Vitaliy's Posts

Co-Founder at Recess Mobile 

Link Building Strategies – The Complete List

Yes, the rumors are true. I’ve put together the most comprehensive list of link building strategies on the Web. If there’s any post on my blog you should bookmark for future reference, this is the one.

Why I created it: The best link building strategies are never found in one place, and the best lists of strategies are completely outdated.

If you can think of 3 link building strategies not listed, leave a comment with them (and a few short descriptions), and if I agree they should be on the list, I’ll add them & send you a free Point Blank SEO t-shirt.

If you don’t want to click on each strategy, you can Expand/Contract All.

Basic Strategies

These are the most basic strategies in the book. Everyone can build links with these strategies, no matter what industry you’re in.

Create a blog

Creating content on a consistent basis not only builds links internally (by linking out from your posts), but also gives you the ability to naturally attract links to your content.A blog is essential to many strategies I list below, such as linking out. You absolutely need a blog in today’s online environment to survive.

For more information, read these tips & tutorials.

Create an RSS feed

If your blog is run on any of the popular Content Management Systems, you’ll already have an RSS feed. If you don’t, create one. If you do, burn it at Feedburner.com so you can get statistics on your subscribers.

For link building, it’s simple. There are sites out there that will scrape your content (stealing it without permission). When they do, make sure you get a link back by 1) including links to other pages on your site in your posts and 2) installing the RSS footer plugin for WordPress (adds a link to your blog after every post).

Ask people you know for a link

Whether it’s your friends, relatives, employees, colleagues, business partners, clients, or anyone else, ask them for a link. Someone you know has a website or blog, so take advantage.

Link out

Linking out is huge. Don’t be a link hoard; you’re going to create content, so use it to gain favor with other people.I’ll go more into depth below with specific strategies on linking out.

Build relationships

This is the #1 link building strategy in the world. Get to know people! Build relationships with them, because it’ll come back to you in the form of links (that is if they’re the RIGHT people).

I’ll go more into depth below on different ways to build relationships, but the best part about this is that it’s just like real life. Remember how people say, “it’s not about what you know, it’s about who you know”? The same goes for link building.

Interlink

You have pages and posts on your website, so make the most of them. Internal links are HUGE for link building because you can control everything about them, from the location on the page to the anchor text.

This is something that most people overlook, and I advise you to please not! Make sure to steer your content in the direction of other posts or pages so you can link to them.

Also, if you have multiple sites, interlinking is a must (unless they’re completely irrelevant and unrelated).

Research competitors

A large chunk of my time finding links is by looking through my competitor’s link profiles. Essentially, you’re piggy backing off of their success. While some links are unobtainable (i.e. a random mention in a news post), others can be diamonds in the rough (a high quality niche directory).

I suggest using SEOmoz’s Open Site Explorer for this. Plugin your competitors and export their backlinks to a CSV. Do this for all of your competitors so you can get all of their links in one place – Excel. Then you can sort them by various link metrics to find the best opportunities.

Make it easy to link to you

If you want people to link to you, make it easy for them.Create HTML ready snippets that people can plug right into their content to link to you, because some linkers in your community might not be too web savvy. I suggest either creating a “Link to Us” page or by using a little javascript to generate the HTML at the end of each article or post.

Note: this might not be the best option based on the community you’re located in. Are you in the cement niche? Then this is perfect. Are you talking about Internet related business? Then this might not be your best bet, because the majority of your audience probably already knows how to link.

Get people to see your content

People won’t link to your content unless they see it. At the same time, you need the rightpeople in front of your content – not everyone is a potential linker.

This is where social media, content marketing, and brand awareness comes into the link building realm. Getting people to see and know your content & brand is a massively important strategy to build links. Below I’ll go into specific strategies to make this happen.

Profile links

If you sign up to become a member for a site, you’ll get a link in your profile. Well, not every site. Some sites will allow quality links in your profile, while others won’t. Some are in the middle, such as Twitter, which gives nofollow links (links that don’t pass link juice).

Example: CrunchBase. Sign up here.

Resources/Links pages

Other webmasters have created links or resource pages, and these are legitimate opportunities to get links. If the links on that page are relevant, you’ve got a chance.

Unfortunately, it’s not as easy as just asking for a link. I’ll go into specific strategies below that help you get webmasters liking you before you ask, because doing that greatly increases your chances of getting a link.

Submission-Based Strategies

There are many places across the web where you can build links through submissions, whether it’s submitting your site, a piece of content, or anything else.

Free web directories

There are hundreds of free web directories to submit your site to. The only qualification you need is to have an active website. Because these links are so easy to get, though, they don’t pass much value. Still, there are a few free general directory links that pass both link juice and trust.

Example: Website Launchpad. Submit here.

Paid directories

Some directories cost money in order to be accepted into their listings. Once again, while some of these can pass legitimate value, others pass little and aren’t worth your time or money.

Example: The Yahoo Directory. Submit here.

Niche specific directories

As opposed to general web directories, niche specific directories only accept sites that meet a certain topic criteria. For example, one directory might only accept sites about arts & crafts. Some of these directories are free, while others are paid.Example: Business.com, a directory for business websites. Submit here. Cost is $299/year.

RSS directories

If you have an RSS feed, you can submit it to RSS directories. There are hundreds. Here’s a fantastic list(scroll down) of RSS directories to start out.Although these links won’t be directly to your content, they’ll pass link juice to your RSS feed which links to any content you linked to in your posts.Example: www.Feedage.com. Submit here (create an account first).

Article directories

You can submit your articles & blog posts to article syndication sites. Although they don’t pass much value, they’re still worth submitting at least a couple articles to. In return, you’ll get a link or two in your author bio, depending on the site.

Example: Ezinearticles.com. Sign up here.

Web 2.0 submission

Web 2.0 sites are similar to article directories, but instead, you can add images, video, and other interactive features to your content. These usually pass more value than article directories, but it depends on the authority of the site.

Example: Squidoo.com. Sign up here.

Press release submission

By submitting a press release to distribution sites or specific syndication sites, you can build links if you add one or two into the body of the release. Some options are paid, while others are free.

Example: PRWeb.com. Sign up here. Packages start at $89.

Blog directories

If you have a blog, you can submit it to various blog directories. Like all other directories, some pass value, while others are crap.

Example: AllTop.com. Find a relevant category, then sign up to submit.

Podcast directories

If you have a podcast, you can snag a few free, easy links by submitting to podcast directories.

Example: PodcastDirectory.com. Submit here.

Multimedia/Document submissions

If you have any PDFs, PowerPoint Presentations, word documents, or any other documents, you can submit them to these sites and get a link in return. You have to put the links in your documents, such as in the first slide of a PowerPoint or in the text of a PDF.

Examples: SlideShare, Scribd, and Issuu.

Note: Although you can get a profile link from each, I’m still not 100% positive Google counts these links. I’m 99% sure Scribd’s links are, but I know these are nofollow. Also, Slideshare’s & Scribd’s profile links are nofollow.

CSS/HTML5 galleries

There are loads of CSS galleries you can submit to if you did a great job designing your website or blog. There are also a few HTML5 showcases that you can get links from too.

I suggest forking out $20 to have your site submitted to 100 of them. Don’t worry; it’s quality manual submissions, not software.

Theme/Template directories

Designing WordPress themes or website templates can be a great way to net a few fantastic links from directories. Also, you can host the download page on your site, and if it’s decent, you’ll get a few links from design blogs.

If it’s a WordPress theme, you can submit to the WordPress.org theme directory, which will get you a couple of high quality nofollow links (not to mention a ton of free exposure).

Example: free-css.com (website templates). Here’s the submission information.

Note: Remember to include credit links in the templates or themes, because sometimes that’s the only way you’ll get a link back (they’ll link to a demo page, not the creator’s site). Popular page locations of links include the footer & the sidebar.

Infographic submissions

If you’ve created an infographic, you can easily submit them to infographic directories or blogs. Paddy Moogan put together this awesome list of 27 of them.

Example: CoolInfographics.com. Suggest one here.

User rating reviews

Submit user ratings and build links at the same time. Once again, Peter Attia created an awesome list of submission sites for this topic.

Example: Epinions. Sign up here.

Video submissions

If you have video content, make sure you’re getting links from all that hard work. The best list is here. Just as a heads up, some sites only provide nofollow links, and they’re usually in the description.

If you’re looking to submit videos on a large scale, consider checking out TubeMogul. It’s a paid service, but it can save you some serious time.

Example: Vimeo. Sign up here.

Company directory submissions

Just like general web directories, you can submit your site to general company directories. You really don’t even need an actual company; you only need a website.

Examples: HotFrog, Manta.

Iphone app directories

If you have an Iphone app, you can get a few easy links. Or, if you want, you can create one to get these links. An easy one to create is an app that just acts as a mobile RSS reader (this app from the SPI blog is a great example of this).

Example: Appolicious. Sign up to submit here.

Web app directories

If you have an online tool or application, you can get links for it. If you’re thinking about creating one, know that it can also be used to attract links (link bait). We’ll go more into that below.

Example: Go 2 Web 20. Hit “Suggest an App” to submit.

Widget directories

Although the majority of widget directories you come across don’t outright give you a link, you can still do some serious link building with them. If you make sure there’s a link somewhere in your widget, you can get it in front of large audiences with these directories, and in doing so, some will embed them (thus, you earn a few links).

Example: Yahoo! Widget Directory. Submit here.

Non-English directories

If you’ve created multiple versions of your site in different languages, you can get links for it. Here’s a great listof German directories.

Example: Hello Dir (Italian). Choose category, then submit.

Web cam directories

If you set up a Webcam, you can get a few high quality links, such as the PR7 directory listed below.If you’re wondering where to set it up, don’t worry; it doesn’t have to be Times Square. I’ve seen a few of highway roads set up right outside of their offices (pretty lame, right?). You can do something similar. If you want, set it up some place awesome, because it could attract links on its own.

Example: Earthcam.com. Submit here.

Logo design directories

Most of you have logos for your website or company, so get a few links in return for them.

Example: TheLogoMix.com. Info to submit here.

EBook directories

If you’ve already written a few eBooks, or if you plan to, there are a solid amount of eBook directories you can get links from.

Example: E-BooksDirectory.com. Submit here.

1-800 Directories

Have a toll free 1-800 number? Get a few links in return. If you don’t have one, you can get one for $10/month at Grasshopper.

Example: InternetTollFree.com. Info to submit here.

Content-Based Strategies

You can use your content to get links. Most of these strategies don’t necessarily attract links (which we go into below), but they can if the content is good enough.

Guest posting

Bloggers, just like me, sometimes have trouble cranking out content on a regular basis. That’s where you can help. Pitch bloggers to ask if you could guest blog, because if they say yes, you can get a few links from the post, and if the blog is popular, you can drive traffic too.

Here’s a fantastic guide on the entire guest blogging process.

If you want, use sites like Blogger Link Up and My Blog Guest to connect with bloggers who need content. It’s scalable, but the bloggers you get in touch with aren’t usually very authoritative (they’re mostly mid-level bloggers).

Trade articles

Just like guest posting, you can get links in return for your content, but why not just trade? You both get content on each other’s site, links, and visitors from an entirely different community.

If you or the other has a significantly more popular blog, see if the less significant one can do something extra in return. A good example is buying the other $10-15 worth of StumbleUpon paid traffic.

Images

Something so frequently overlooked is the use of images for link building. Bloggers just like me struggle to find relevant images to our content, so why not take advantage? When people use your images you’ll get an attribution link in return (that’s if they’re honest).A great idea is to always have a camera with you whenever you’re at an industry event. Imagine if you took 100 pictures at PubCon of all the different speakers and published them on a certain portion of your site.

Pro tiphotlink your images. Make it easy for publishers to copy & paste HTML code right into their posts. This not only makes it easier to use your images, but it also makes it much more likely you’ll get a link from each.

Free charts/graphs

If you’ve got a few tidbits of data lying around, make them into charts and graphs. SEOmoz did a fantastic job of this. Just like images, you’ll get attribution links.

Educational content

If you’re trying to get links from colleges, create content targeted at them that you can use during outreach. Trust me, there’s usually something you know that you could write an entire tutorial on that would interest college webmasters.

Pro tip: Seek out pages on .edu websites that feature similar content, then do any of the strategies I list further down on this list that get you on the webmaster’s good side.

Green content

Just like educational content, create something that targets a specific community. In this case, environmentalists. They’ve got hoards of link juice just waiting to be tapped into.

