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Eric Ward Eric Ward   Bio
06.20.06

Link Bait Kool-Aid?

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"Link Bait." Man I hate that term. Like your site’s users are nothing more than fish to be hooked. Dangle a tasty little piece of content, any content, and BAM, got another click....

If you haven’t heard the term yet, you may be shocked to see over 20,000 references to Link Bait at Google. I’m not shocked. Link Bait has been around longer than I have. It’s what we used to call “content.”

Nowadays I guess the term content has become quaint. I hear people saying, “I don’t have time to add real content, I need is something quick that will make everyone want to link to my site.” And I say, “Like what, the Diet Coke/Mentos fountain video? But I thought your site sold ball bearings?”

Funny, but true. People are getting so caught up in their quest for viral, user-generated links that they will do anything. Who cares if it has nothing to do with your long-term business success, your site was on the Digg homepage yesterday! Cool!!

I say you’re drinking the link bait Kool-Aid.

Link Bait is more or less anything you create anywhere on the Web that inspires other people to link to it. They can link to it via a Web page, a blog, social bookmark site, tagging site, e-zine, newsletter, IM, email or any other method that tells others about the bait.

The bait itself can be anything from a controversial blog post that gets people talking and linking, to a Web site that adds something really funny, to a useful application that actually helps people.

Go back all the way to the days that Yahoo was just a hobby for the boys at Stanford, and you could say their directory was early Link Bait. Everyone linked to Yahoo. Why? It was an awesome place to go find new Web sites.

Remember that silly screen saver of the noodles doing the Macarena? That was Link Bait circa 1997.

Even earlier was 1994’s Really Big Button That Doesn’t Do Anything. I laughed over that for weeks. It was funny back then. I think I emailed the link to a bunch of friends.

There’s nothing necessarily wrong with link baiting. It’s the term and the tactics I don’t like. If you are creating Link Bait for no other reason than to attract links in hopes of also attracting search engine rankings improvement via those links...well, good luck. That’s what EVERYONE is doing. And those types of links wont help you long if at all. But go ahead and try it. While you do, why not also add some really useful content and tools to your site that will help your users accomplish something?

No matter how clever the Link Bait, if it does nothing more than cause a little buzz or drive-by traffic, then you’ve wasted time and opportunity. Any site can fool people once, even twice. I’d rather have one person bookmark my site and use it every day than have 10 people come by for three seconds and leave.

Eric



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Comments

This is a pervasive issue across all kinds of marketing effots. It is the age-old struggle between quality and quantity. I keep hoping that we will find a good balance but the fact is that delivering quality is *hard* and it is often easier to go for "good enough" and try to make up the difference with volume. Besides, it can be a lot of fun.

On the other hand, if you can't be found, the quality folks you really *want* end up passing you by, too. So there's a definite and legitimate need to get that first glance.

On some level, I would love to have the next "Mentos and Diet Coke video"-type piece. But, in the long run, what I want to *deliver* is utility. It's my way of trying to give something back to the prospects and customers who give us their time. (Can I have a side of "fun" with that?)

Posted by: Ariel | 06.20.06

What's the point of having unqualified traffic if it does nothing for what you are trying to accomplish?

If it makes sense, go for it. If it doesn't - it doesn't. I like it as a "current event" or fun piece supplement that Ariel mentioned. It makes you want to go back there to see what the current event is. why not even make fun of it at the same time? Just thoughts...

Depends on what you do. Or what you are trying to do.

-Allison McCarthy

Posted by: Allison McCarthy | 06.20.06

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