Is Linkbait Dead?


Skeleton Pirate with Ghost Ship

The simplest definition of linkbait is a blog post that attracts people’s attention enough to get them to link back to the post. Getting links to a blog post is crucial for SEO.

Generally speaking: more links = better SEO. And better SEO = more traffic.

I’m simplifying, but the basic premise is there. For a more detailed definition you can check out these great posts about linkbaiting.

The truth is: linkbait works best when the content is great. It’s about writing great headlines and valuable content. So I don’t consider linkbait cheesy or inappropriate (although I’ve seen some fairly lame efforts at it.) Most of the time I consider successful linkbait to be about, “writing great content in a very smart way.”

Tad Chef has a great resource post (in and of itself a nice piece of linkbait!) – 45 Link Baiting Resources: Ideas, Techniques, Case Studies & Drawbacks.

I agree with Tad that the terms “linkbait” and “linkbaiting” are not used as much anymore because the concept has become the norm. But what I am curious about is whether linkbait is really relevant anymore? And whether it works as well as it used to?

I’m seeing less and less links to this blog. I suspect others are seeing the same thing. And one of the big reasons is Twitter.

Twitter is where more and more people are sharing the precious resource that bloggers’ crave: links. It’s so much easier to tweet a link than to write a blog post. And bloggers have made it even easier, using things like Tweetmeme to encourage the behavior. But the result is that you get less links from blogs. Tweets with your linkbait link are still valuable – they can drive traffic, buzz, etc. – but they don’t have the same SEO value by any stretch of the imagination.

So if linkbait doesn’t generate as many links as it used to because of Twitter (and I believe Facebook will have more of an impact on this as well), and this is only going to get worse in the future, the question is this:

Is Linkbait Dead?

Maybe we should call it TweetBait? You tell me! And feel free to link over … oh, and tweet too. Much appreciated!

If you enjoyed this post, please share it!



August 18, 2009 Posted in Blogging by

  • http://www.asiatranslate.net/ Simon Ng

    linkbait is far, far from dead. I consider linkbait the perfect content source. Clickety click.

  • rogerakers

    From an SEO perspective, I don't see how linkbait could be dead. Fundamentally the more eyeballs you get to your site the better – either by link juice or branding in general.

  • http://www.therentalbug.com/ therentalbug

    Linkbait is not dead definitely. It is also an effective way to attract potential customers. Nice post. Thanks sharing with us.

  • confeti

    It can't be dead, because I still see it everyday searching blogs. You are right, there are definitely some poor attempts at it, but there are some good ones as well.

  • http://logoworks.com/ Clayton Shumway

    I agree, and I think linkbaiting is becoming over saturated. Great content can never be heard just because the title wasn't creative or engaging enough.

  • http://www.property-for-sale-in-javea.com/index.php Poul Anderson

    Nice post. This true that linkbait works best when the content is great. This is also depending on the type of linkbait and the market. In internet marketing Twitter adoption is higher. Thanks for sharing with back links.

  • alantollemache

    The problem is that it is hard to control the outcome of “link baiting”. It requires a lot of time and effort to develop meaningful site content, but there are no guarentees that people will link to you.

  • http://www.attorneysmax.com/ Attorney Smith

    Linking still helps you to ranking better in search engine and increases your PR and ultimately your traffic. So its not dead yet.

  • unityKAMA

    Interesting post,thanks for the back link.
    unitykamasutra

  • http://www.undated20pcoin.info undated20p

    Nice post,thanks for the back link.
    luis

About Ben Yoskovitz
I recently joined GoInstant as VP Product. GoInstant changes how we use the web, making it shareable like never before.

I'm also a Founding Partner at Year One Labs, an early stage accelerator in Montreal. Previously I founded Standout Jobs (and sold it). I'm a hands-on startup guy, helping companies grow successfully from the idea forward. You can reach me at byosko at gmail dot com.

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