Simply outreaching to green bloggers and letting them know about your content usually does the trick. If the content is good enough, and if it’s a complete conversation (i.e. a huge infographic on the environmental impact of drift nets), they’ll usually dedicate an entire post to it.

Pro tip: As stated above, an infographic or something similar would work great, because all they have to do is imbed it. If there’s any community willing to imbed an infographic that’s relevant & worth sharing, it’s the green community.

Writing testimonials

This one is HUGE. Right now, list any services or products you’ve bought recently. As long as it’s not a product or service from a massive company (i.e. Walmart), there’s a good chance you can get a link in exchange for a testimonial.

For example, this testimonial page has a Page Authority of 82. The best part – it only cost the customers a few sentences about that specific service.

Entering contests & giveaways

I love online contests, and so should you. They’re not only your chance to win some cash or prizes, but they’re also a chance to net a few high quality links. The most popular contests & giveaways you’ll see are guest blogging contests.

For instance, I not only got a link from this post I entered, but I also won the $1000 grand prize. Not bad, eh?

Here’s a great example of where your great content pays off. I entered an infographic created by Kapil Kale, one of my friends, into a contest on StumbleUpon, and it got a link from their blog! Talk about high quality links…

Get interviewed

Just like you should interview others, seize opportunities to be interviewed, no matter how small the audience is. The 5-600 words that take you 15-20 minutes can turn into a few highly authoritative contextual links.

Contribute to crowdsourced posts

Just like with interviews, if someone reaches out to you to participate in a crowdsourced post, make sure you contribute. The questions usually don’t take more than 5-10 minutes of your time, and you’ll get a decent link or two from it.

Link Attraction (Linkbait) Strategies

Outreach & submissions only go so far. Sometimes you have to let your content attract links naturally to get the results you want.

If you create content that naturally attracts links, it not only saves you time getting them manually, but it also increases engagement on your blog (if it’s worth linking to, it’s usually worth reading). This is where your content & link building strategies meet.

Lists

1.People.

2.Love.

3.Lists!

Why? Because the content is super easy to digest.

Don’t believe me? Check out this simple list of water conservation tips that received over 1,900 links from 400+ root domains.

Data/Research

By collecting data on just about anything, you can attract links. Why? Because, like lists, people absolutely love data. One reason is because they like to make conclusions from it that support their arguments.

Take it one step further. Release it as straight data, then release it again that makes it visually appealing with any of the strategies below.

Pro tip: If your data supports a side of an argument (i.e. nature vs. nurture debate), reach out to those that it would support. People love telling the world how right they are.

Infographics

People love data, but sometimes it’s hard to digest. Creating an infographic on it is a  popular way to change that. Not only will it naturally attract links, but you’ll also get other bloggers imbedding it, which means even more links! Not to mention you have control over the anchor text of the imbed code.

Here’s a fantastic case study on an infographic that not only netted a ton of links, but also some serious traffic and social traction.

Interviews

Interviewing industry experts will always be a fantastic way to attract links, but getting them to interview is only half the battle. The other half is asking great questions.

A good way to find out what questions you should ask is by holding a Q&A with your blog’s community, whether it’s on Google+, Twitter, or any other site. Ask what kinds of questions you want your readers to see.

Crowdsourcing

Getting answers from a group of industry experts is another fantastic way to attract links. If the piece is good enough, and if you have the right influencers involved, the amount of links you’ll attract can grow exponentially.

For example, SEOmoz did a study on ranking factors, getting input from over 130 different experts. You can probably guess it was a huge success. It’s attracted 27,000+ links from 3,300+ root domains. Why? Because the experts did the promotion for them.

Interactive

The next big thing in linkbait is interactive content. The reason: because it’s flat out cool and few people are doing it.

A great example is what Thomson.co.uk did with this.

Infoanmiations

Instead of creating an infographic, why not create a video that displays the same information? It’s a lot different than what most are doing, and trust me, that’s a good thing. The best part is that it works the same way as infographics; the video can be imbedded and can act as a post by itself.

Here’s a great example, and here’s where I got the idea.

Trollbait (controversy)

I love this term. I think Rand Fishkin or Kris Roadruck first said it. Basically, it’s a better way to say “create something controversial”.

Creating controversy can be a great way to attract links. Godaddy’s SOPA fiasco is a fantastic example. They originally supported it (which rose controversy), and then stated they would now oppose it (which rose even more controversy).

Complete guides/resources

Creating evergreen resources that are complete guides on a subject are fantastic. This complete list of link building strategies is my attempt at one.

Why? Because when people need to explain an entire topic, they’d love it if they could refer to just one resource, and not a group of them. For example, Kristi Hines created one on the Google +1 button.

Pro tip: If it’s not timeless, curate it and keep it up to date. It might be an awesome resource, but it could become stale in a couple of years, such as a guide to Pinterest.

Covering News first

This one’s tough, but remember to always keep it in mind. If you see someone talking about a new developing story, and no one has covered it yet, start mashing on your keyboard at lightning speed.

A good way to do this is by making sure all of the news sources are in your RSS feed reader. For example, if I wanted to cover the latest development of search engines, the Google, Yahoo, and Bing blogs would all be in my reader.

Curated rankings/scores

If you create rankings or scores of people, companies, or anything else, and if it’s decent enough, then trust me, you’ll get a few links. The best part – they don’t even have to be accurate (of course it would be great if it was).

A few good examples are Klout and this list of Top blogs on Startups. Again, both aren’t exactly accurate (Klout isn’t the best depiction of your influence on Twitter, and the #1 blog on that list is no longer active), but people care about numbers and rankings, especially the ones that make them look good.

Microsites

Creating fun, quirky microsites is a great way to attract links. While some people might naturally link to your main site to give credit, they’ll most likely link to the microsite, which should have at least one link back to you on it.

Here are a few highly successful ones. If you’re thinking they might be too big of an investment, know that they don’t have to be fancy.

Quizzes/Tests

Testing your reader’s knowledge and letting them share their results with their friends is always a great idea.

OKCupid does a fantastic job with this. Their 2008 politics test attracted 1,600+ links from over 500 root domains.

How to’s and tutorials

Whether it’s a tool, DIY project, or anything else, showing people exactly how to do something is extremely helpful.

This RSS tutorial attracted 8,000+ links from over 600 root domains.

Debunking myths

If there’s a common misconception in your industry, make sure you let everyone know. If it’s big enough, and if your statements are bold enough, you could get some serious attention.

This debunking of 9/11 myths, with 4,000+ links from over 200 root domains, is a perfect example of it working flawlessly.

Petition

If you and your community are passionate about a certain issue, start a petition. If you can gain any traction from an industry news site, it could catch on like wildfire.

This petition received 1,100+ links from over 200 root domains.

Note: Although not recommended, because it isn’t hosted on your site, one option is to use change.org to start your petition. It’s an easy set up, and because it’s hosted on their all ready popular site, you get all the added benefits of professionalism & exposure.

Glossary of terms

Newbies in your industry probably don’t know all the jargon you and other bloggers are using. Do them a favor and create a glossary of industry terms and acronyms.

Here’s a fantastic glossary of internet terms that landed 2,600+ links from over 1,200 root domains (imagine if you made an updated version!).

Humor

Creating a parody, spoof, or industry jokes list is a great way to loosen up your readers. People love sharing things they can laugh at.

The Onion, a fake news network, is built on humor. This story in particular attracted 4,400+ links from 1,200 root domains. No, you’re not a major site like The Onion, but making a similarly funny industry news story is something worth thinking about.

Case studies

Everyone loves a good case study. Real results with real numbers can instantly catch people’s attention. If you offer a product or service, this is a no-brainer. If you give out advice, find someone who’s used it successfully.

Although this particular case study didn’t attract more than 200 links, it’s still a great example of what one should look like.

Surveys

There’s generally a two-step process to attracting links with surveys.

The first step is asking people to participate. If it’s on a particularly interesting topic, reaching out to bloggers, experts, and industry news sites to ask to spread the word both on their blog and on social media sites is a great way to attract your first wave of links.

The second step is releasing the results. Combine the release with some nice visualization and a bit of controversy, and you’ve got yourself a fantastic piece of linkbait.

Although it didn’t use the above formula, this survey has attracted 250+ links from 100 root domains in only 4 months (published September 2011, last OSE update Jan. 17).

Research papers

Going all out and diving deep into a subject is a great way to establish yourself as an industry leader. It’s also a great way to attract a few links. If you make any major discoveries, you’ll get at least a few citations from scholarly and news websites.

This one, which attracted 7,600+ links from 1,500+ root domains, might look a little familiar.

Printable resources

People like hard copies of useful guides. By creating a printable resource with an awesome design, you can almost guarantee a few links will come your way.

Check out this case study (see what I did there?) about how Brian Flores created a printable HTML5 cheat sheet that got shared by the Google Developers G+ page.

Web tools

Creating free online tools, like calculators, is a fantastic way to attract links. They don’t even have to be complex. If it could save me five minutes, then I’ll probably use & share it.

A fantastic example of a simple, yet effective free online tool is this one by Solo SEO. I can’t count how many times I’ve seen SEO bloggers such as myself link to it. It’s netted almost 500 links from almost 200 root domains.

White papers

You might be thinking research & white papers are the same, but they’re not. Someone writing a research paper doesn’t know what the outcome will be; someone writing a white paper has a clear understanding of the objectives and intended results from the beginning.

For example, you could outline an entire sector of an industry from top to bottom.

This one outlined the company and its services and got over 300 links from 100+ root domains. If a boring one like this could get links, imagine what you could do with more exciting content!

Egobait

It’s a fact of life: people like to look good. If you’re featured as one of the top bloggers in your niche, you’re probably going to spread the word.

By appealing to the egos of people, companies, and communities, they’ll help spread the word about your content. For example, this post I wrote appealed to some of the authorities in the SEO industry who all helped me spread the word.

Drawings

Using drawings to appeal to emotion can work great if it strikes the right tone with your audience.Here’s a good example that attracted 15,000+ links from over 350 root domains.

I have to give credit to Neil Patel for this strategy & the next one.

Stories

People love a good personal story. Whether it’s crazy, funny, or embarrassing, this is yet another way to strike at your reader’s emotion.

James Chartrand managed to attract over 1,000 links from nearly 300 root domains with this interesting one.

Games

Creating exciting games to keep visitors content is not only a strategy to attract links to the game itself, but if you make it embeddable, other webmasters will put it on their site (if it’s good enough), which means even more links.

I can’t find a good enough example, but trust me, they work :) .

Live blogging

If you’re at an industry event, blog about everything that’s taking place. If you’re the only one, you’ll get loads of links. If you’re not, you’ll still get A LOT of attention.

I know it’s Wired, so it’s a little unfair, but hopefully you can learn how it’s done from this example (451 links from 140 root domains in 3 months).

Also, check out this fantastic guide on live blogging.

Contrary hook

If there’s controversy in your industry, or if someone has one particular view on a topic, don’t be afraid to write up a post on the opposing view. If you do it quick enough, and if the majority agree with you, you could attract links from your supporters like there’s no tomorrow.

A great example is what Rand Fishkin said in response to this post, which attracted over 800 links from 140+ root domains.

Timely/Seasonal content

Creating the right content at the right time can get you a ton of attention. Creating an infographic on the statistics behind this year’s super bowl the day after the event is a perfect example.

The same goes for seasonal content. Whether it’s Valentine’s Day, Christmas, or Halloween, you can create holiday themed content that can get a ton of attention over a short period of time (and every year after). Although yet another infographic, this is a great example.

Webinars

Spending a couple hours every month by doing a webinar is a great idea for attracting links over the long term. Set up a page on your website solely dedicated to webinars, and as you create new ones, the links will roll in each time.

HubSpot has done a great job with this, having over 1000 links from 100 root domains to their Webinars page.

Creating contests

Entering contests is great for link building, but creating them is even better. By requiring your participants to write about & link to the contest from their blog, you’ll not only get links from them, but their posts will increase the exposure of your contest, thus growing your number of contestants at an exponential rate (and thus, the amount of links you get).

Gerald Weber on MySEOCommunity.com did a great job doing exactly this.

Google Maps mashup

Google Maps is a great tool, and you can use it to attract links if you get it in front of the right audience. A great idea would be to map out all the industry events taking place this year.

For example, Mashable linked out to 100 helpful mashups in this post.

Review something new

Just like with news, if you’re the first to review something, and if it’s awesome, your review will get tons of attention.

