” or “Pelland Advertising provides website development services for small businesses” is preferable to “Click here to learn more about Pelland Advertising’s website development services for small businesses.”
  • Links that are anchored to text are more valuable than links that are anchored to graphics.
  • Do not include more than a maximum of 50 outbound links on a page.
  • Linking to high ranking sites will do you far more good than linking to sites which are relatively unknown to the major search engines.
  • Do not buy links or exchange links with “link farms”.
  • Be sure that your links are active and up-to-date.

This last point is often overlooked. A fine page of links which is put together in January may be full of errors by July. It is important to check your link pages on a periodic basis and to make corrections as they become necessary. Fortunately, there is a very easy way to accomplish this. The W3C Link Checker is an excellent freeware tool which will find all of the broken links within a page, including graphics and URL’s which refresh to other pages. This online validator from the W3 Consortium is able to recursively check your document for dead links. Simply go to the W3C Link Checker site, enter the full URL of the page that you want to check, and click the “Check” button. It will check every link on the page, generating a color-keyed report that will show you the corrections that need to be made.

Aside from the SEO advantages and the site usability benefits which you will be offering to your visitors, keeping broken links off of your site simply makes your business look more professional and perceptive.

One last note: If you have a robots.txt file within the meta tags on your page, it will typically show the “index,follow” attributes. Double check to be sure that your page is not using the “nofollow” attribute if you have outbound links on the page and you would like to maximize the benefit of the outbound links to the linked sites.

This post was written by Peter Pelland