Articles
The Worst Web Site Design Advice I've Ever
Seen
by
Dennis Gaskill
Reading a recent article on the things you shouldn't do as you build web
sites, the author stated, "Don't link 'out' unless you *want* your
visitors to leave!"
That
might apply if you're building a one-trick pony, that is, a mini web
site only designed to sell one product. For everyone else, this is among
the worst web site design advice I've ever seen. How do I fault thee?
Let me count the ways:
1)
First and foremost is the link popularity factor. Search engines use
link popularity as the primary factor in ranking your site. If you don't
have a lot of links to your site, you're not going to rank well.
Trading links with sites, and especially sites with content that
complements your content, is the main way you obtain the all important
incoming links. What are you going to do, write to other webmasters and
ask them to link to your site so it can be popular with search engines,
but then say that you can't give them a reciprocal link? Yeah, that
works.
2)
The advice assumes a visitor will stay longer if there are no links out.
Your visitors are going to leave whether you provide the links for them
or not. They will use their book marks, back button, or type an address
into the browser themselves. Not providing links doesn't keep them on
your site longer. What keeps them there is quality content. If you have
quality content they will stay until satisfied and possibly bookmark
your site and come back again.
If
you don't have quality content nothing in the world will keep them on
your site one minute longer. Any perception that you're trying to trap
them there will be met with resentment. Lack of quality content and lack
of quality links makes for a *very* forgettable web site.
3) I
have over a dozen sites bookmarked just because they have great links on
them. I asked several friends if they did the same thing, and each one
said they did. I don't think that's unusual. Great links are just one
more section of quality content that you can add to your site, and
quality content is what makes or breaks a site.
I've
had several people write to thank me for the links I offer. Rather than
causing people to leave your site, it brings them back. If you look at
it logically, search engines and directories are nothing but links, but
they are among the most popular sites on the Internet. If people are
coming back, even if it's just for links, you'll have that many more
chances to attract them to your offerings.
If
you're afraid of losing your visitors because you provide links out,
then perhaps you don't have enough confidence in your site or your
content. Perhaps you should spend more time working on that and less
time about worrying how long you can keep someone trapped.
4)
One of the things that people like about the Internet is the sense of
community. Isolating yourself infers to some that you have no desire to
be a part of this global community. It says you're only in it for your
own selfish interests rather than being a part of a larger community of
Netizens. Isolationism is unattractive to some users, so even if you've
done well in other areas, you may be met with skepticism.
5)
The writer's advice of not linking out unless you want people to leave
your site completely ignores the fact that exchanging links also brings
traffic TO your site.
My
site is in the top 1% of the most linked-to-sites on the Internet
according to websmostlinked.com. It serves about 750,000 page views per
month. Less than 35% of my traffic comes from search engines. That means
over 65% of my traffic comes from links or a bookmark, and I do have
good search engine rankings for several keywords so it's not balanced
that way because of my search engine rankings.
I
didn't develop that kind of traffic by isolating my site. The writer
didn't say what kind of traffic his web site has. Could it be he just
didn't want to brag? It's possible, but he didn't give any advice on how
he's getting big time traffic, so maybe isolationism isn't such a good
idea.
Granted, there may be certain specific situations where you might want a
site with no outgoing links. But that would be the exception, not the
rule. Links should be a vital part of most web sites, and not just an
afterthought. The quality of your links reflects on the quality of your
web site. Link well and wisely.
Dennis Gaskill is the creator and owner of Boogie Jack's Web Depot at
http://www.boogiejack.com - a
popular webmasters resource site ranking in the top 1% of the most
linked to sites on the Internet. He is also author of the new book Web
Site Design Made Easy and publishes Almost a Newsletter, named the Best
Ezine of 2000.
"Reprinted
from
Zongoo.com Daily Press & Consumer
Information"
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