You can also use this to gain favor with the creators of the product or service you’re creating. For example, I reviewed Domain Hunter Plus, a new link checker, and not only did I get a few links to the review, but the creator of the tool worked out a deal with me by linking to the review & my home page from the tool’s home page, which is now a PageRank 5.

Helping Webmasters

One of my personal favorite link building strategies is helping out, or adding value to, webmasters. By doing something for them, they’ll be much, much more likely to give you a link. Here are a few ways to help out webmasters.

Broken links

Out of all the strategies listed, this is my favorite. The scalability of finding broken links is crazy awesome. In a nutshell, you’ll be finding pages that could potentially link to you, looking for broken links on the page, and if there are any, you’ll let the webmaster know and ask if the broken link could be replaced with a link to you.

You can get really creative with broken link building. It’s by no means a narrow, straightforward strategy.

Here’s a great guide on the entire process.

Dead content recreation

Take broken links one step further by recreating the content found at those URLs, then outreaching to not only that specific linking site, but also other sites linking to that broken URL.

For this, use Archive.org to find what content used to be found at that URL.

Fixing grammar/spelling

Ross Hudgens pointed this one out to me. It’s just as simple as it sounds; look for grammar & spelling mistakes, notify the webmaster, and ask for a link on a relevant page.

Finding malware

Chris Dyson pointed this one out. Use ScrapeBox to find sites with malware, then reach out to webmasters, let them know, and ask for a link.

Remember: don’t go to their site! You might get a virus. Use a whois lookup to find contact info.

Filling gaps in content

If a site is missing information on a certain topic, whether it’s an article entirely or a portion of one that should be better elaborated on, reach out to the webmaster and ask if you could fill that gap. Here’s a great post on this strategy.

Update old content

If information is out date, do webmasters a favor and help update it for them. If you’re in a rapidly changing industry such as SEO, look for articles & posts written a few years back that still get traffic (i.e. rank high for a decent keyword). This is because if many people no longer see the content, the webmaster probably won’t care enough to have it updated.

Here’s a great example. Danny Sullivan even states in the article that he needs to update it! If I knew Danny better, I’d outreach to him with newly updated content, and ask if he could replace it (he’d probably be more than likely to). Unfortunately he’s not exactly easy to get in touch with, but in most cases for you, this shouldn’t be a problem.

Remember, when you do update the content, make sure you add a link to you in it. We are building links, aren’t we?

Give them hosting

Every webmaster has to fork out a few bucks (or more) a month for hosting. Why not help them out by either providing hosting or paying for it? For those who have a server, this shouldn’t cost you a penny. A great thing to ask for would be a link in their blogroll.

Logo/Graphic/Web design

A decent website usually has some sort of logo, graphic, and web design. If you have any experience with any of these, reach out to webmasters and ask if they’d like any of the above services free at no cost.

Sometimes it doesn’t have to be a major website makeover. Michael Kovis has helped me make a few CSS tweaks in the past, something that I’ve been very, very thankful of. Casey Kluver helped me with a bit of javascript that went into making this very post!

If you don’t know design, you can get someone on Fiverr to create a logo for 5 bucks. No, it’s not going to be amazing, but it’ll get the job done.

Social Strategies

By no means are social media and link building two disconnected parts of your web marketing strategy. Here are a couple of ways to build links using social media sites.

Social bookmarking

Sites like Delicious, Digg, and Pinterest offer a bit of link equity through social bookmarks. Because they’re so easy to abuse, they don’t have much value, but if you’re looking to get the ball rolling in the beginning, think about bookmarking all of your posts and pages.

The only ones you should really be using are these 10, Pinterest, and niche specific ones (i.e. Inbound.org for inbound marketing).

Twitter

If you’ve got a Twitter account, then you’ve got 15 easy links in the bag.

Outside of those, there are numerous ways to build links with Twitter. Instead of listing them all here, just watch this video.

Create Useful Things

If you build it, they will come. There are numerous things you can create that webmasters can embed on their site. In return, of course, you’ll get links.

Some of these things will also naturally attract links to the page you’re offering on them, so they work both ways.

Note: Web tools aren’t listed here because they aren’t something webmasters can physically put on their site.

Widgets

By creating embeddable widgets, webmasters can place them on their site, and if you coded it correctly, you can easily get a link back.

Toolbars

Here’s a great example of a toolbar that Webmasters can place on their site (with a link in the toolbar, of course).

Alternatively, you could create a browser toolbar, such as the SEO toolbar from SEObook.

Plugins & extensions

CMS plugins & extensions, like those for WordPress & Joomla, can get you a few links.

For example, in the Sharebar plugin, the default setting includes a link on the bottom of the floating bar. It can be disabled, but some people don’t bother, thus giving the developers a link.

WordPress themes

If you’re thinking about designing WordPress themes for link building, know this: the links you get have little value, and that to gain any real value, the anchor text needs not to be spammy (i.e. exact match) and the theme needs to be used by sites with relevant content.

For example, if you’re a sports blog, create a sports theme.

If you’re OK with this, here’s the best guide on the Web for utilizing WordPress Themes for link building.

Drupal Themes

Just like WordPress themes, Drupal themes can be developed to build links exponentially.

If you’ve ever looked into theme development, you know most people are focused on WordPress. Use this to your advantage. Develop a Drupal theme because you’ll have far less competition. The official Drupal theme directory includes only 955 themes as I’m writing this.

Badges

Creating badges, such as the ones for the TopRank BIGLIST, work great if you’re giving out awards.

On the other hand, you can create a badge like this for anyone, and not just an exclusive group.

Obviously, make sure you get a link from the badge. If they’re sitewide, then congratz!

Icon sets

They’re easy to create, and if they catch on, you’ll get a ton of design blogs linking to you.

You don’t have to know design to create an icon set & get links to it. Hire someone (on oDesk for example) to create a set for your blog. Then give away the set for free in a new blog post for anyone who wants it, and of course, notify design blogs about your free giveaway (they love free giveaways!).

Paid Strategies

If you have a little room in your budget, then consider some of the below paid strategies. Google is against paid links, but there are some out there that are acceptable, such as the ones listed below.

Sponsor contests

Blogging contests usually don’t cost more than $50-100 to sponsor. Make sure to look for ones that require participants to post about the contest on their blog & link to each of the sponsors in the post.

Sponsor clubs

Most colleges have a wide range of clubs, and if you ask one to sponsor it for a link in return, they’ll probably say yes. You can usually sponsor one for $50.

Sponsor events

Whether it’s a local meet-up, industry conference, or anything in between, event groups are always looking for sponsors, and you can usually get a link in return for a $100-200 sponsorship.

Wil Reynolds brought up a good point in this post. The moment an event is over, ask if you could sponsor next years. The event committee will be so excited that they’d instantly say yes, and in the end you get the link for close to two years instead of one.

Sponsor animal shelters

There are usually more than a few local animal shelters you can sponsor, and according to Adam Melson in this post, they can be as low as $10.

Donate to charities & non profits

Charities and non-profit organizations usually have a donators page like this one. The amount you need to donate to get the link shouldn’t be more than $50-100.

Content acquisition

If you find highly linked to content on sites that are no longer maintained, reach out to the webmaster and ask if you could pay him $100-200 to 301 that page to a page on your site that has the content. Chances are he’d be more than willing to if he doesn’t care anymore.

Note: this isn’t white hat.

Buying StumbleUpon traffic for the webmaster

Ask webmasters if they’d give you a link on a relevant page in exchange for $10-20 worth of StumbleUpon Paid Discovery traffic. Sometimes they’d be willing to link regardless of the PD traffic, so this just encourages them to link even more.

Theme sponsorship

It’s a bit shady, but sponsoring WordPress themes is a way to build links. They usually don’t cost more than $25-50 per sponsorship. If you’re thinking about doing it, check out this guide to theme sponsorship.

Pay authorities to imbed your badges

It’s a paid link that cannot be detected, it increases brand awareness & trust, and best of all, it can be used to get natural embeds.

For example, if I get one of the two bloggers in the industry to embed a badge of “Featured in Top 10 X Blogs in 2012”, and I outreach to a few mid level bloggers that I also included (exactly for this reason), they’d be more than happy to embed it, because if the big time blogger did, they’d be honored to.

Honestly, if you’re going to pay for a sitewide, this is the way to go. There are so many added bonuses.

Note: If you go for spammy anchor text, and not branded or partial, it could send spam signals, so don’t play around there.

Hire industry veterans

Relationship building can be hard. Find people in the industry you can hire that can tap into their list of contacts for links, because they’ve already built up those connections. This can extremely helpful for those who are just starting to try to make a name for themselves.

Hire veteran link builders

Just like industry veterans, experienced link builders have built up little black books of contacts (at least the good ones have). Chances are they’ve dealt with people in either your vertical or a very similar one. In that case, they can get in touch with those contacts, saving you the time to initially build those relationships.

Paid reviews

If you’ve got a product or service you want reviewed on a blog, you can pay for one. By using sites like sponsoredreviews.com, ReviewMe.com, and PayperPost.com, you can pay for blogger reviews. Of course, they’ll link to you in the review.

Crowdfunding

While only some link out to funders, there are a ton of crowdfunding opportunities that you can use to make small investments in various businesses. For link building, make sure you get in touch with the individual business so you make sure that you can get a link in return for funding their project.

I have to give credit to Chris Gilchrist and this post for this one.

College/Educational Links

.Edu links are some of the best, yet toughest links to get. There are a few specific strategies I listed below that work great if you’re willing to try them out.

Write curriculum

Reach out to universities and let them know about your expertise. By writing curriculum for courses (the more basic, the easier it is to get involved), you can get a few citation links from their site.

Speak at universities

Most universities announce speakers on their website, and when they do, make sure a link to your site is included.

Offer discounts

By offering discounts to faculty, teachers, and students, you can easily get links from pages like this.

Student blogs

Students are allowed to create blogs on their respective college websites, so get in touch with them. They’re a lot easier to get links from then a regular college webmaster. Whether it’s buying them lunch or making sure you get a link from a college intern, you can always get links through students.

Intern/Job postings

If you have any job or internship opportunities, you can get a few easy .edu links. For example, if you work in anthropology and you’re looking for an intern, here’s an easy link.

Alumni directories

Most colleges dedicate a part of their site to their alumni, and some of them link out to their alumni’s websites.

For example, one of my client’s competitors had a link from one of the Harvard Business School’s most authoritative pages, only because they got listed under “HBS Entrepreneurs”.

Scholarships

Scholarships can become the bread and butter of your .edu link strategy if it’s in the budget. Give out a decent sized scholarship, such as $500-1000, and reach out to multiple colleges & high schools. You don’t have to settle for just a couple here; usually there’s not a limit on this one.

You could take it one step further and set it up as a contest; the finalists have to write blog posts on your blog on why they deserve it, and half the voting is done socially (i.e. tweets, +1s, FB likes). Heck, I bet you could get even more creative at that point.

Community Strategies

By interacting in communities, you can not only build links, but also relationships (remember how I said how important they are at the top?). This is a great way to get to know people in your industry while snagging a few links at the same time.

Blog commenting

It’s definitely classified as low hanging fruit, but you can still get value from commenting on blogs.

To get the most value, comment on relevant blogs, dofollow blogs (blogs that offer followed links to their commenters), and CommentLuv blogs (blogs that have the CommentLuv plugin installed).

If you do it right, you’ll build rapport with bloggers and links at the same time.

Forum posting

Forum posting is a great way to find the people in your industry that are really passionate about your niche. Again, you’ll get links when you post in the right forums.

Q&A

Using sites like Yahoo! Answers, you can build a few nofollow links that should also send a bit of traffic. Make sure to cite pages on your site when answering questions in order to guarantee a link.

Community newspapers

There are a number of online newspapers that are run by the people, for the people. By contributing, curating, and adding your insight, you can get links from these sites on a regular basis (you get the chance to promote yourself in your bio on most of them).

Here are a few for example:

Making Use of Existing Opportunities

Chances are there are links out there that are already yours that you just haven’t gotten yet. For example, if someone uses your content, you should be able to get a link back. Here are a few existing opportunities for you to snag a link or two.

Contacting people using your images/infographics

By using Google’s reverse image search, you can easily find other websites using your images or infographics. Politely outreach to each and ask you could a link back for using them. If they don’t, make sure to let them know it’s copyright infringement.

Getting links from scraped content

If your content gets scraped, and the scraped piece of content doesn’t have a link back, then make sure you contact the webmaster and get one. Just like images & infographics, it’s copyright infringement, so they’re not going to say no.

