My Linkbait Experiment, Holy Mackerel!
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A couple weeks ago I seriously riled some folks up. It was fun, but now I want to show you why I did it and how perfectly my fiendish blog-traffic-linking plan has unfolded so far. If you haven’t yet, definitely read my recent post about misusing five words. If you’ve already been there, you know there was a little controversy stirred up, but otherwise, a lot of fun talking about the idea. If you hadn’t guessed yet, that post was not really about screwing up the English language at all. In fact, it was an experiment in linkbait. What is linkbait? Oh my, where have you been? Please allow me to refer you to the number one Google result for the term linkbait by Matt Cutts (at least it’s number one as I write this).
It Sounds a Little Dirty
The word linkbait sounds like it could be a bad thing, or at least, it could have a few negative connotations. In fact, it’s not bad at all if you do it right. Linkbait is essentially nothing more than writing a great headline that attracts a reader to click your link and commit to reading your article. And if the article is good enough, they cannot resist bookmarking it, or linking to it on either social media sites, their own blog, or their website.
When newspaper, or magazine editors select a headline, they’re creating the equivalent of linkbait. They make the headline as compelling as possible and attach it to a phenomenal article. And the best articles are passed around by friends who may eventually subscribe to the publication, if they like the article enough. This is offline linkbait. More like, readbait, or make-you-not-able-to-put-the-magazine-down-and-also-insist-your-friends-read-it bait. You get the picture. If you want your blog, or web site (or printed ad, for that matter) to attract and keep readers, you must learn how to write headlines and posts (articles) that are so compelling that a majority of casual observers click through and commit to spending a little time with you and then even bookmark you for reference and sharing. A curious thing about this:
The headline is useless if you write a terrible article and the article is useless if you write a terrible headline.
Doing it Wrong Can Hurt You
If you’re just writing a snappy headline and it has a crappy article behind it, you probably just lost yourself a whole mess of readers. You made a great promise with the headline, but failed to deliver with the article. There’s good linkbait and bad linkbait and if your article is weak, or an obvious attempt to linkbait-and-switch, you will get what you deserve: a bad reputation and no catch-of-the-day, AKA link love. I’ve already written a post about how to write great headlines and there are some good references there to get you started. That post, by the way, had a terrible headline and is a perfect example of how to fail epically at writing a linkbait headline. I got almost zero readers for that post, although it did have some good info in it. Word to the wise—seriously consider your headlines.
So, Does Linkbait Work?
I’ve been practicing and diligently doing the training in the Social Power Linking program and my last, best attempt at a linkbait piece succeeded better than I could have expected in my wildest dreams. I spent probably five hours on that post, whittling away every non-esssential word and making sure it flowed smoothly, etc. I also spent a good 30 minutes on the title alone, to which I grant the most credit for having made that post so popular. My post on five misused words got more traffic than any other post I’ve ever made.
In fact, during the two days following my linkbait post, this blog received over 1800 pageviews and is now up to approximately 4870 pageviews at the time of this post. Unique visitors climbed to over 900 during those two days and have continued to flow in ever since. I got more unique visitors and overall traffic from that one post than all my other posts combined to date.
A Few Resources
If you want to learn more about the fine art of linkbaiting, the following resources will really cover almost everything. I owe a lot to SPL, but I also spent a lot of time reading the posts linked below and I want to thank the authors for taking the time to put that information together. I’d also love to hear about your own experiments in linkbaiting as well as any advice that the resources below may have left out. Andy Hagans’ Ultimate Guide to Linkbaiting and SMM The Link Baiting Playbook: Hooks Revisited
And if you don’t feel like reading right now, check out Aaron Wall’s video on linkbaiting, How to: Create Linkbait Every Day:
And finally, here are just a few more linkbait resources you might find useful:
- 5 Linkbait Ideas Any Blog Can Use
- Linkbait in difficult industries
- Beyond Linkbait with Media and Blogger Relations – SES NY
- Productivity, How-to and Advice Sites: Making Linkbait Useful Again
- Five Simple Linkbait Metrics (& How To Measure Them Cheaply)



April 6th, 2008 at 3:33 am
Great post, I’ve never really tried linkbaiting, but I’ll check out the resources above and give it a go.
Fingers crossed I’ll get the same results as you did
Cheers
Stuart
Beardy Geek’s last blog post..My Twitter Tales
April 6th, 2008 at 10:06 am
I would say this is the hardest thing for a new blogger to get good at. Thanks for the hope and the resources to get better.
good luck
reversemortgage’s last blog post..Wisconsin Reverse Mortgage: How to Help Increase Retirement Income
April 7th, 2008 at 2:34 pm
Thanks and appreciated the video backing it all up
Diane Scott’s last blog post..A Strange Thing Happened on the Way to the Giveaway
April 7th, 2008 at 7:18 pm
@Stuart: glad you liked it! I’m still practicing, but I think it really does just get down to getting a feel for writing according to your reader’s curiosity factor. If you do it well, people Stumble, Digg and bookmark you and you’re on your way. It doesn’t hurt to prime the pump a little though. IOW, get some friends to Digg or Stumble your story.
@reversemortgage: I think you’re right. It’s a great challenge to help improve one’s writing skills in general as well. Thanks for commenting.
@Diane: Thanks for commenting, Diane–very glad it was useful. I’m a big advocate of video training.
April 28th, 2008 at 8:04 pm
I’ve done a bit of link-baiting, although I tend to do it more as a “useful tutorials” thing, rather than an in-your-face sort of thing. My linkbait tends to consist of concrete steps to do something which I haven’t found elsewhere—or present it in a way that I haven’t found elsewhere.
One of them, my third HTML for Dummies post, racked up 14,000 hits over two weeks.
It’s nice to be useful.
Your “five words” article is quite excellent.
Arachne Jerichos last blog post..A Personal Discovery of Authority
April 29th, 2008 at 3:41 pm
Hey Arachne!
I learned a lot from this post actually and will likely do my linkbait differently after this. I am most interested in uplifting, helpful, fascinating posts rather than the fear-based sort. But in the interest of blog science, I have done my duty and tested this, just to be sure.
Wow, 14,000 is pretty significant. Although I’m not surprised, you have a very well-written blog with excellent information presented extremely clearly. Look forward to reading more, in fact.
And I’m flattered you liked my article and honored you stopped by. More praise like that and I just might write more often . . .
See you around on the ‘Tubes!
May 13th, 2008 at 2:11 am
Well done article. I am keeping it for reference.
Cheers,
Michaels last blog post..Popular Greek Islands
June 11th, 2008 at 12:16 pm
You laid out how fun linkbaiting can be. Although it can be some work I am sure you will get quicker and better as you practice it more, congrats on the success you had with your test.
Joshs last blog post..Unconventional Marketing targets the fringe
September 9th, 2008 at 9:42 pm
Wow, it’s been a while!
I’ve been on hiatus and am only now getting back to my blog. (Yes, it was an experiment. Sort of . . .
)
Michael, thanks for commenting. Glad it was useful!
Josh, thanks for stopping by and commenting.
Since I’ve been away I’ve realized a few things, namely, the so-called link baiting that is generally referred to is not exactly the way I want to do it now. I have some new ideas about writing posts.
I’ll write more about that in an upcoming post though
I look forward to reading your blog.
June 24th, 2009 at 6:29 pm
Thanks for sharing your post. I really appreciate it.
July 28th, 2009 at 9:31 am
Interesting post. Your experiment with link baiting can help business owners market the sites well.