How You Should Be Accepting Guest Posts on Your Blog Website Guest posting is not exactly the latest trends among bloggers and Internet marketers to grow their blogs and get backlinks, but it’s certainly one of the most popular techniques.
Most people prefer guest blogging over article marketing, as the quality of links and exposure that we get from a high-quality blog is far more than from an article directory.
This article is dedicated to all bloggers who accept guest posts on their blogs, and who receive too many guest posting requests/submissions every day.
The
idea of getting a free blog post is always appealing to a webmaster,
but care must be taken so that you do not unknowingly hurt your blog
with unfiltered guest posts. In this article, I will be sharing a few
techniques that you should keep in mind when accepting guest posts. Use
it as a guideline, or add it to your current criteria for accepting
guest posts. I will also be outlining a few of the methods I use, which
you may wish to use for your own blog.
Before
moving forward with the following information, I recommend that you read
my previously published guide on how to create a multi-author WordPress
blog, which details some WordPress plugins that will help you to open
your blog to guest posting.
Accepting guest posts? Are you killing your blog?
Believe
it or not, you can use too many guest posts, and by doing so, you
could be killing your blog. I’m not referring to the difference in the
voices of the guest blog posts, but to the SEO demerit of linking out
via guest posts.
Guest posting can be very lucrative,
and is an inexpensive way to gain backlinks, as I have previously
outlined in an article on how to craft a guest posting campaign. You
may have noticed a rise in requests for guest post proposals in the past
few months. Since the Penguin update, it has become more difficult to
gain quality links, and this has served to make guest blogging which an
Internet marketer’s best friend. But, for many bloggers accepting guest
posts for their blogs, it could become slow poison. I’m not suggesting
that you should not accept guest posts. You must, however, set a high
standard with your guest post acceptance criteria.
Start with links
Let’s
consider backlinks in guest posts. This will help you to determine
whether you need to consider additional factors, or simply reject
a post.
Here are a few suggestions to consider:
- Avoid linking out to irrelevant niches. If you blog about blogging, only accept articles that link out to related niches and blogs.
- Avoid SEO-optimized anchor text links: Most of the IM uses the anchor text to generate links, and many times they use the same anchor text. Since the Penguin update, too many exact anchor text backlinks are considered spam, and you might end up penalizing your site. I usually link out to sites with the domain name.
- A number of links: Limit the number of links to a maximum of two. Too many backlinks from one post to a single domain might be considered spam or a sponsored post.
- Diversify links: This point may be a bit out of context, but it is still very important. Try to add 2-3 more outbound links from other domains. This will ensure that if your guest author’s blog is new and not credible enough, your link will not be viewed as bad linking. Remember that you can link to Wikipedia or other useful resources from the web. You can read more about this in my previously published article on outbound links for SEO.
Content length
As
part of my criteria for guest posts, I have set a post length
of greater than 500 words. My niche is blogging, SEO, and Internet
marketing, all of which requires detailed information. For this reason,
I believe 500 words should be the minimum for adequately and
meaningfully delivering that information. Depending on your niche, you
can set a length criteria for guest posts for your blog as well. My
recommendation would be that guest posts should be at least 400 words,
regardless of the niche.
Duplicate content/spun content
Before
checking the quality and other factors of guest posts, I recommend you
carefully check to make sure every proposed guest post is original,
and not duplicated material. To do this, simply select one line from
each paragraph, and search that line, enclosed in quotation marks
(“…”), in Google. This should tell you whether there is any
near-duplicate or exact-duplicate out there. You can also use services
like Copyscape to check the originality of content.
Guest post image
This
same research applies to images within guest posts. Make sure they
are not copyrighted images, and that you have sufficient permission to
use them on your blog. I have noticed that in most guest post
submissions, authors are using images from Google image search, and
that is always a bad idea. As an editor or owner, you can run a reverse
image search or simply direct the proposed guest author to guides such
Content quality
Most
bloggers and IM whom I know hire freelance writers to write articles
for them, and then they submit the articles as guest posts. There is
nothing wrong with this practice unless the submitter is not thoroughly
editing the articles and adding personal touches to them.
I set
criteria of a certain standard of quality of the content I will allow
on my blog. If a proposed guest post does not meet the standard of my
blog content, I simply reject the proposed post and add a note
explaining this. You can read this guide on how to judge the quality of
content, which will give you an idea of what factors you should be
looking for in a quality article.
Readability and spelling mistakes
Readability
is one of the SEO factors, and I use the EasyWPSEO plugin to check the
readability score of any article. If the readability score is negative
or very low, I always ask the submitter to rewrite and resubmit the
content.
Make sure also to take great care to correct grammar and
spelling mistakes. What matters most is the quality of an article when
the post goes live. You can use free chrome addon like Grammarly to
check for common grammatical and spelling mistakes.
Self-promotion
I
don’t mind self-promotion as long as it is adding value to the
article. Sometimes people go overboard with self-promotion in guest
posts, and this is never good. Excessive self-promotion should be
limited from day one.
Out-of-niche topics:
Make
sure you have a good reason for accepting every guest post for your
blog. Never accept articles on topics that are not related to your
niche. Regardless of how good the article may be, if it is off topic, it
will be a disappointment to your regular readers. You can specify
clearly the topics that you accept for your guest posts.
If you
follow the points noted above, you will improve the quality of guest
posts on your blog. I also recommend that you have a dedicated page for
guest post submission guidelines on your blog. This
page should mention the criteria for accepting guest posts, as well
as other important information such as how to submit the guest posts and
how long the author should expect to wait to hear whether the post has
been accepted.
What criteria do you specify before accepting a
guest post on your blog? Share your thoughts with us using the
comments section below.
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Thank you sir...
ReplyDeletePromotion and backlink to own website make my post accept guest to one top index.