Brand mentions

If your brand gets mentioned, then make sure you ask for a link. For example, if someone mentioned “Point Blank SEO” on their blog, I might ask if they could include a link so the reader would know where Point Blank SEO is located on the Web.

You can easily set up free alerts to find who’s talking about your brand.

Reclaim links pointing to 404s

Sometimes links to your website break over time, whether it’s because you’ve moved the intended page, or because the webmaster messed up your URL. Go into Google Webmaster Tools to see which pages are getting 404 errors, then redirect those pages to either the homepage or the implied intended page.

Previous linkers

If someone has linked to you in the past, chances are they might be willing to in the future. Get to know them, and make sure they’re up to date with your content, because that only leads to more links.

I like using Linkstant to instantly see who’s linked to me. I always make sure to stop by and leave a thank you comment.

Associations/organizations you’re a part of

If you’re a part of an association or organization, chances are they have a website. If they do, find out if they link out to their members. Get included if they do.

Leverage copy & pasting

Tynt.com is a site that allows you to get a link every time your content is copy & pasted. It uses a bit of JavaScript to add a “More from: URL HERE” when something is copy and pasted from that URL. So, for example, if a blogger copies a paragraph from a recent post of yours and adds it to a post of his own, a link will be added. Granted he can easily delete it, it’s still worth doing.

Here’s a fantastic post on this concept.

Pro tip: if you make the “More from” text something like “Cited from”, it’ll look more scholarly & professional. This usually gets a much higher success rate.

Asking customers

If someone just bought something from you, then this is the perfect time to ask for a link if they have any influence online. Ask them to write a review of your product or service, and then offer to help promote it to spread the word. It’s a win-win!

Link re-purposing

If you’ve got too many links with generic or branded anchor text, reach out to those webmasters and ask if they could alter the anchor text to either exact or partial match. I myself haven’t tried this, but Cleo Kirkland told me he’s gotten a ton of success with this strategy.

Your Twitter followers

Someone who follows you on Twitter is much more likely to link to you than those who don’t. Use this strategy to scrape your followers, find the influencers, and develop relationships with them for future link opportunities.

Reclaiming Twitter links

People will sometimes link to your Twitter account, so take advantage. Do what I did here by going to the Twitter widget page, then ask webmasters to link to your Twitter page on your site rather than directly to Twitter.

Your commentators

By scraping your commenters and their URLs with this plugin, you can find influencers that have commented on your blog in the past. Just like with Twitter followers, use this to build relationships with them to use for future link opportunities.

Your influence

If you’ve built up influence, you can definitely use this to build links. If I got an email from Aaron Wall asking to review his toolset on my blog, I’d be more than willing to.

Outside of outreach, you can use your influence for a ton of things. For example, Ann Smarty used her influence to get a chance to write posts for Mashable (no lack of quality links there).

In general, you can use your influence to get a much higher success rate with every other strategy I talk about, but remember: if the person you’re contacting doesn’t know who you are, then your influence is worthless (ex. a .gov webmaster could care less if you’re a big shot travel blogger).

Give

You have something that people want, so give it away. Here’s a list of things you can give to get links.

Discounts

Giving out discounts & coupons is a great way to get mentions in lists like this one. Make sure to reach out to writers who dedicate posts to discounts & coupons so you can get included – usually they’d be more than happy to.

Social coupons

Sites like Living Social & Groupon allow you to include anchor text links in the description of your coupons. If you’re wondering, Google does cache the pages, so I’m 99% sure these links are indexed.

Contest giveaways

If you have a product or service, and if there’s a relevant blogging contest taking place, reach out to the blogger running it and ask if you could give your product or service to the winner. They’d be more than happy to, and they’ll give you a link on the contest page if you ask.

Products to bloggers

There’s no better way to connect with bloggers than by giving them your product or service in exchange for a review. Usually there are a lot of mid level bloggers in big industries more than willing to, so this can be quite scalable.

P.S. – if you have a link building related product or service (please, no black hat software) reach out to me using this tactic. I might just review it and give you a link :) .

Free ebooks/products using social payment systems

Give out free ebooks and products using services like PayWithATweet.com or Cloudflood.com. In order to get it, you have to tweet or share it, thus causing a landslide of social shares.

No, there’s no guarantee you’ll get a link, but it’s a great way to get your stuff in front of a potential linker’s eyes by giving something away.

Note: Don’t forget to submit those eBooks to eBook directories!

Develop Relationships

Links and relationships are directly related. The more bloggers & webmasters you know, the more links you’ll get. Here’s a few great ways to build relationships.

Conferences

Seriously, go to them. At the time I’m writing this, I’ve only gone to one, but it was awesome and I highly recommend it. Here’s a fantastic testimonial to why conference events are such great investments.

Call them

Yep, I said it. Get them on the phone. Make them hear your voice and know that you’re a real person.

Ben Wills was the first to do this with me. I now know a lot more about him & Ontolo, something I’m extremely grateful for.

Answer questions

Answer questions on Twitter, Quora, and anywhere else people hang out. People ask questions all the time. These external opportunities are a great way to put you on their radar.

Give a crap

Actually care about people. Show them you’re not just a bot with a picture, but that you’re somewhat human. If they share on Twitter that their daughter just graduated, congratulate them. Something as simple as that can open up your chances to build a relationship in the future.

Participate

If someone is conducting a survey or testing something, get involved and participate. Those are great chances to start conversations with new people.

Local meetups

Whether you find one or start one, meetups are a fantastic way to get to know people close by. For example, if you live in a big city (Seattle, NYC, Philly) then meetups are absolutely perfect. Here’s the best site to find or start one.

G+ Hangouts/Skype

Be the first person to use a Google+ hangout! But seriously, that or Skype is a great way to meet face to face with someone without actually meeting face to face (if that makes any sense…).

Twitter RTs, Responses, and DMs

If you want to get to know someone on Twitter, first retweet them a few times. Then respond a couple times to a few of their tweets, then continue the conversation as direct messages. Finally, ask to email (because 140 characters is never enough), and now you’ve got the ball rolling.

User group meetups

A great way to get to know people who think like you is by finding those who use the same products or services like you. A great example is the Hubspot User Group Summit I attended last year (one of my clients used HubSpot and I got a chance to tag along).

Random acts of kindness

Whenever you can, be nice to people. It might just payoff. Always be on the lookout for helping those in need.I know this isn’t exactly an actionable strategy for link building, but I’m telling you, you’d be surprised. These random acts can turn into lasting relationships.

Traffic Strategies

Not all links that we build are for search rankings. Some are for traffic. We are getting high rankings so we get more traffic, right? Besides, having all of your eggs (links) in one basket (Google) is never a good idea. Here are a few examples of links for traffic.

Scoop.it

Scoop.it is an awesome way to drive traffic and to build a few nofollow links at the same time. This site is a content curation site; users get to curate what content they want to share. It’s hard to explain, so watch this video.

For us, we’ll be suggesting content to users that get traffic to their pages. For example, look at this one. It’s received 21.6k views, so I know it will give me a bit of traffic if I can get my content here. All I have to do is hit the “suggest” button at the top, and wa-la, they can accept or deny my content.

Note: If your content sucks, this won’t work for you. If it’s great, this is a reward.

Newsletters

Including links back to your site in newsletters is a great way to get traffic, but take it one step further. Find influential newsletters in your niche and try to get a link included.

For example, I’ve gotten a link in Eric Ward’s Link Moses Private. An even bigger target (that could potentially crash my site) is the Moz Top 10 newsletter, which has 220,000 subscribers. Yeah. I know.

Pro tip: Find out who’s sending out the newsletters, and get to know them.

Email Signatures

If you send out 100 emails a day, having an email signature with a link back can drive an extra 50+ people a day to your website. It’s not much, but it requires zero effort.

Craigslist

Craigslist and other classified sites are great places to drive a bit of traffic. Make sure you’re not spamming, and make sure it’s relevant to that category.

Community Projects

Creating a new project in your niche can not only help build your authority and trust, but it can also get you a few links if you know where to put them. Here are a few examples of what you could create.

New online community

Whether it’s a niche forum, Q&A site, or social network, you can probably create it without much trouble.

A few options are vBulletin or Simple Press for a forum, Buddy Press for a social network, or qHub for a Q&A site.

If you want to above and beyond, create a community from scratch. Inbound.org, created by Rand Fishkin and Dharmesh Shah, is exactly that.

Industry specific directory

Creating a human curated, quality niche directory is something worth looking into if there isn’t one in your industry.If the design sucks (i.e. it looks like every other one) and the submissions you’re accepting are subpar, you’ll have little success, but if you’re accepting only quality sites, it could get listed often on resource lists.

I suggest starting with directory software, then customizing from there. Just Google “directory software” if you’re looking for one; most don’t cost more than $100.

Obviously, since this is a link building strategy, link to your main site.

Wiki

Wikis are great, but only if you get people involved. Having a little influence to begin with helps a ton. By outreaching to influencers to contribute and by incentivizing contributions, you can build it up as an authority. Again, make sure to link to yourself with it.

Local Strategies

Based on where you’re located, you can get a few links from local websites. Here are a few ways to use your location to build links.

Local listings

Submit your site to local listings. Here’s a fantastic list created by Peter Attia of all the best sites for this.

Example: Yelp.com. Sign up to submit here.

Better Business Bureau

I don’t always suggest an individual site, but when I do, it’s the Better Business Bureau. This link will pass more trust than almost any other link in your profile.

The price is determined by state/region/city and by number of employees. The St. Louis BBB ranges from $370 for 1-3 employees all the way to $865+ for 100-200 employees. Anything over that, as well as additional websites, constitutes as additional charges.

That being said, you are SUPPOSED to get a “dofollow” link out of all of this. You need to check on your listing once it is published as each region has their own rules regarding their directory of businesses. There have been some instances where your businesses website URL in the directory listing was NOT a live link, only text. All you have to do is contact your BBB representative and ask for that to be changed.

Chamber of Commerce

Getting a link from your Chamber of Commerce is a guaranteed link just waiting for you to get. In some cases, though, it takes a little bit of time to find the right person to get in touch with.

Library

Most local libraries have a website, and most of them have somewhat of a link profile. Nonetheless, get in touch, and do what you can to get a link; it’s going to be a link from one of the most white hat sites in your profile.

For example, my local library has a Page Rank of 6. At the time I’m writing this I haven’t gotten a link from them, but it’s only a matter of time :) .

Linking Out Strategies

Linking out is a great way to build links, because when bloggers see they’ve been linked to by your blog (along with 50 visitors coming over from that post), they’ll at the very least check out your content, if not tweet & link to it.

Why? Because people are much more likely to help out others that have helped out them. This is the exact same idea as helping out webmasters in the strategies I listed above.

Actually, you can rank by linking out alone. Don’t take my word for it; take Tad’s from SEOptimise.

Link roundups

Whether they’re monthly, weekly, or even daily, doing roundups of great posts in your niche is a fantastic way to put you on the map. Mid-level, and even some high-level, bloggers take notice when they get links from these.

Pro tip: Make sure you add a little insight to why you listed the post. It helps the bloggers being linked to know that someone is actually taking the time to read their posts.

Mention specific people whenever possible

Whenever possible, and I mean whenever possible!, mention specific people. People LOVE getting mentioned. Link to their site (so they know they got mentioned), and when they find out, they’re usually more than willing to share the post at the very least (if not link to it!).

Again, this is a great way to put yourself on their map.

To spark conversation

Try turning off your comments and asking other bloggers to continue the conversation over a particular issue or topic on their blog. Promise that you’ll link to them at the end of the post if they do. When they do this, they almost always link back to the original post.

This works best with controversial posts.

To active medium level bloggers

Medium level bloggers are the best audiences to target. When they get linked to, they go bananas. I did when I got my first few links; I actually told my friends about this particular mention I got because of how excited I was.

Linking out & letting them know you did so is a great strategy for this large group. Usually the best natural link profiles come from blogs that have control over this middle group.

Giving trackbacks

Reward people who link to you by giving trackback links. Take it one step further and make them dofollow. When they sort through there backlinks and see these, they’ll be a lot more likely to link out to you in the future.

Getting trackbacks

As opposed to giving trackbacks, find blogs that allow you to get trackback links.

For example, the Google blog gives out trackback links, and even though they’re nofollow, they’re still worth something.

Getting People to See & Read Your Content

People won’t link to your content if they don’t find it in the first place. At the same time, they might come across it, but skim it at best. This means you need to get your content in front of more people, and you need to get them to actually read your content.

