Is Building Backlinks from Free Hosted Pages Worth Your Time?

November 5, 2009

in SEO

Working on my crochet projects lately, I decided to watch this year’s Thirty Days Challenge videos. I was curious to see what Ed Dale and his people are teaching newbies nowadays and wanted to see if there were any tidbits I might find useful.

I was surprised to see just how much effort was still placed on building backlinks from free hosted services. Dale recommends building pages for your main site from Squidoo, Hub Pages, Weebly, Blogger, WordPress.com and Scribd. The video guides talk about throwing as many hooks into the water as you can, implying, presumably, that these efforts are focused at getting surfers directly from these services. However, they do mention, quite often, that this should also be part of your link building strategy – getting quality backlinks from your own on-topic pages from these respectable (authority?) websites.

Theoretically, it’s a brilliant idea, and certainly not new. It sounds so good, doesn’t it? By putting in a few hours of work, you can generate on-topic links, all from “good neighborhoods”, with your anchor text of choice. No need to negotiate with other webmasters – just log into your account and create your page and your link.

Is It Worth Your Time Though?

My Own Backlinks from Free Hosted Pages Experiment

I have tried this myself two and a half years ago, launching a series of pages on Squidoo, Blogpost (Blogger), Hub Pages and Google Pages. Don’t laugh, but Yahoo Geocities and Angelfire (Lycos) were respectable free hosting services back then too – with many of their pages taking top positions in the SERP’s – so they were incorporated into my linking scheme as well.

Focusing my efforts on promoting three quality content websites, I built these backlinks pages  gradually, over several months. There was nothing spammy about them either. I suck at spam and find it very difficult to write total drivel (although I suppose some might disgree!), so each of these pages, whether moderated ones on Hub Pages or Free-For-All on Angelfire, got my full attention. They were beautiful pages, with rich meaningful text, pictures and even some design where necessary. They were interlinked to some extent, and I threw in some more links for good measure from my own directories (that was back when directory links still carried some weight).

I monitored the results for a while and still take a peak every now and again.

The results were mixed and, as far as I’m concerned, disappointing:

  1. All of the pages were indexed and still are.
  2. The links to my main pages are still there and counted as backlinks to my main sites.
  3. Naturally, the amount of traffic to these free-hosted pages is minimal. They target some long-tail search phrases, and as far as I can tell, have very limited success in scoring high on the SERP’s for those (with the exception of a few of them, mainly the ones on Hub Pages).
  4. Most importantly, I could see little to no effect on the main sites they were supposed to push forward.

So Was It Worth My Time?

Well, you could say that a backlink is a backlink, but I really don’t think this works as a viable long-term link building strategy. It is too time-consuming to be worth the effort, especially when you consider you will need to promote these “satellite pages” to give them any SEO significance as a source of links.

For myself, I feel that my time is better spent creating natural organic links and keeping my quality content in my own network.

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{ 1 comment }

1 Keith@Norman Rockwell Art November 11, 2009 at 9:09 pm

I agree completely with your assessment.

It seems like a lot of work form negligible benefit. Not only that you are really building hubs and pages that you ultimately have no real control over. Squidoo, hubPages, et al could change the TOS tomorrow. Then where would you be? Completely out of a lot of work.

It’s much better to concentrate where you know your effort will be worthwhile.
Keith@Norman Rockwell Art´s last blog ..Nov 10, The Metropolitan Museum of Art is home to Norman Rockwell painting My ComLuv Profile

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