Written on September 8th, 2007 at 04:09 am by Darren Rowse
Learn How to Get Your Blog Ranking High in Search Engines - An Interview with Aaron Wall
Over the next couple of days you’re in for a treat because I’ve managed to secure an interview with Aaron Wall - a blogger and author that has literally added thousands (if not tens of thousands) to my own blogging earnings over the last few years as a result of me reading his great eBook - SEObook. Aaron’s book is 300 pages of pure Search Engine Optimization gold and he’s been generous enough to answer some of my questions.
His answers are so good that I’ve decided to split this into a two part interview so you don’t scan over them too fast and miss something.
Aaron - thanks for your time. Can you give us a short introduction to yourself and what you do?
I am a blogger who wrote a popular book about SEO. I also publish a wide array of websites and do a limited amount of high end SEO consulting with my partner Scott Smith at ClientsideSEM.com.
In addition to writing about SEO I offer free tools to help people automate doing research. I recently created a couple Google Gadgets that were well received, and my programmer created SEO for Firefox, which puts marketing data right in the search results.
It seems that a lot of people are getting into SEO at the moment - how and when did you get into it?
My first website, in early 2003, was a poorly done rant site. I wanted others to see my opinions and I figured the easiest and cheapest way to do so was to learn how to make it rank in search engines. I asked lots of questions at forums and then started moderating many of them. I had a site that listed my own notes about SEO stuff and a person hired me before I knew I was selling anything. A few months later they had already seen a 20x return on their spend and I felt pretty good about that.
By the end of 2003 I was ranking in the top 10 of Google’s results for search engine marketing, and my article about the Google florida update became popular and got me more client inquires than I could handle.
I’ve said on numerous occasions that I’ve learned almost everything that I know about SEO from your resource - SEO Book - but can you tell us why you wrote it and why ProBlogger readers might want to consider making the purchase?
When I got on the web I bought SEO services from a scammy company that ripped me off. I also went down many dead end paths, trying to find where there was free traffic, doing arbitrage from unclean sources that stole my money, signing up for programs that teach you the world revolves around spreading their crap. etc. That led me to an inbox full of spam but no rankings.
I saw at the end of 2003 that the client services lifestyle was a bit feast or famine. I was getting about 2 calls a month. Then overnight it was up to like 30 in a day. Then it went back down a bit. And honestly I tended to undersell services because I didn’t fully appreciate the value of search off the start.
After I started learning more about SEO and business I thought it would be a good idea to share what I knew. My goal when I first wrote SEO Book was to write the book I wished I had read when I first got on the web. The first version was a modest 24 page HTML document that I gave away on Christmas of 2003.
Search has since got more complex and important, my experience has increased, and my knowledge of marketing has increased. As a result, the book is now over 300 pages, and rather than talking about do this do that in specific white and black my book also offers reasons why I think an idea will work or not.
When it comes to building links to a blog - do you recommend bloggers buy links, ‘use’ social media sites, trade links, linkbait, something else…. or some combination of the above?
I say try everything and see what works best for you. You might come across a trick that I haven’t used much that works well for you given your personality and your market.
- I wouldn’t recommend renting too many links right out of the gate, because it adds cost and you may not be able to recoup the costs unless you are business savvy, plus sites get trusted more as they age. I would recommend listing in the Yahoo! Directory and some of the other higher quality general directories and blogging directories if you intend on creating a long term successful blog as a business.
- Comment on related blogs and participate in related communities. These may not provide direct links, but links flow naturally after you have subscribers. You need to raise awareness if you are new and starting from scratch.
- After you have awareness many people will frequently cite you just because they are subscribed to you.
- Buy specific ads from specific sites.
- Take concepts you see poorly done and do them exceptionally well, then use email to notify people who might care. Don’t forget to ping people you know well, especially if you have done them favors too.
- Create social content as a form of marketing. Interview people, create tools, hold contests, give out awards, etc.
One other thing I would probably add is that for most people it is probably not going to be worth it to spend tons and tons of time building up a social media account on a large generalist website. If you only have a few hours a day to spend online then you should spend most of that reading and participating on sites specifically about your topic, or writing your site.
Tomorrow I’ll share the second part to this interview with Aaron and will ask him about the best ever link building strategy that he’s used, where he gives 5 key SEO tips that bloggers should implement, where he talks about Page Rank and gives some hints on how to launch a successful ebook (plus more).
In the mean time - take a little time out to check out SEO Book - which comes with a money back guarantee, free lifetime updates (and he does update) plus a few worthwhile bonuses.


46 Responses to “Learn How to Get Your Blog Ranking High in Search Engines - An Interview with Aaron Wall”
Mason from SmallFuel Marketing
September 8th, 2007 5:06 am
Hi Aaron, Darren,
Great interview, good questions, and good answers. SEO is one of the most misunderstood aspects of being online, and I applaud you two for trying to rectify that.
I’d been mulling over a Yahoo! Directory listing for the past several days, and I think I’m going to go for it. Are there any other high quality directories (other than the DMOZ) that are worth getting into?
- Mason
Cyrus
September 8th, 2007 5:22 am
I’ve been looking into buying the seo book. Have heard good things but currently don’t have the capitol to do so. I’ll look forward to the tips tomorrow and hopefully in the no time I’ll have a copy of the SEO Book.