Social platform optimization

Your linkeraiti and my linkeraiti are two entirely separate groups that find content on two entirely different platforms. Whether it’s Twitter, LinkedIn, or a niche news site (ex. Inbound.org), you need to find the right place that gets your content in front of the right people.

Evergreen content

Timeless content can not only be used for manual outreach, but it can also give your content the ability to be rediscovered, and thus, a second chance to be linked to.

High Flesch-Kincaid readability score

If your content needs a Literature major to be deciphered, then you’re probably not going to get a lot of links. Why? Because if they don’t understand it, they have no reason to link to it.

Minimal grammar & spelling mistakes

It just looks bad when you link to content that’s full of spelling & grammar errors. Do your potential linkers a favor and make sure your content is free of them.

Offering your content in multiple languages

Your potential linkers might not all speak English, so get your content translated as soon as possible.

When you do this, remember to submit to non-English directories as mentioned above!

Segment your content

If you catch yourself writing a few monster paragraphs, cut them up into smaller, bight sized pieces. Make sure you use headers, lists, and bullets when ever possible. Don’t forget to add appropriate spacing. This strategy directly correlates with increased readability, and thus, linkability.

Miscellaneous Strategies

There are a lot of fantastic link building strategies that don’t quite fit in one specific category. Here are a miscellaneous bunch of strategies you should check out.

PR Outreach

Good ole’ fashioned PR outreach is always a great idea if you’re buzzworthy. If you’re not up for hiring a PR company for this, make sure you research who you’re pitching, and make sure to keep it short and to the point.

If you do it right, you’ll build up a relationship with the person you’re pitching long before you pitch them. This will also result in you being able to tap into that relationship multiple times, and not for just a one-off pitch.

Tom Critchlow gave an awesome tip in this video – take things one-step further. If you write something up for a news publication, ask if you could regularly contribute by creating a weekly column. If they say yes, then you’ve just landed yourself a fantastic long-term link opportunity.

Second tier link building

Building links to pages that link to you can be awesome if you do it right. You not only can pass more juice back to your site, but you can also use it for reputation management and to drive sales.

Pro tip: Do second tier link building to trustworthy sites linking to you, such as a guest post on a highly authoritative blog. For example, if you’re doing some broken link building, asking for the replacement link to be to a highly trustworthy site over a link to you will get you accepted a lot more often than if you asked for a link to you.

This is because the site is more trustworthy (webmaster more willing to link) and because you’re not asking for a link to the domain that hosts your email (i.e. jcooper@pointblankseo[dot]com asking for a link to pointblankseo.com), meaning it looks more natural in the eyes of the webmaster.

Set up free blogs

Setting up free blogs for others is fantastic, because doing it might be complex for others, but easy for you. Make sure you get a link from their blogroll in return.

Coin a new term

Coining a new term in your industry can get people talking. It worked for me when I coined the term Scrape Rate, and it worked for Rand when he coined Linkerati.

Help A Reporter Out (HARO)

HARO, or Help A Reporter Out, connects journalists with bloggers & industry experts. By becoming a source, you can get big time links from news sites.

Contribute to Wikipedia pages

By citing your own content on relevant Wikipedia pages, you can get a link under the “References” tab. It’s nofollow, but it’s very trustworthy & can send a lot of highly relevant traffic.

Get your own Wikipedia page

As opposed to contributing, having a Wikipedia page about you or your company is something to look into if you’ve already built up authority. If you’re well known, this is a great option & a huge way to build trust.

Make sure you’re not the one writing it; have someone else write it, because it needs to be as unbiased as possible.

Offline marketing

Whether it’s meeting your customers, handing out business cards, or even putting a sticker of your URL on your car, getting the word out away from your computer can help increase brand awareness, traffic, and in the end, links.

Relevant reciprocal links

Yep, I included it. If you’re going to exchange (reciprocate) links with a website, don’t do it as if you’re living in 1998. Make sure they’re the most relevant, trustworthy websites you’ve ever come across. If they’re not, don’t do it.

Expired Blogspot blogs

This is a little something I came up with myself. Some blogspot blogs become expired and allow anyone to register it, so by finding these blogs that have a few links pointing to it, you can gain control, put up some content, and link back to your site.For example, I picked up this PR3 blog and added a link back to Point Blank SEO. I did this awhile go, and I agree that it’s a little grey hat. I wouldn’t do it again, but it’s something I thought I should at least mention.

The easiest way to find them is to do is to check for broken links on pages that link out to a ton of blogs. This could be blogrolls, links pages, or blog directories. If a link is broken, and if it’s to a blogspot blog, check to make sure you can register it. Most you can’t. If you can, then go to OSE and check out its link profile to see if it’s worth registering.

Affiliate program

It’s a strategy past its prime, but by starting an affiliate program, you can not only get links through affiliate links, but you can also get links to the affiliate program page itself (affiliate bloggers will link out if they like it).

Guest books

Some outdated sites still offer guest books you can sign in. If you come across one, include a link.

Non-college job/intern postings (get picked up by job boards)

Job & intern postings outside of colleges can be a fantastic link building strategy. When one major job site, such as Monster.com, picks up your postings, it gets distributed to a ton of others. Most of the links don’t last long (until the vacancy is filled), but some do stick.

Abandoned domains (auctions too)

Finding and taking over abandoned domains is definitely a strategy on the black hat side if you’re doing something like a 301 or using its expired content outside of the site.

One strategy is to find abandoned domains that have link equity, then use archive.org to repopulate the content on some of the pages that got the most links. Obviously, include a few links in the content back to you.

I recommend using Domain Hunter Plus and Godaddy auctions for finding them in the first place.

Buy existing domains

Finding existing domains for sale through Flippa is great if you’re looking to build up a few link assets. It’s costly, but nonetheless, it’s a strategy.

Google Alerts

Google Alerts is one of the best, free prospecting tools on the Web. What better way to get prospects than from Google themselves?

Here’s a fantastic guide written by Ross Hudgens on using this tool.

Reverse engineering assets

By finding assets that have worked in the past for competitors, such as awards & infographics, you can steal their success with little work. Basically, you’re taking advantage of them not keeping up with the times.

It’s a lot to explain, so here’s a great guide to reverse link building.

Join associations/organizations, both local & niche specific

Groups, organizations, and associations, both local and niche specific, sometimes offer links to their members.

Video embeds

By including links in the embed code of videos, and reaching out to bloggers to host them (i.e. as part of an upcoming post), you can get a link for each embed.

Linker outreach

Find people on delicious or other social sharing sites that have saved similar content to yours, outreach to them letting them know about your content (i.e. an upcoming infographic), and let them do the rest; they’ll share it or link to it if they like it.

I have to give credit to this post by Jason Acidre for this strategy.

Networking

Use some of the relationships you’ve built to create a network of similar non-competing blogs. Link out to them, and ask for them to do the same. A good number to have in your network is 5; it’s not too much, but it’s not too little.

For example, make sure everyone links out to each different blog in the network once a month. Heck, make it once a week.

It’s like reciprocal linking, but way better, because the links are relevant, contextual, and natural in Google’s eyes.

Top commentators widget

Some blogs have a top commentators widget that displays the top commentators in the sidebar of their blog. All you have to do is make it up on that leaderboard and you’ll get a sitewide link. Granted it might take 10-15 comments, it’s still worth it.

Make sure you don’t drop all of the comments on the same day; you’d look like an idiot. Do one or two a day for a couple weeks until you get that link.

Get on the news by crashing cars

Yep, you heard right. I saw this comment, and I couldn’t resist not dedicating an entire strategy to it.

Luckily, there’s a point to be made. Get creative! Creativity is the key to pioneering new link opportunities, and usually ones your competitors can’t get.

 

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Cooking Tips and Questions Answered

1. You don’t taste as you go.

Result: The flavors or textures of an otherwise excellent dish are out of balance or unappealing.

For most cooks, tasting is automatic, but when it’s not, the price can be high. Recipes don’t always call for the "right" amount of seasoning, cooking times are estimates, and results vary depending on your ingredients, your stove, altitude…and a million other factors. Your palate is the control factor.

Think that experienced cooks don’t forget this most basic rule? Cooking Light Associate Food Editor Tim Cebula was sous chef in a notable restaurant when he served up "caramelized" pineapple that somehow refused to brown. Turns out Tim had coated the fruit in salt, not sugar. "That’s why it wouldn’t caramelize."
 

Read Recipe Before Cooking

2. You don’t read the entire recipe before you start cooking.

Result: Flavors are dull, entire steps or ingredients get left out.

Even the best-written recipes may not include all the headline information at the top. A wise cook approaches each recipe with a critical eye and reads the recipe well before it’s time to cook. Follow the pros' habit of gathering your mise en place―that is, having all the ingredients gathered, prepped, and ready to go before you turn on the heat.

“Trust me,” says former Cooking Light Test Kitchen tester Mary Drennen Ankar, “you don’t want to be an hour away from dinner guests arriving when you get to the part of the recipe that says to marinate the brisket overnight or simmer for two hours.”

Healthy Baking Substitutions

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

3. You make unwise substitutions in baking.

Result: You wreck the underlying chemistry of the dish.

Substitutions are a particular temptation, and challenge, with healthy cooking. At Cooking Light it's our job to substitute lower-fat ingredients―to change the cooking chemistry a bit while capturing the soul of a dish. When it comes to baking, this is as much science as art.

"I'll get calls from readers about cakes turning out too dense or too gummy," says Test Kitchen Director Vanessa Pruett. "After a little interrogation, I’ll get to the truth―that the reader used ALL applesauce instead of a mix of applesauce and oil or butter or went with sugar substitute in place of sugar." Best practice: Follow the recipe, period.

Boiling Water

4. You boil when you should simmer.

Result: A hurried-up dish that’s cloudy, tough, or dry.

This is one of the most common kitchen errors. First, let’s clarify what we mean by simmering: A bubble breaks the surface of the liquid every second or two. More vigorous bubbling than that means you've got a boil going. And the difference between the two can ruin a dish.

"I had a friend serve me a beef stew once that gave me a real jaw workout," says Nutrition Editor Kathy Kitchens Downie. "She boiled the meat for 45 minutes instead of simmering it for a couple of hours. She says she just wanted it to get done more quickly. Well, it was 'done,' but meat cooked too quickly in liquid ironically turns out very dry. And tough, really tough."

How to melt chocolate

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

5. You overheat chocolate.

Result: Instead of having a smooth, creamy, luxurious consistency, your chocolate is grainy, separated, or scorched.

The best way to melt chocolate is to go slowly, heat gently, remove from the heat before it’s fully melted, and stir until smooth. If using the microwave, proceed cautiously, stopping every 20 to 30 seconds to stir. If using a double boiler, make sure the water is simmering, not boiling. It’s very easy to ruin chocolate, and there is no road back.

Associate Food Editor Julianna Grimes recently made a cake but didn’t pay close enough attention while microwaving the chocolate. It curdled. "It was all the chocolate I had on hand, so I had to dump it and change my plans."

How to soften butter

6. You over-soften butter.

Result: Cookies spread too much or cakes are too dense.

We’ve done it: forgotten to soften the butter and zapped it in the microwave to do the job quickly. Better to let it stand at room temperature for 30 to 45 minutes to get the right consistency. You can speed the process significantly by cutting butter into tablespoon-sized portions and letting it stand at room temperature.

Properly softened butter should yield slightly to gentle pressure. Too-soft butter means your cookie dough will be more like batter, and it will spread too much as it bakes and lose shape. Butter that’s too soft also won’t cream properly with sugar, and creaming is essential to creating fluffy, tender cakes with a delicate crumb.

How to heat low-fat mlk products

7. You overheat low-fat milk products.

Result: The milk curdles or "breaks," yielding grainy mac and cheese, ice cream, or pudding.

If you're new to lighter cooking, you may not know that even though you can boil cream just fine, the same is not true for other milk products, which will curdle. The solution is to cook lower-fat dairy products to a temperature of only 180° or less.

Use a clip-on thermometer, hover over the pan, and heat over medium-low or low heat to prevent curdling. And if it curdles, toss and start again. One alternative: Stabilize milk with starch, like cornstarch or flour, if you want to bring it to a boil; the starch will prevent curdling (and it'll thicken the milk, too).

How to test your oven

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

8. You don’t know your oven’s quirks and idiosyncrasies.

Result: Food cooks too fast, too slow, or unevenly.

