web2.0建立外链的方法

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发表于 2009-2-9 16:45:39 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
1、首先写一篇高质量300字左右 的论文,确保论文有强烈的吸引力,标题含有关键词,且论文第一段和最后一段都有关键词。
2、发表在Squidoo,且使用一个含有关键词的文本链接到你的站点。
3、去Twitter 发1个帖子,说我创建了一个new lens
4、发一篇文章在Hubpages.com.在添加Squidoo你的Hubpages RSS feed,要求同1,然后执行3
5、创建一个BlogBlogger.com,发表一篇文章,同样使用一个含有关键词的文本链接到你的站点,同时添加你的Squidoo和Hubpages rss feed。
6、然后再去Twitter说你发表一篇文章在Blogger。
7、发一篇文章在Tumblr.com,同样添加前面几个feed
8、再去Twitter发帖子
9、去FeedBite.com做同样的事情。
10、去Bumpzee创建一个用户,添加你以上的feed
11、去Ping.in   ping你所有以上的页面,包括Twitter
重复以上的工作,会有意向不到的结果。

看一个老外发的,赚点论坛币

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发表于 2009-2-10 02:00:44 | 显示全部楼层
"在添加Squidoo你的Hubpages RSS feed" 这句话不太明白,那位高手能给解释一下,是谁添加到谁上?一个添加一个,看着操作起来好像很复杂啊。
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发表于 2009-2-10 08:23:38 | 显示全部楼层
收藏,有空试试看。不试不知道效果
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发表于 2009-2-10 08:50:56 | 显示全部楼层
收藏了 啥时候俺也去试试 lol
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发表于 2009-2-10 18:11:03 | 显示全部楼层
2# breaknew

在Squidoo添加你的Hubpages RSS feed
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发表于 2009-2-10 18:39:30 | 显示全部楼层
很有实用价值
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发表于 2009-2-12 12:57:20 | 显示全部楼层
不错,实用哈,学习中!
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发表于 2009-3-3 14:03:26 | 显示全部楼层
真是思维转换的很快啊!
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发表于 2009-3-3 17:58:10 | 显示全部楼层
有点金字塔式架构呀,学习了
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发表于 2009-3-5 17:31:01 | 显示全部楼层
以后试试。我只会spam。呵呵。
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发表于 2010-7-10 14:19:14 | 显示全部楼层
1# dangdang7262


我想知道,这到底需要多少篇文章,是一篇呢还是?
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发表于 2010-7-11 04:17:08 | 显示全部楼层
1、首先写一篇高质量300字左右 的论文,确保论文有强烈的吸引力,标题含有关键词,且论文第一段和最后一段都有关键词。
2、发表在Squidoo,且使用一个含有关键词的文本链接到你的站点。
3、去Twitter 发1个帖子,说 ...
dangdang7262 发表于 2009-2-9 16:45 web2.0建立外链的方法


一共要写几篇文章啊?

求原文链接
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发表于 2010-7-12 21:44:50 | 显示全部楼层
其实都是同一篇
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发表于 2010-7-12 23:22:08 | 显示全部楼层
有空试试看
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发表于 2010-7-13 12:23:38 | 显示全部楼层
向老外学习哈
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发表于 2010-7-13 13:09:56 | 显示全部楼层
看着像链轮~
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 楼主| 发表于 2010-7-15 01:58:42 | 显示全部楼层
Welcome to this lesson on the Web 2.0 backlink method.

The key to this strategy is RSS. It’s a crucial tool for utilising Web 2.0 sites because it acts as a connector between your blog, your Squidoo lens, your Twitter feed and all the other Web 2.0 sites you use — ultimately helping you to form a tight network, which in turn, leads to piles of traffic.

What is RSS? A refresher:
RSS is a type of language that formats your website content in a standard way so that a variety of RSS readers can understand it and display it to subscribers.

When you go to a blog or any number of other sites you’ll often see an orange block in the address bar, or somewhere else on the page. That’s the RSS icon. If you click on this it will bring up the RSS feed.

