Why Matt Cutts Can’t Kill Guest Blogging

Why Matt Cutts Can’t Kill Guest Blogging


I’d hate to be in Matt Cutts’ shoes. He’s often in an incredibly difficult position, serving as a mouthpiece for Google, passing on the company’s unpopular and even hated policies, and then bearing the brunt of the ensuing criticism from the digital marketing industry. I have tremendous respect for Matt, and am grateful for the information and updates he shares. I have no doubt we would complain a lot more if Google refused to share any information with us as to what they are thinking and doing.

That said, I was dismayed by his recent blog post declaring the death of guest blogging as an SEO tactic, not because of the declaration itself, but because ofhow it was communicated.
While Matt Cutts is a prominent figure on both the Google and the digital marketing landscapes, he’s not the final word on Google policy. While his frustration-fueled post may be an indication of things to come from the search engine, we—especially those not in the digital marketing industry—need to keep some important things in mind.

An Abuse of Trust

Matt’s blog audience isn’t just made up of SEO and marketing professionals. Being in a highly visible position has made him known to business owners and others in the digital space as well. One of the comments on Matt’s guest blogging post came from a representative of a fitness blogger network who was expressing not just concern, but actual fear that his websites may now be penalized for the way they were handling guest blogging:
“We are a health and fitness community which has always allowed our members to submit guest articles and blogs for editorial review. We have always steered clear of spammy articles, not allowed optimized keyword links and made sure we used the correct Google+ Authorship.
I am worried now my website will be penalized for this activity ??
Are you saying “ALL” Guest blogging is bad or can high-quality publishers still carry on if we make sure the posts are high quality and relevant ??”
Despite Matt’s efforts to stress that he was referring to guest blogging as a link building tactic, there was clearly still a lack of understanding from those who are not digital marketers or SEO professionals.
Hopefully that commenter will find someone who can allay his concerns. The point is, using broad language like “guest blogging is dead” and “guest blogging used to be a respectable thing” is at best careless, and at worst, irresponsible, and can have real consequences for those who don’t live and breathe digital marketing and SEO.

SEO Isn’t Everything

In “Why Your High Ranking in Google May Be a Failure Point“, I showed just how dangerous it can be to rely solely on a high-ranking in Google. Smart business owners stabilize their marketing and conversion sources. Their businesses take advantage of multiple marketing channels.
If you think about it, guest blogging is really the Internet’s version of traditional PR. It’s a valid and legitimate strategy on its own, and doesn’t need SEO to be a powerful promotional technique. Guest blogging can be a form of link building, yes, but it doesn’t require links to be effective, depending on what your goals are.
For example, at this moment, you’re reading a post I wrote for Search Engine Journal, a respected site. My goal is not to acquire a link, but to build my brokerage’s brand and reputation, as well as my own. Whether you agree with my post or not, the mere fact that you’re reading it means I’m gaining exposure for my business, and building my authority. As far as I’m concerned, this is already an instance of successful guest blogging.

An Abuse of Trust

Matt’s blog audience isn’t just made up of SEO and marketing professionals. Being in a highly visible position has made him known to business owners and others in the digital space as well. One of the comments on Matt’s guest blogging post came from a representative of a fitness blogger network who was expressing not just concern, but actual fear that his websites may now be penalized for the way they were handling guest blogging:
“We are a health and fitness community which has always allowed our members to submit guest articles and blogs for editorial review. We have always steered clear of spammy articles, not allowed optimized keyword links and made sure we used the correct Google+ Authorship.
I am worried now my website will be penalized for this activity ??
Are you saying “ALL” Guest blogging is bad or can high-quality publishers still carry on if we make sure the posts are high quality and relevant ??”
Despite Matt’s efforts to stress that he was referring to guest blogging as a link building tactic, there was clearly still a lack of understanding from those who are not digital marketers or SEO professionals.
Hopefully that commenter will find someone who can allay his concerns. The point is, using broad language like “guest blogging is dead” and “guest blogging used to be a respectable thing” is at best careless, and at worst, irresponsible, and can have real consequences for those who don’t live and breathe digital marketing and SEO.

SEO Isn’t Everything

In “Why Your High Ranking in Google May Be a Failure Point“, I showed just how dangerous it can be to rely solely on a high-ranking in Google. Smart business owners stabilize their marketing and conversion sources. Their businesses take advantage of multiple marketing channels.
If you think about it, guest blogging is really the Internet’s version of traditional PR. It’s a valid and legitimate strategy on its own, and doesn’t need SEO to be a powerful promotional technique. Guest blogging can be a form of link building, yes, but it doesn’t require links to be effective, depending on what your goals are.
For example, at this moment, you’re reading a post I wrote for Search Engine Journal, a respected site. My goal is not to acquire a link, but to build my brokerage’s brand and reputation, as well as my own. Whether you agree with my post or not, the mere fact that you’re reading it means I’m gaining exposure for my business, and building my authority. As far as I’m concerned, this is already an instance of successful guest blogging.