Ideally, every oven set to 350° would heat to 350°. But many ovens don't, including expensive ones, and some change their behavior as they age. Always use an oven thermometer. Next, be aware of hot spots. If you’ve produced cake layers with wavy rather than flat tops, hot spots are the problem.

SaBrina Bone, who tests in our kitchen, advises the "bread test:" Arrange bread slices to cover the middle oven rack. Bake at 350° for a few minutes, and see which slices get singed―their location marks your oven's hot spot(s). If you know you have a hot spot in, say, the back left corner, avoid putting pans in that location, or rotate accordingly.

How to measure dry ingredients

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

9. You’re too casual about measuring ingredients.

Result: Dry, tough cakes, rubbery brownies, and a host of other textural mishaps.

In lighter baking, you're using less of the butter and oil that can hide a host of measurement sins. One cook's "cup of flour" may be another cook's 1¼ cups. Why the discrepancy? Some people scoop their flour out of the canister, essentially packing it down into the measuring cup, or tap the cup on the counter and then top off with more flour. Both practices yield too much flour.

"Lightly spoon flour into dry measuring cups, then level with a knife," advises Test Kitchen Director Vanessa Pruett. A dry measuring cup is one without a spout―a spout makes it difficult to level off the excess flour with the flat side of a knife. "Lightly spoon" means don’t pack it in.

Do not overcrowd the pan when cooking

10. You overcrowd the pan.

Result: Soggy food that doesn’t brown.

Food releases moisture as it's cooked, so leave room for the steam to escape. It's easy to overcrowd a pan when you're in a hurry, particularly if you have to brown a large amount of meat for a beef stew. But the brown, crusty bits are critical for flavor, particularly with lower-fat cooking.

A soggy batch of beef going into a Dutch oven will not be a beautiful, rich, deeply flavored stew when it comes out, even if it does get properly tender. This browning principle applies equally to quick-cook foods like crab cakes and chicken breasts. Leave breathing room in the pan, and you'll get much better results. If you need to speed things up, use two pans at once.

How to separate egg whites

11. You mishandle egg whites.

Result: The whites won’t whip up. Or, overbeaten or roughly handled, they produce flat cake layers or soufflés with no lift.

Properly beaten egg whites are voluminous, creamy, and glossy, but they require care. First, separate whites from yolks carefully, by letting the whites slip through your fingers. A speck of yolk can prevent the whites from whipping up fully.

Let the whites stand for a few minutes―at room temperature they whip up better than when cold. Whip with clean, dry beaters at high speed just until stiff peaks form―that is, until the peak created when you lift the beater out of the bowl stands upright. If you overbeat, the whites will turn grainy, dry, or may separate.

Turning food in the pan

12. You turn the food too often.

Result: You interfere with the sear, food sticks, or you lose the breading.

Learning to leave food alone is one of the hardest lessons in cooking; it’s so tempting to turn, poke, flip. But your breaded chicken or steak won't develop a nice crust unless you allow it to cook, undisturbed, for the specified time.

One sign that it’s too early to turn: You can't slide a spatula cleanly under the crust. "It'll release from the pan when it’s ready," says Assistant Test Kitchen Director Tiffany Vickers Davis. "Don’t try to pry it up―the crust will stick to the pan, not the chicken."

Heating pan before cooking

13. You don’t get the pan hot enough before you add the food.

Result: Food that sticks, scallops with no sear, pale meats.

The inexperienced or hurried cook will barely heat the pan before adding oil and tossing in onions for a sauté. Next comes...nothing. No sizzle. A hot pan is essential for sautéing veggies or creating a great crust on meat, fish, and poultry. It also helps prevent food from sticking.

Associate Food Editor Tim Cebula was once advised: "If you think your pan is hot enough, step back and heat it a couple more minutes. When you’re about ready to call the fire department, then add oil and proceed to cook the food."

How to slice meat

14. You slice meat with―instead of against―the grain.

Result: Chewy meat that could have been tender.

For tender slices, look at the meat to determine the direction of the grain (the muscle fibers), and cut across the grain, not with it. This is particularly important with tougher cuts such as flank steak or skirt steak, in which the grain is also quite obvious. But it’s also a good practice with more tender cuts like standing rib roast, or even poultry.

Underbaking breads and cakes

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

15. You underbake cakes and breads.

Result: Cakes, brownies, and breads turn out pallid and gummy.

Overcooked baked goods disappoint, but we’ve found that less experienced bakers are more likely to undercook them. "You won't get that irresistible browning unless you have the confidence to fully cook the food," says Associate Food Editor Julianna Grimes.

"Really look at the food. Even if the wooden pick comes out clean, if the cake is pale, it’s not finished. Let it go another couple of minutes until it has an even, golden brownness." It’s better to err on the side of slightly overcooking than producing gummy, wet, unappealing food. Once you've done this a few times and know exactly what you’re looking for, it'll become second nature.

Meat Thermometer

16. You don’t use a meat thermometer.

Result: Your roast chicken, leg of lamb, or beef tenderloin turns out over- or undercooked.

Small and inexpensive, the meat thermometer is one of the most valuable kitchen tools you can own. Using one is the surefire way to achieve a perfect roast chicken or beautiful medium-rare lamb roast, because temperatures don’t lie and appearances can deceive.

We love digital probe thermometers, which allow you to set the device to the desired temperature. A heat-proof wire leads to an external digital unit that sits outside the oven and beeps when the meat is ready. This eliminates the frequent opening and closing of the oven door to check the temp―during which you lose valuable heat―and that speeds the cooking.

Let meat rest after cooking

17. Meat gets no chance to rest after cooking.

Result: Delicious juices vacate the meat and run all over the cutting board, leaving steak or roast dry.

Plan your meals so that meat you roast, grill, sear, or sauté has time to rest at room temperature after it’s pulled from the heat. That cooling-off time helps the juices, which migrate to the center of the meat, to be distributed more evenly throughout.

The resting rule applies equally to an inexpensive skirt steak or a premium dry-aged, grass-fed steak, as well as poultry. With small cuts like a steak or boneless, skinless chicken breast, five minutes is adequate. A whole bird or standing rib roast requires 20 to 30 minutes. Tent the meat loosely with foil to keep it warm.

Caramelized Onions

18. You try to rush the cooking of caramelized onions.

Result: You end up with sautéed onions, which are nice but a far cry from the melt-in-your-mouth caramelized ideal.

If you want real, true, sweet, creamy caramelized onions to top your burger or pizza, cook them over medium-low to low heat for a long time, maybe up to an hour. If you crank the heat and try to speed up the process, you’ll get a different product―onions that may be crisp-tender and nicely browned but lacking that characteristic translucence and meltingly tender quality you want.

Bottom line: Know that caramelized onions take time, and plan to cook them when you can give them the time they need.

Kneading low fat dough

19. You overwork lower-fat dough.

Result: Cookies, scones, piecrusts, and biscuits turn out tough.

Recipes with lots of butter are more likely to stay moist and tender because of the fat, even if the dough is overkneaded. But without all that fat, you absolutely must use a light hand. That’s why many of our biscuit and scone recipes instruct the cook to knead the dough gently or pat it out (instead of rolling), and our cookie or piecrust recipes say to mix just until flour is incorporated.

“Whenever I make any of our cookies, I stop the mixer before the flour is completely incorporated,” says the Test Kitchen’s Deb Wise. “I do that last bit of mixing by hand, and it makes a difference.”

How to toast nuts

20. You neglect the nuts you’re toasting.

Result: Burned nuts, with a sharp, bitter flavor.

Toasting intensifies the flavor of nuts. But the nut is a mighty delicate thing―in an oven it can go from perfectly toasty to charred in seconds. This has happened to every one of our Test Kitchen cooks.

Arrange nuts in a single layer on a heavy baking sheet, and bake at 350° for as little as two minutes for flaked coconut to five or more minutes (for dense nuts like almonds); shake the pan or stir frequently so the nuts toast evenly―they tend to brown on the bottom more quickly. They’re done when they’ve darkened slightly (or turned golden brown for pale nuts like pine nuts or slivered almonds) and smell fragrant and toasty.

Preventing mushy vegetables

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

21. You don’t shock vegetables when they’ve reached the desired texture.

Result: Mush.

Toss green beans, broccoli, or asparagus into boiling water for three to seven minutes, and they’ll turn vibrant green with a crisp-tender texture. But if you don’t “shock” those vegetables at that point by spooning them out of the boiling water and plunging them into ice water (or at least rinsing under cold running water) to stop the cooking process, the carryover heat will continue to cook them to the point that they turn army-green and flabby. This is not a concern if you intend to serve the vegetables immediately.

Seasoning meats

22. You put all the salt in the marinade or breading.

Result: Fish, poultry, or meat that’s underseasoned.

Healthy cooks try to keep sodium levels in check and only allocate a small amount of salt to a recipe―so they need to maximize the salt’s impact. For example, chicken marinating in citrus juice and salt will only absorb a tiny amount of the marinade. When you toss out the marinade, you also toss out most of the salt and its seasoning effect.

It’s better to use a little salt in the marinade, then directly sprinkle the majority of the salt on the chicken after it comes out of the marinade. The same goes for breaded items. Sprinkle salt directly on the food and then coat it with the breading.

How to cook meats evenly

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

23. You pop meat straight from the fridge into the oven or onto the grill.

Result: Food cooks unevenly: The outside is overdone, the inside rare or raw.

Meats will cook much more evenly if you allow them to stand at room temperature for 15 to 30 minutes (depending on the size of the cut) to take the chill off.

A roast that goes into the oven refrigerator-cold will likely yield a piece of meat that is overcooked on the outside and undercooked at the center. As you slice the roast, you’ll see a bull’s-eye effect: The middle is rare (or even raw) while the outside is well done. This is less of a problem with smaller cuts like chicken breasts―though even those benefit from resting at room temperature for five or 10 minutes before cooking.

Burned food

Photo: Romulo Yanes & Randy Mayor

24. You don’t know when to abandon ship and start over.

Result: You serve a disappointing meal. And you know it’s disappointing!

There’s no shame in making a mistake; we all do. And while it may feel a bit wasteful to throw food in the trash, tossing out burned garlic, charred nuts, or smoking oil is the right thing to do. Start again fresh (if you have extras of the ingredients). Of course, there is a no-turning-back point, too. If you’ve overcooked a chicken because you didn’t use a meat thermometer, you’re bound to serve an overcooked chicken. At that point, the best practice is to 'fess up, apologize, pass the wine, and move on.

High quality ingredients for cooking

25. You use inferior ingredients.

Result: Sigh.

This is an important point because it’s the linchpin of great cooking: Good food begins and ends with the ingredients. The dishes you cook will only be as mediocre, good, or superb as the ingredients you put in them. As a rule, we recommend using high-quality ingredients whenever available and affordable.

Always shop for the best ingredients. They’re the foundation of good cooking and why we strive not to make the mistakes described here. Choose top-notch produce, meats, and cheeses, and protect them as you would anything else precious―handle with love, respect, and care so you can be a steward of the joys of great food. Your cooking will invariably turn out better.

Poaching Eggs

Photo: Randy Mayor

26. Your poached eggs aren't pretty

Result: The typical botched poached egg is tentacled, scary, tough, overcooked.

First, fill a wide saucepan or sauté pan with water to about two inches. Bring it to a gentle simmer—not a rolling boil, which toughens and twists the whites. Add a few teaspoons of vinegar, which does help eggs keep their shape. Crack eggs (fresher ones won't spread as much) into small ramekins or custard cups. The cups let you gently pour the eggs into the pan so the whites stay in a tight circle, and ensure that you won't crack a broken-yolk dud into the water. Cook three minutes (the whites should be set and the yolks still creamy), then remove carefully with a slotted spoon. Drain them for a few seconds, or blot with a paper towel. Voilà: no more poor poaching. You can now perch your perfectly poached gems atop a dish like Two Potato and Beet Hash with Poached Eggs.

Lumpy Gravy

Photo: John Autry

27. Your gravy is lumpy

Result: Lumpy gravy. Next time, whisk wisely. Meanwhile, here's a fix.

One cause is the direct dumping of dry flour, cornstarch, or other thickener into the hot stock or broth. Another: adding broth too quickly into a roux—the flour-fat mixture that some gravy recipes start with—which can cause clumping or a gluey layer on the bottom of the pan. Hot spots in a large pan can complicate things, as well. In any starch-based sauce, the thickener needs to be gradually introduced to the hot liquid it's supposed to thicken. The easiest way, as with our recipe for the Mushroom Gravy, involves whisking a flour slurry into the broth mixture, then stirring until the gravy comes together.

