Creative Ways To Exploit Twitter For Link Building

by Scott Cowley on March 2, 2011

Twitter Link Building

You know what’s ridiculous? Creating equity and funneling it into something you don’t really own. I’m not talking about working for the man (although that’s true too). I’m talking about the way we split our souls among 3rd party social platforms. We spend all the time and creative energy on Facebook, Twitter, Quora, Flickr, etc., and from a link perspective, the platforms and profiles get all of the credit. We should be more concerned than we are about this.

As my own small contribution to fighting the system, I want to look specifically at how to exploit Twitter for SEO and link building purposes. Up until now, most of what you’ll read on the subject talks about promotion of content and indirect payoff. Things like:

- Tweet links to your content to get more exposure and increase the chances that someone will link to your content
- Use Twitter to get your content into the hands of influencers who can help promote it and get more exposure resulting in natural backlinks
- Tweet links to your content because Google will view this as a social signal of relevancy

Evidently, we’re just not thinking creatively enough about this. Getting links using Twitter is all about understanding the constraints of the platform and how conversations on Twitter become content with links. Here are several link building tactics I’ve been using and seen used effectively to build links with Twitter.

1. Reclaim Links Going To Your Twitter Profile

When people find something valuable online, they link to it. Since many people get personal value from individuals on Twitter, they often mention these people and link to their Twitter profiles instead of their websites.

A quick look at the backlink portfolio of my Twitter profile page shows that I have a lot of misdirected link opportunities.

Scott Cowley Twitter Profile Backlink Portfolio

You can always request that these people link to your website instead of your Twitter profile, but remember that they may not see the same value in your site as they saw in your Twitter engagement. Here’s how you fix that.

Twitter has a seldom-used feature that allows you to embed your Twitter stream on a web page. I created a page on my site called “Twitter” and embedded my stream into it. (Make sure it looks like a full page instead of widget-size). Now, you have a perfect page of content that replicates your Twitter.com stream and it makes getting people to change their links to point to your site much easier. I’ve already had success doing this.

Scottergories Twitter Embed

You can make the process even easier by adding more helpful content on this page, including resources about Twitter, your personal Twitter use guidelines, etc. This is called future-proofing your link portfolio. Twitter may die, but you can retain some of the link equity.

With this foundational addition to your website, you can start targeting links in other creative ways.

2. Push Bloggers To Turn Twitter Conversations Into Blog Posts

This is a fun one. First, create a big private Twitter list of semi-frequent bloggers (Semi-frequent meaning at least once a month) and add that as a column to Tweetdeck.

Tweetdeck has a tasty feature for in-column filtering. You can only filter by one search term, but that’s all we need. Filter the column by “?” and you’re left with instances where those bloggers are tweeting questions. (Thanks to Richard Barley at Tweetdeck for showing me how this is done and providing the screenshot)

The secret is to watch for instances where they ask good questions that would be blog post-worthy. These kinds of questions are usually open-ended. Help them out by retweeting the question and providing your own answer. Use Twitter search again to see what kind of other responses the person is getting.

When responses hit “critical mass” (I’d say at least 4-5 responses), encourage them to write a blog post and share everybody’s insights. The power of suggestion works well on bloggers who are constantly trying to find original things to write about. Let them know what a good question it was and that you would love to see the responses compiled and their own thoughts added. You may even consider following up in a couple of days.

When this works, your Twitter profile will probably get linked to from the post, following which you can revert to Tactic #1 above and get that link pointed to your site instead of your profile.

3. Use Twitter Search To Find Blogging Crowdsourcers

Many people use Twitter while writing blog posts to crowdsource their content and give link attribution to the people who help. The easiest way to identify these is with Twitter search.

Search from the perspective of a crowdsourcer. Try some of these queries:

http://search.twitter.com/search?q=writing+a+blog+post+%3F
http://search.twitter.com/search?q=input+blog+post+%3F
http://search.twitter.com/search?q=help+blog+post+%3F

4. Find Bloggers Who Use Tweeps For Inspiration

In the same vein as Tactic #2, start by identifying people on Twitter you are similar to, in terms of industry, reputability, and Twitter usage. You could always use something like Formulists to do this, or start with who you know.

Look at the backlink portfolios of their Twitter profiles. Find out which bloggers are linking to these profiles. Create a custom private Twitter list to keep these bloggers on your radar. Make special effort to help answer their questions and encourage them to write.

5. Find and Win Blog Contests

How could I not throw this one in there? Often, if you win someone’s blog contest, they’ll write a special post to announce winners, and even link to the winner’s profile or website.

You can actually use Twitter search to find these types of contests, but remember that they have to be blog comment-based.

You can always search for terms like “blog contest” or “blog giveaway” to start. A very nice feature about Twitter search is that you can put terms like “wordpress.com” or “blogspot.com” into your query and not only will it return results of tweets that mention “wordpress.com,” but it will also return results of tweets with shortened links pointing to sites hosted on WordPress. Very handy.

Will Twitter Be Around In 5 Years?

Good question. If it won’t be, shouldn’t we be exploiting it while we can?

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{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

John March 2, 2011 at 9:22 am

Scott –
This is brilliant. Thank you for these insights and tactics. I didn’t even know about being able to filter a column by a search query in Tweetdeck. Brilliant!

I appreciate your insights. Keep them coming!

John
(@dohertyjf)

Reply

Scott Cowley March 2, 2011 at 4:56 pm

Thanks, John. One thing I’m hoping that Tweetdeck will develop is the ability to tack multiple keyword qualifiers onto a Twitter list instead of just one. In that case, I would filter out links so you’re only left with plain questions.

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AJ Wilcox March 2, 2011 at 12:01 pm

Very nicely done!!! This is something I’d thought about but hadn’t even gotten anywhere close to taking action on. Hooray for brain wrinkles!

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@garyjmag March 2, 2011 at 3:45 pm

great post scott. you came up with some super creative opportunities for leveraging Twitter for backlinks. I really like #2, such a great idea for establishing yourself within a vertical or industry while helping others and gaining links at the same time.

While #1 is also a good idea (who doesn’t love more links?!), do you think there is some value to building links and authority for your Twitter profile? We know that Google calculates some type of authority score for Twitter profiles, and I think it makes sense that inbound links plays a factor in that somehow. Maybe I’m off base, but as long as Twitter remains a factor in Google’s algorithm, it still makes sense to build up your profile’s authority, to a certain extent.

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Scott Cowley March 9, 2011 at 11:35 pm

Thanks for the great comments, Gary (and for the write-up on your site). Yes, I do think that there’s value to building authority for the Twitter profile, but not because of any algorithmic factor that might help content tweeted from a stronger account (I think social factors such as follower count are probably more valuable than a Twitter profile’s backlink portfolio). In my case, I never had to worry about getting my Twitter account on the 1st page for my name. Others might have to consider that.

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Tim Biden March 3, 2011 at 9:23 am

I was wondering why you were asking about tactic #2 the other day and now I have my answer. Far more creative than I imagined.

Great list. You have earned your way into my Tweets for the day.

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Ugochukwu Opara July 3, 2011 at 7:59 am

Holy Crap!

I didn’t even know twitter could be used like that! Tactic #2 is brilliant (first time I’m hearing any of this stuff so its all brilliant) and http://formulists.com is super helpful (See Who is Not Following You Back, oh yeah!)

Thanks,
Ugo

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Emanuel Yankulov January 8, 2012 at 3:00 am

Really great tips and tricks! About the #2 you just blow me off! I don’t use tweetdeck but I’ll install it right now to test this!

Thanks! Thanks! Thanks!

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