The Threat to Small Business Owners

This is why issuing  a statement such as: “So stick a fork in it: guest blogging is done; it’s just gotten too spammy”, is so dangerous. Small business owners may abandon a valid technique for promoting their business because they may see it lumped together with other spammy practices.  They don’t have a deep enough understanding of how guest blogging works—or should work—and they don’t have the knowledge or experience to differentiate between spammy guest blogging and the legitimate promotion tool it can be.
That’s the part I find dismaying. We all know the Internet has lowered the barrier to entry for a lot of people to become business owners who otherwise may not have had that kind of opportunity. A lot of the people who make a living from their online business are single moms, retirees, students, and others for whom it may be difficult to work outside the home.
They’re not SEO experts, or even marketing experts, and they shouldn’t have to be. So when someone like Matt Cutts takes it upon himself to “call it” and declare a perfectly valid promotional technique “dead,” without a fuller, clearer explanation, those people can become frightened, and their businesses can suffer. And that is a greater travesty than a link building tactic becoming more difficult, or even obsolete.

The Unofficial Last Word

The most important thing to note about Matt’s post is that it was published on his personal blog—not the official Google blog. To the uninitiated, it may have seemed like a change in Google policy when it was actually Matt expressing his frustration with the 8,436th guest blogging pitch email he’s received.
Matt is perfectly within his rights to complain about, well, anything on his personal blog. While I do think a little more care is warranted when blogging about topics like this, small business owners must also change the way they respond to posts like this.
So if you’re a small business owner, what are your actual takeaways from Matt’s post?
  • Identify good guest blogging partners: Avoid sites that offer “open invitations” to guest bloggers, unless they’re moderated and edited.
  • Look for strong metrics: This is important in both the SEO and audience areas. Do they have a responsive audience? Is the audience targeted to your industry? Can you legitimately add to the conversation?
  • Avoid linking to your content in the body of the article: Links to your website should be mostly saved for your bio. Focus on your brand and develop thought leadership.
  • Be creative: Put in the time and effort to create high-quality content, whether it’s on your site or someone else’s. Any benefit you may get from guest blogging will be negated by poorly written, thin content. Besides, if you are paying attention to the first point (Identify good guest blogging partners), they hopefully won’t allow you to publish thin content.
  • Develop relationships: Be a true partner to those sites that publish your content. Your job isn’t done once the post goes up. Be available to respond to comments, and stay in touch with the site’s publisher.
  • Diversify your marketing efforts: If you’re using guest blogging as your sole method of building links or marketing your business, you’re setting yourself up for failure. Use multiple marketing techniques to not only broaden your reach, but to ride out changes such as one of those techniques eventually being killed by Google. And it will happen, whether it’s guest blogging, or some other tactic.

Stay on the Course

Above all, see posts like this for what they are—a reason to do things better. Guest posting as a link building tactic is on its way out because too many people have abused it. The same can be said for several past SEO tactics. Too many people out there look for the loopholes they can exploit, to the point where Google changes its algorithm, and the process starts over again.
Don’t let yourself fall victim to the latest marketing trend or tactic. Keep things above-board, maintain quality in everything you do, and don’t make business decisions based on one person’s blog post, whether it’s Matt Cutts or anyone else. Weigh the pros and cons, and seek out more information before you make changes that could put your business in jeopardy.
And Matt, next time you get frustrated, maybe you can give it a day or so before you write that exasperated post. I think we’d all appreciate that.

After Guest Blogging What’s Left for Safe Link Building

As link building tactics get shot down by the Big G, online marketers are left wondering what’s left.  Guest blogging has been devalued, alongside every other known scalable method to build links, including comments, forums, article marketing, and directories.  These almost sound like dirty words in today’s marketing environment, but years ago, they were the way to rank.  So what now? What can you do to get your site to rank?
Everyone is now touting the benefit of Content Marketing as the only safe tactic left.  But what happens when EVERYONE starts doing it?  Mark Shaeffer from Businesses Grow coined a term called Content Shock.  There’s simply too much content being produced.  So is content marketing a sustainable model for every businesses wanting to improve their presence in Google organic?

Safe Link Building Strategies

Let’s start by changing the paradigm.  “Link building” is over, done, kaput.   Any of the known methods used to build links are now on Google’s radar to penalize.  They really, really, really don’t want anyone “Building” links.  They want everyone Building content that THEY can monetize on.  Think about it.  All those great long tail articles that you are creating will help improve relevancy which in turn helps them improve their bottom line.  If link building is out, what can you do?

Forget Link Building, think Link Earning

The concept of link earning is one we’ve all heard about, but have difficulty turning into a scalable methodology.  Great content can’t assure links.  But great content CAN be the foundation for which you implement other methods to EARN links.  The best way to achieve this is using integrated online marketing.