If lumps happen, pass gravy through a sieve or strainer, or puree it (with an immersion blender or, very carefully, in a regular blender). If the gravy originally contained sautéed mushroom slices, well, the guests needn't know that, and it will still be delicious.

Gluey Mashed Potatoes

Photo: John Autry

28. Your mashed potatoes are gluey

Result: Gluey mashed potatoes. Next time, watch the cooking time and drain well.

Gluey mashed potatoes are more than just unfortunate—they're usually a lost cause. Overcooked or insufficiently drained potatoes can become sticky, as can the wrong kind of potato. But the main problem is overworked spuds. The science is simple: Boiled potatoes develop swollen starch cells. When ruptured during mashing, the cells release starch. The more cells are ruptured, the gummier the mashed potatoes. So if you use an electric mixer or food processor to mash your potatoes, you'll probably beat them mercilessly and end up with wallpaper paste. Instead, use a potato masher, or even better, pass the potatoes through a ricer or food mill before mixing them with butter and hot milk—these devices are gentler on the starch cells, and they'll also prevent lumps.

Low-starch (or waxy) red potatoes hold their shape well after boiling, so they require more effort to mash. Hence, you're likely to overwork them. Try mashing them just partway, as in our Herbed Smashed Potatoes. By contrast, high-starch (mealy or floury) baking potatoes, also called russets, break down more readily, yielding light and fluffy mashed potatoes (or, with a little more milk and butter, smooth and creamy).

Burned Brown Butter

Photo: John Autry

29. You Burn the Brown Butter

Result: Dark and bitter butter. Next time, pay attention to the visual cues.

Browning butter is a sure way to suffuse a dish with a great deal of nutty buttery flavor without using a lot of fat. Example: Sautéed Chicken with Sage Browned Butter. But the process is a little trickybecause once the butter begins to brown, it can race right into burnt. Then nutty becomes bitter.

Success depends on visual cues, so use a stainless steel pan—you can see the butter change color better. Us no more than medium heat so that the browing proceeds gradually. First the butter will foam in the pan: The milk solids are separating from the butterfat, and the water is evaporating. Then the foam subsides and the milk solids begin to brown. Now the butter gives off its characteristic nutty aroma (the French call brown butter beurre noisette, or hazelnut butter). Some recipes call for adding lemon jice at this point; the tartness complements the sweet butter, while the juice cools it and slows the browning. Either way, when the butter turns amber-brown, take the pan off the heat. If you're not using it immediately (say, drizzling it over steamed vegetables), get it out of the hot pan and into a bowl so the residual heat doesn't continue to push the butter from brown to burnt.

Burnt Bacon

Photo: John Autry

30. Your bacon is burnt and crinkly

Result: Burnt and crinkly bacon. Next time, bake your bacon.

Pan-frying is the standard way to cook bacon, but it has drawbacks. Only a few strips fit flat in most skillets—any more than that will slope up the sides, cooking unevenly. And bacon strips can shrink more than they need to in a hot pan. (Starting them in a cold pan helps, but you'll still need to flip often.)

Take a cue from chefs—bake your bacon. Heat hits from all sides, cooking more evenly. The result: consistently flat strips.

Line a jelly-roll pan with aluminum foil or parchment paper to make cleanup easier. Set a wire rack on the pans so the bacon doesn't sit in fat. Place bacon slices in a single layer on the rack, and bake at 400º for about 20 minutes (depending on bacon thickness and how crispy you like it).

Unless your oven has major hot spots, you don't have to flip the bacon or turn the pans. You can even put the bacon in while the oven preheats—the gradual temperature increase will render the fat more slowly and won't shrink the meat as much.

Avoid Brown Veggies

Photo: John Autry

31. Your Green Veggies Turn Brown

Result: Drab veggies. Next time, baby them and they will stay vibrant.

When vegetables take a sad turn from bright green to khaki drab, it conjures memories of grade-school cafeteria food and the ruined texture of canned asparagus. The most common culprits: overcooking and acidic dressings. A cook has to know how to care for the delicate source of the green: chlorophyll.

Vegetables such as green beans, broccoli, and asparagus lose their bright color—and crisp texture, for that matter—after six or seven minutes of cooking. If you know you'll be eating them immediately, just remove, drain, and serve. But if you'll be busy assembling other dishes, consider blanching and shocking. Cook for two minutes in salted boiling water, then remove vegetables immediately and plunge into ice water. The ice back halts the cooking process and helps set the color. Later, the chilled vegetables can be quickly reheated—by sautéing in a bit of olive oil, for instance—without losing their green.

But blanching won't keep veggies vibrant if you dress them too soon with an acid such as vinegar or lemon juice. Wait until just before serving (as we do with our SuperFast asparagus sides).

Avoid Soggy Salad

Photo: John Autry

32. Your Salad Goes Limp

Result: Soggy salad. Next time, consider three important factors.

A soggy pile of wilted greens makes for a sorry salad indeed. Tender greens like Boston lettuce, mâche, and arugula are delicate little things that perish at the mere rumor of mistreatment (tearing or roughly handling lettuce bruises it), but even crisp, hearty lettuces like romaine need to be treated with care. To keep them at their best, you need to consider three factors: time, volume, and temperature.

Only dress your greens just before serving, particularly when using vinaigrette: Oil quickly permeates the waxy surface of leafy greens, turning them dark green and droopy. If you've washed your greens, use a salad spinner or blot them delicately with paper towels to dry them. Water clinging to leaves will repel oil-based vinaigrettes and thin out creamy dressings, leading to bland salad.

Put dry greens in a salad bowl. Add less dressing than you think you'll need (to avoid overdressing), and pour it down the sides of the bowl, not onto the greens—you'll dress them more evenly this way. Gently toss, adding dressing as needed, until the greens are lightly coated. If you do overdress them, a quick whirl in the salad spinner will shake off any excess.

Finally, follow the lead of professional chefs and serve your salad on chilled plates to help keep the greens crisp as you enjoy them.

Avoid Burnt Chicken

Photo: John Autry

33. You Incinerate Chicken on the Grill

Result: Charred skin and rare meat in the thickest part of the breast.

Grilling bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts feels like it should be simple enough. Even experienced grillers often try to cook them entirely over direct heat, figuring it's just a matter of timing. At which point dripping fat causes flare-ups that engulf the breasts, charring the skin while the meat remains rare deep within. Yet perfectly grilled chicken—with crisp, browned skin and juicy, succulent meat—is relatively simple if you learn to manipulate the heat.

First, establish two temperature zones: Set one side of a gas grill to medium-high and the other to low, or build a fire on one side of a charcoal grill. (Make sure your grate is clean and oiled to prevent sticking.) Start the chicken skin-side up on the low- or no-heat side, and cover the grill. After a few minutes, when the chicken fat starts to render, flip the meat, skin-side down. Point the breasts' thicker ends toward the hot side to help them cook evenly. Cover and grill for about 25 minutes. When the meat is done (165° at the thickest part of the breast), crisp the skin on the hot side for a minute or two, moving it as needed to avoid flare-ups. Wait until the last few minutes to brush on barbecue sauce: The sugars in the sauce will char quickly.

How to Avoid Ruining Hard-Cooked Eggs

Photo: John Autry

34. Your Hard-Cooked Eggs Are Icky

Result: A rubbery, chalky, green-gray hot mess! Next time, heat slowly and cool quickly.

We’ve all puzzled, after following someone’s can’t-fail advice, over less-than-perfect hard-cooked eggs—the eggs with rubbery whites, chalky yolks, and that tell-tale green-gray film between yolk and white. The cause? Temperature differential: The white of an egg dropped into boiling water cooks much faster than the yolk at the center, and that’s trouble. By the time the yolk sets, the white is tough. And if the egg stays over high heat too long, or isn’t cooled quickly after cooking, sulfur in the white will react with iron in the yolk, creating that nasty off-colored ring.

Here’s the fix: To keep the temperature of the egg white and yolk close, heat the eggs gradually. Place them in a saucepan, cover them by an inch or two with cold water, and set the pan over high heat. When the water reaches a full boil, remove from heat, cover the pan, and let the eggs stand for 10 minutes. This cooks them gently and keeps the whites from toughening. Peel the eggs immediately under cold running water; or, if you’re not using them right away, set them in an ice water bath. This lowers the eggs’ temperature and minimizes the pressure that causes sulfur rings to form.

 

How to Avoid Dry Turkey Burgers

Photo: John Autry

35. Your Turkey Burgers Are Parched Pucks

Result: A dried out burger that sticks to the grill. Next time, add a little heart-healthy fat to help the meat stay moist and juicy.

A well-made turkey burger is a delicious, lower-fat backyard grill treat, but if you don't compensate for the leanness of the meat, you could be eating turkey-flavored particleboard. Mostly it's a matter of getting the patty off the grill before it dries out (or sticks and falls apart)—a job made trickier by the need to cook poultry to 165°. So, to avoid sawdust syndrome, add a little fat to the meat. Yes, add fat. This might seem counterproductive, but it's not if you use a fat that's heart-healthy.

The fat in question? Olive oil. Stirring in two tablespoons olive oil per pound of ground turkey keeps the burgers moist and juicy and also helps them form a nicely browned crust on the outside that won't stick to the grill.

Even better: Sauté 1 cup diced onion in 2 tablespoons olive oil until nice and tender, let cool slightly, and then mix the onion and oil from the pan into a pound of ground turkey to form four patties. The oil-coated onions do a marvelous job of adding both moisture and flavor to lean poultry burgers, and you get a hit of that nice, oniony sweetness, too.

How to Avoid Gummy Rice

Photo: Mary Britton Senseney

36. Your Rice Gets Gummy

Result: Sticky, gummy goo. Next time, use more water.

Rice is the great staple grain of much of the world, but it can strike fear in the hearts of some American cooks who have learned that the famous 2:1 water-to-rice ratio is not reliable in many cases or for many varieties. And stovetop prep can be tricky (rice cookers are reliable, so if you love rice, consider buying one). Slightly undercooked rice can sometimes be fixed with more water and time, but the dreaded gummy rice is a dead loss.

When rice is cooked in the traditional way—simmering in a lidded pot—the close-packed grains rub together and release starch, often leading to stickiness. The solution is blessedly ratio-free, though it may seem counterintuitive: Use more water. Lots more, so you cook the rice like pasta until it reaches the proper consistency, then drain. The pasta method keeps rice from rubbing together too much as it cooks; draining ensures it won't suck up more water than it needs.

Check brown rice for doneness at around 25 minutes. You can also sauté brown rice in olive oil after it's drained, to evaporate excess moisture. For white rice, which absorbs water more readily, try sautéing the grains before boiling, for about two minutes in a tablespoon of oil. Then add roughly four times as much cold water as rice to the pan, and boil. Check for doneness at around 15 minutes (timing starts when water boils). The oil forms a protective layer around the white grains during boiling—and sautéing lends the rice deliciously toasty flavor.

How to Avoid Burnt Caramel

Photo: Mary Britton Senseney

37. Your Caramel Meets a Burnt, Bitter End

Result: Burnt, bitter caramel. Next time, a little water—and patience—goes a long way.

Caramel is a one-ingredient recipe for experts, two for more cautious cooks who add water to the sugar—but either way it can quickly turn into a chemistry experiment gone wrong. The problem is a rapid acceleration of browning, which can quickly move your sugar sauce into bitter, burnt territory.

Sugar behaves differently from other foods when it's cooked. While most ingredients absorb heat from the pan, sugar actually generates its own heat as it breaks down. This causes the temperature to rise fast—about one degree per second. When you remove the pan from the heat as the caramel reaches the perfect light-amber hue, it can still burn because residual heat from the pan keeps the action going.

The key is watchful, hands-off cooking, as slow and even as possible. Adding ¼ cup of water per cup of sugar dissolves the sugar uniformly and slows boiling, providing more control as you look for that honey-gold color. Use a light-colored stainless steel or enamel saucepan and a candy thermometer.

To make the caramel, cook the sugar and water, without stirring (or absolutely minimal stirring, if you must), over medium-low heat until golden and fragrant, about 335°. With experience, you'll learn to trust color more than temperature.

The hands-off approach works best because stirring can cause hot caramel to crystallize when it hits the cool sides of the pan, and that can set off a chain reaction that ruins the sauce.

Set the pan in an ice bath for two to three seconds to stop the cooking (any longer and the caramel will seize), then use immediately.