How is an RSS feed useful?
Many web 2.0 sites allow you to

create RSS feeds
add content to their networks using RSS feeds.
They will translate your feed into standard HTML so that it can be published as content on a website. Every time you post a new article on a site or blog with RSS enabled, it will automatically update the RSS feed and consequently, any site that is using that feed. So by updating one site, you can effectively be updating many.

Not only that, each update will also provide a link back to the original source for the RSS feed. What that means is that you can build a chain or network of sites and links that ends up pointing back to your main web­site — and thereby explode your traffic through the backlinks!

The way to put this into practice is to take a systematic approach. Here’s the basic method:

Create three or four 300 word articles that are on the keyword topic you want to rank for. Make sure these articles have compelling titles which include the main keyword. Also make sure the keywords are in the opening and closing paragraph and once or twice throughout the body text. The content needs to have a purpose and direct readers to take action.

Create a high quality lens on Squidoo and post one of your articles along with a text link back to your main site that uses the keyword you’d like to rank for.

Go to Twitter and make a post that says something like: "I just created a new lens at…(and insert your Squidoo lens URL)". This is to get your backlink spidered.

Create a page at Hubpages.com.

Hubpages describes itself as the leading online publishing ecosystem and is in fact very similar to Squidoo. The benefit of Hubpages however, is that it gives you more tools to monetize your page and doesn’t require the same amount of profit sharing as Squidoo.

For this fourth step of the process, add your second article to your Hub, again making sure to include a keyword text link back to your main site. You should also add the RSS feed from your Squidoo lens to your Hubpage.

Go back to Twitter and make a post about your new Hubpage to get that backlink spidered.

Create a blog at Blogger.com and add the third article with a text link containing your keyword back to your main site and add the RSS feed from the Squidoo and Hubpages page to your blog.

Post on Twitter about that to get your Blogger post spidered.

Create a page at Tumblr.com and add the RSS feed from your new pages (Tumblr allows you to add up to 5 pages).

Post on Twitter again to get that backlink spidered.

Create a page at FeedBite.com with the RSS feed from all the previous sites.

Post on Twitter.

Create an account at Bumpzee and add your Squidoo, HubPages, Blogger and Tumblr RSS feed.

Go to Ping.in and ping all the pages you’ve just created, including your Twitter page.

And on and on you go….!

I could continue, but I’m sure you are getting the general idea!

Mix it up
Don’t take the example I’ve just given as a rigid formula to be followed to the letter. The beauty of this method is that it can be mixed up in a thousand different ways, the more original the better.

Some web 2.0 sites to try are:
Hubpages
Squidoo
Tumblr
Blogger
Xanga
Yahoo360
Wordpress.com (although they’re VERY wary of anything that looks commercial)
Zimbio
FeedBite
Bumpzee
Ezinearticles
Twitter (for getting your new sites, posts, comments etc indexed in Google)
Ping.in (for pinging your new content)
You can mix and match any of these sites using the template we’ve give you.

Which Web 2.0 sites work best?
This is a common question, but the answer is simply that it doesn’t really matter. The sites that work for you might be different from the sites that work for other affiliate marketers; so don’t get too hung up on this issue. The best idea is to watch your web statistics and see which web 2.0 sites are sending you the most traffic. From that information, you can weed out the ones that aren’t working and focus on the ones that are.

Most web hosting companies will give you a basic stats package that allows you to see where your traffic is coming from.

Forget the "nofollow" tag
The nofollow tag is what some sites add to their outgoing links to tell the search engines not to pay attention to that link. It was introduced a few years back to try to curb comment spam in blogs. It’s considered a problem for internet marketers because a back­link with a "nofollow" tag doesn’t really count as a backlink.

However, the good news is that even with the nofollow tag, people will still visit a website, read your content and then visit your site. And at the end of the day, isn’t traffic what you’re really after anyway?

这是原文
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发表于 2010-7-19 02:43:50 | 显示全部楼层
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