How to Use Integrated Content Marketing to Earn Links & Social Signals

Before you think links you HAVE to think content.  Content Marketing is the foundation for an integrated marketing strategy.  Your social, paid, and organic promotions depend on highly authoritative, quality content.
Once you’ve created amazing resources, get your content in front of people with Social Media.  Create community by building an engaged audience ready to share and like your content.
Amplify your content using paid social channels as well as Direct Outreach to increase the visibility of your content.  Marty Weintraub, who coined “Paid Organic Amplification” has been teaching marketers how to amplify content using Facebook for years.
The combination of content, social media, and paid social leads to visibility which in turn links to those Coveted Links and Social Signals that help you rank organically.
Continued Psychographic, Semantic, Persona and Keyword Research will drive the content creation strategy which in turn will bring in more users from different stages of the sales funnel.

The Goal:  

Build high quality content assets that can be placed in front of a socially engaged and psychographically targeted audience which then shares and links to your content – naturally.  No byline, no manufactured links profiles…just genuine shares and attribution to great content.

Scaling Link Earning

Once you have great content, how do you guarantee visibility for this content?
Let’s start by discussing some of the different types of content that can have traction in this over-saturated environment.

Vanity Bait & Round-up Articles

Have you been emailed a question by bloggers as part of a round-up where your answer gets aggregated with that of other influencers? These posts tend to be extensive, chock-full of knowledge, and a genuine resource.  And guess what happens when it’s published? You email the influencers who are published in the content piece and announce that the content is live.  What will 9 out of 10 people do? Share it socially – why not show off this mention? So you generated content and social signals with a little bit of high-end, targeted outreach.

Interviews

Influencers have to promote themselves, too and generally love to share their knowledge.  Build connections with high-profile industry influencers and ask them if they’re willing to be interviewed.  GoogleHangouts are a great way to create video content that is highly shareable.  I recently interviewed Jesse Wojdylo on a Hangout, and his share of our interview generated some nice social activity for us both.

Surveys

Using Survey Monkey to create surveys can generate a plethora of content pieces that contain both statistical data as well as many other potential content pieces.  Instead of just regurgitating what everyone else is talking about, why not get some actual HARD data that you can turn into blog posts, infographics, white papers and case studies?

Infographics

I know this is an old practice that has been abused, but there’s still massive value in creating infographics.  People love visual content, and infographics are a great way to convey a message without boring people with a lot of text.  People’s attention span just keeps getting shorter, so engage them with gorgeous visuals that are also informative.  Combining infographics with direct outreach, even offering to write custom intros for those infographics, can generate great results for earned links.

Amplify your content with paid social ads

Now that you’ve created all these content pieces, how can you guarantee eyeballs?  Place that content in front of the people who are most likely to share and link to it.  Using Facebook ads is the most precise method due to the highly advanced targeting capabilities.  In a groundbreaking post dating back to 2012, Marty Weintraub outlines a precise method to amplify content using Facebook. You can use other social promotions channels as well, including Twitter, Reddit, and Stumbleupon.

And Pretty Please…don’t Forget Google Plus

Even though this isn’t a link building tactic, you really can’t ignore Google Plus.  Google has stated that they WILL be using social signals in the future, and the only signals that they fully control are those from their own social platform.  We’re already seeing more Plus pages ranking in Google, and the trend will only continue.  In the same way you use links to build authority, now you have to build connections to build social authority, which is in turn connected to your site and persona as you publish across the web.

Direct Outreach is a Crucial Component

Even when you place content in front of people, the most effective way to generate links and mentions is via direct outreach.  This outreach is what leads to the connections made for interviews and round-up posts.  When promoting an infographic, finding people who have shared contextual infographics and telling them about yours WILL lead to links.  Perhaps they didn’t see your post on Facebook promoting your infographic, but if you reach out to them via email, Facebook, or Twitter then it’s possible they’ll share the infographic. Direct outreach is the jelly in a PB&J sandwich – you really can’t practice Link Earning without outreach.

Don’t forget to Track!

Before you start your integrated marketing campaign, make sure you have clear goals with associated Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s).  Tracking these KPI’s will help you identify what content pieces are working best, movement in both social and organic results, and of course conversions.  It’ll help drive the content creation strategy.

Guest Blogging is NOT Dead

Who am I to contradict Google’s head of web spam?  What I will say, from someone who spends 80% of her time doing link audits, analyzing link profiles, and doing competitive analysis – is that most of the links that Matt has pronounced as “dead” are really NOT.  What’s dead is “Footprint Link Building”.  If ALL of your links are guest posts, then yes, this will cause your site to be penalized.  If you have money terms in your anchor, Penguin will likely catch you at one point or another.  If too many of your link ratios create a footprint, then your link building is not safe and will lead to manual or algorithmic penalties. 
As many have said before, use high quality guest posting as a small part of your internet marketing campaign and you won’t have any problems.  Just make sure to vary your link profile and use many different types of link earning sources and you’ll stay safe from Google’s dangerous animals.