How to Avoid a Sloppy Turkey Carving

Photo: John Autry

38. The Turkey Hack Job

Result: Your turkey platter resembles a crime scene.

On turkey day, it's your well-earned right to parade that magnificent roasted bird around the dining room. But carving is best done where there's elbow room and a large, stable cutting surface. You'll need a well-honed knife; have it professionally sharpened before the big day.

Now, as the pros say, "break" the bird down in the right order (this is where many cooks go wrong—trying to slice meat directly off a big, hot bird). Leg quarters come off first, then breast meat, with the tucked-under wings serving to stabilize as you cut. Set the big pieces onto a cutting board where you can deal with them properly.

Take the breast meat off the bone in one piece, then slice crosswise, which ensures uniformity and allows for slightly thicker slices that are juicier and less fibrous than thin portions. Cut the thigh meat into large chunks. Reserve room on the platter for legs if you have a Henry VIII in the family.

Oh, and remember—in the days leading up to Thanksgiving, you can always practice your technique on a nice roasted chicken: same configuration of bird parts, no game-day pressure.

How to Avoid a Spreading Cookies

Photo: Johnny Autry

39. Your Cookies Gain Unwanted Holiday Width

Result: Sad gingerbread men.

Baking holiday cookies can go from a labor of love to an exercise in frustration when your gingerbread men come out more bloated than a Macy's parade float. The problem is too much heat—but not at the baking stage, at the mixing stage: Your butter is too warm.

The solution: Keep your butter cool, right until baking. Butter starts to melt at 68°, and once that happens, its water-fat emulsion breaks and there's no getting it back. Cold, emulsified butter helps give baked goods structure by taking in air when mixed with sugar. For cookies, you want butter well below room temperature; between 50° and 65° is optimal. Cut the butter into chunks, and let it stand at room temperature to soften (nix the microwave idea entirely).

If the butter is still cold to the touch but spreadable, you can start creaming. Butter and sugar need only be mixed (or "creamed") for about 30 seconds—much longer and the butter warms up. Chill the dough for 20 to 30 minutes before you bake. Lastly, don't put the cookies on a hot pan. If you're working in batches, cool the used pan for a few minutes, then run it under cool water before reloading (don't do this while it's hot, though, or you'll risk warping the pan).

Burnt Pancakes

Photo: Randy Mayor

40. Your Flapjacks Flame Out

Result: Blotchy, burned pancakes

Too often, pancake cooks put up with a few poor specimens at the beginning—splotchy and greasy—and a few more duds at the end; the latter can be scorched from a too-dry pan yet perversely underdone within. This is not a heat problem or a batter problem: It's a pan-prepping problem.

The solution: Don't pour oil directly into the pan. Hot oil will spread, pooling in some areas, leaving other parts dry. Just a scant amount of cooking oil creates a smooth, even cooking surface throughout, so pancakes cook evenly from start to finish.

If you're using a pristine nonstick pan, you may not need oil at all. Otherwise, here's how to apply it: Heat a skillet (any variety) over medium heat, then grasp a wadded paper towel with tongs and douse it with 1 tablespoon canola oil. Brush the pan with the soaked towel. You could also use cooking spray, except for nonstick pans: It leaves sticky residue on Teflon surfaces.

Add batter, flipping only when bubbles form on the surface of each pancake, about two to three minutes. Resist the urge to peek, which breaks the seal between the pan and the batter; that seal is what ensures even cooking. Swab the pan with the oiled paper towel between batches to keep it properly greased.

How to Cook Oven Fries

Photo: Johnny Autry

41. Your Oven Fries Fizzle

Result: Pale, soggy spuds or dried up and burnt fries.

Great oven fries can mimic, if not entirely duplicate, the best qualities of their deep-fried cousins—golden, with a crisp exterior and fluffy middle—yet remain much lower in fat. Bad oven fries, however, can turn out pale and soggy, or dry up and burn, sometimes achieving both states in the same batch.

The solution: It seems counterintuitive, but you need to presoak. Nearly half a potato's weight is accounted for by water. Soaking pulls out starch, which reduces the water content of the potatoes: less water, less steaming in the oven.

Start with baking potatoes (russets): They're drier than waxy varieties. Cut each peeled potato in half lengthwise, halve again, and slice each quarter into ¼-inch-thick strips (a mandoline is nice but not essential). Even thickness and wide surface area prevent burning and give you more crispy real estate. Soak in cold water for 30 minutes, then dry thoroughly with paper towels.

Toss with olive oil, and then spread on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Don't overcrowd the fries, or it will be a steam bath in there. Bake on the bottom rack at 400° for 35 minutes. Flip once halfway through.

Great tips in this article.

Filed under  //   cooking   tips  

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10 Little Known Social Media Tools You Should Be Using

Social media is everywhere. It's in our homes, places of worship, schools and, of course, our businesses. Everywhere you look, people are using social media and are talking about it. And it seems that every week a new type of social site pops up.

And as the number of social networking sites grows, so does the number of services that are created to measure, track and monitor those services. What's a marketing professional to do?

To help you cut through the clutter, here are the 10 must-use social media tools that can not only help you make sense of your social media efforts but make them more effective.

EditFlow 1. EditFlow
EditFlow is a plugin from open source content management system WordPress that allows you to manage your editorial team seamlessly.

With it, you can get a snapshot of your month-to-month content with the calendar feature. It also offers improved content status beyond WordPress' default draft and pending review. And user groups can help you keep your team of writers organized by department or function.

Who should use it and why: Any business owner who manages a multi-author website should give EditFlow a look. This tool can keep all of the things that are important to a multi-author blog in one spot so management is easy, clean and documented.

TweetReach2. TweetReach
This tool allows you to see how far your tweets travel. For example, with TweetReach I can search my blog and come up with these results. It breaks down how many people your messages reach and how many tweets it took to reach them. For instance, TweetReach can tell you how many times your tweets have been shared by retweets, replies and other standard tweets.

Who should use it and why: From a social media manager to a small-business owner, basically anybody who is interested in finding out how effective his or her tweets are based upon the number of people they touch should consider using TweetReach. It can also useful from a metric standpoint in terms of justifying the results of your social media campaigns with senior management or partners.

ArgyleSocial3. ArgyleSocial
This Durham, N.C.-based startup is a social media platform that aims to help marketers connect the business dots with the social media dots. ArgyleSocial offers a single dashboard to monitor Facebook and Twitter that allows you to delegate tasks to your team. It also offers easy reporting on the ROI of your social media efforts.

If you'd like to be an affiliate, you can use ArgyleSocial's white label brand and resell the social media platform to your clients. All of your accounts can be wrapped up into one bill and sent to you to distribute or absorb as an included service.

Who should use it and why: From the social media manager to the one-person business that needs to prove to management, clients or themselves that their social media campaign is paying off.

HootSuite for iPad4. HootSuite for iPad
HootSuite users should be happy with this iPad application. It includes a stationary column in the sidebar that keeps track of all streams being tracked.

Among the other things HootSuite says you can do with this iPad app include checking in using a Foursquare account, scheduling messages to send at a later time, examine click-through statistics, add geo-location coordinates to messages and shorten URLs with a built-in Ow.ly tool.

Who should use it and why: HootSuite for iPad is for heavy iPad users who want to manage their social media content and engagement.

TweetLevel5. TweetLevel
You might be thinking you don't need another Tweet metric tool, but TweetLevel, allows you to specifically search for hashtags, which can lead you to insights on who to follow based upon conversation versus person.

Once you've found someone you'd like to follow, you can use TweetLevel to help measure his or her social influence. You can also evaluate the buzz around a certain topic to determine if it's a trend worth paying attention to. Then take a peek at related phrases around your topic to gauge the true scope of the trending idea.

Who should use it and why: Public relations managers and social media marketing professionals who want to analyze a campaign should give TweetLevel a try. This tool can help you identify the Twitter conversation, where it's going wrong and how to correct that mistake.

ReFollow6. ReFollow
When it comes to Twitter, numbers might not be as important as the people you follow and who follows you. ReFollow is an application that allows you to lock in those followers that you've connected with and make sure they continue to follow you.

Other features include filtering a search on Twitter to uncover insights, such as what you have in common with certain followers. This can lead you to connecting with someone who maybe you're Twitter conversation has been close to zero, but with a simple direct message to that person you can make a connection and build a business relationship.

Who should use it and why: This can be the perfect tool for the person who wants to grow a list of highly-qualified, like-minded people. Consider using ReFollow if your concern is quality over quantity, which it should be.

TwitterSearch7. TwitterSearch
You've probably heard of TwitterSearch but, more than likely, you aren't using it correctly.

New media expert Thomas Baekdal offers a number of little-known tips for using TwitterSearch. For instance, to see what people are saying about your competitors, search with to:competitor or from:competitor. Replace "Competitor" with that company's Twitter handle.

To uncover top trending topics search that topic plus –rt filter:links. For example, "digital marketing-rt filter:links". That code will remove all of the retweets from the search.

Who should use it and why: Anyone who wants to use and search Twitter more effectively should brush up on his or her TwitterSearch skills. And knowing what's trending on Twitter can be a useful way to generate ideas for your business blog. When you see trending topics, you can create a blog post with content relevant to that discussion.

Traackr8. Traackr
One simple way to find and follow people who are influential in your space is to use Traackr. It allows you to identify the "authorities" in your industry who can mean the most to your business or your client's.

What's also useful about Traackr is that you can watch how social media leaders are responding and contributing to content you are sharing. An ad agency, for example, can see who it should target to help social media campaigns get off the ground, build its engagement strategies based upon Traackr's unique intelligence and then see results of those campaigns.

Who should use it and why: Traackr can be a useful tool for either advertising agencies or brands that want to build social media campaigns that improve over time and show how they pay off in the end.

SocMetrics9. SocMetrics
The Topical Influencer platform by SocMetrics is a web-based tool that allows you to identify influencers, understand who these people are, interact with them and then monitor your campaign.

The "Competitive Influence" feature allows you to specify brands and drill down for detailed influencers. What's slick about this tool is that you can narrow your search to a long-tail keyword, seeing who is truly influential.

Who should use it and why: Any marketing professional who wants to build an effective social media campaign based upon influencers in a specific industry should give this a look. SocMetrics can help you harness the power of thought leaders, which in turn can help you build your brand and sell more.

Social Scope10. Social Scope
For BlackBerry users who've longed for an app that combines Twitter and Facebook on one screen, such as TweetDeck for your desktop, consider trying Social Scope.

And on that same screen you'll see a thumbnail image if someone shares something from TwitPic. It also has a built in retweeting feature, hash tag search and will also let you see the entire URL to know where a truncated URL is pointing.

Who should use it and why: Anyone who owns a BlackBerry and has a Facebook and Twitter account is a prime target for this app. It's probably the closest you can get to a desktop-type app on a BlackBerry.

Filed under  //   social   social media   tools  

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The Hacker Shelf | Community-curated collection of free books for the intellectually curious.

http://hackershelf.com/

Filed under  //   books   development   free   tech  

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Want Guest Post Links? Find Them Via Twitter [TOOL]

Media_httpcdnseomozor_afyos

Great tool for finding guest blogging opportunities.

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Lean Domain Search

http://www.leandomainsearch.com

Filed under  //   domain   domains   names   naming   search  

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SETH GODIN: If You're An Average Worker, You're Going Straight To The Bottom

"For 80 years, you got a job, you did what you were told and you retired," says the former vice president of direct marketing at Yahoo! People are raised on this idea that if they pay their taxes and do what they're told, there's some kind of safety net, or pension plan that's waiting for them. But the days when people were able to get above average pay for average work are over.

If you're the average person out there doing average work, there's going to be someone else out there doing the exact same thing as you, but cheaper. Now that the industrial economy is over, you should forget about doing things just because it's assigned to you, or "never mind the race to the top, you'll be racing to the bottom."

However, if you're different somehow and have made yourself unique, people will find you and pay you more, Godin says.

Instead of waiting around for someone to tell you that you matter, take your career into your own hands. In other words, don't wait for someone else to pick you and pick yourself! If you have a book, you don't need a publisher to approve you, you can publish it yourself. It's no longer about waiting for some big corporation to choose you. We've arrived at an age where you choose yourself.

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Beard Slap!!!!

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Infographics & Data Visualizations

http://visual.ly/

Filed under  //   data   data viz   gallery   showcase   visualization   visually  

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Phone Numbers, Customer Service Tips & Reviews

Media_httpgethumancom_esflh

Filed under  //   call waiting   phone numbers   skip hold  

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