Dan Cole
September 8th, 2007 5:25 am
Darren, do you look directly look at making your SEO better? It seams as if some large websites never worried about SEO before they got big. How much time should be put on SEO? Aren’t there better things you could do to improve your sites traffic? To me SEO seams to fit into 80/20, taking 80% of your time to product 20% of the results.
Jake from MoreMerchant.com
September 8th, 2007 5:30 am
I can’t wait for the rest. Aaron Wall has some fantastic tips that have helped me out enormously in the past and still do!
Bontb
September 8th, 2007 5:35 am
Yes I read that book it’s cool book, but as SEO savy I am I knew most of the things. I learned a lot from that book as well , especially the strategies.
Arron is a good guy, I like him, he is very good in what he does congrats to him.
Darren make an Interview with me now!
I mean I would like to interview you.
21st Century Citizen
September 8th, 2007 5:51 am
Great interview!
My environmental lifestyle blog gets about 3% of it’s daily traffic from SEO, but I believe it’s relatively high quality traffic since I know the readers are coming directly because they have an interest in what the saw in the SERP.
Following those results closely helps me to amplify that traffic by seeing the actual search terms people arrive on.
Thanks for another great post!
Bill Hartzer
September 8th, 2007 6:40 am
Great post and great interview. The most important question that I want to know, though, is why the heck Aaron decided to grow a beard? Perhaps he has visions of running a contest so someone can win it? LOL
Terra Andersen
September 8th, 2007 6:48 am
This was wonderful advice. I absolutely love the SEO book. Great interview.. and great post! (as usual) *=)
icedragon
September 8th, 2007 6:52 am
I have a little sense of urgency to buy Aaron’s book . . .
Great guy indeed
Rhys
September 8th, 2007 6:59 am
I have the same t-shirt as him. Irrelevant I know, but dammit I wanted to share it ;)
doug m
September 8th, 2007 8:00 am
I’m already intrigued by this interview, can’t wait for the rest Darren!
Alex
September 8th, 2007 8:41 am
Great Interview. I would buy the book, but I’m flat out broke
Aaronontheweb (AjaxNinja)
September 8th, 2007 9:08 am
I thought the bit about participating within relevant blogging communities was especially important. Finding the correct blogs to comment on can be tricky.
Taste Like Crazy
September 8th, 2007 9:13 am
I really look forward to reading the rest of the interviews.
This is such a hot topic right now and it’s rarely done right.
aaron wall
September 8th, 2007 10:30 am
>Are there any other high quality directories (other than the DMOZ) that are worth getting into?
I like Yahoo!, BOTW, JoeAnt, UncoverTheNet, Gimpsy, GoGuides, Linkopedia (much smaller than the others but they still reject junky sites and are affordable), and Business.com if you have a business oriented website. You can also get free exposure on Business.com by submitting a how to guide to Work.com.
In some cases I may submit to even more directories if my domain matches my keywords or I need a few descriptive inbound links.
>I have the same t-shirt as him.
So does my wife. It was the undershirt I had on when we got married. It is so symbolic I will try to keep it forever. (Our big wedding is coming up soon, but when we went to the courthouse to get arrangement papers we got married on the spot too).
>The most important question that I want to know, though, is why the heck Aaron decided to grow a beard?
Two factors. My boundless laziness combined with my wife thinking I looked cute with it.
RT the fitness guy
September 8th, 2007 11:27 am
There are some things missing here that helped me get to number one on google for so many posts.
I wonder if he’ll talk about them tomorrow?!
RT
Leon
September 8th, 2007 1:38 pm
Excellent tips. I’ll be reading on.
Kieran
September 8th, 2007 1:56 pm
It is amazing how competitive SEO is now compared to 2003. I’ve always thought that the opportunity from SEO that was available 4 years ago was one of the greatest bargains in business history. There are plenty of sites from totally amateur webmasters who knew nothing about coding or design that spend $100 on hosting and ended up making 6 or 7 figures. SEO is by no means dead now but the demand and supply dynamics of the content market are different now.
Kieran
September 8th, 2007 2:02 pm
I understand that paid directories give you a high-PR authoritative link but are these sites really worth it? I’ve always thought that if your content isn’t good enough to get organic links then your site isn’t unique or good enough to get good rankings in general. $200 spent to get 4 links on paid directories could end up getting you 4,000 visitors from a PPC campaign if you do $0.05 bids on MSN with long-tail keywords in your industry.
A. Taylor
September 8th, 2007 2:29 pm
Great Interview Aaron and Darren,
Have you guys thought about podcasting an interview in the future?
Jok3r
September 8th, 2007 3:05 pm
*waiting earnestly for the 2nd part of the interview =P
Brad V.
September 8th, 2007 3:06 pm
Without knowing anything about SEO, my blog now gets a majority of it’s traffic from search engines. This is both good and bad. It’s good because, well, I’m getting more and more traffic each month. It’s bad because the traffic isn’t the “sticky” kind - people visit and leave and only a handful come back. So I’m now concentrating on making my blog more “sticky” rather than SEO.
But I still really enjoyed reading the interview and can’t wait for the second part! Thanks Darren!
aaron wall
September 8th, 2007 3:43 pm
>I’ve always thought that if your content isn’t good enough to get organic links then your site isn’t unique or good enough to get good rankings in general.
I have pages that rank #4 or #5 for keywords that cost about $2.50 a click and $100 a day if I want to buy them on Google. If I spend that same $100 a day on links for about a month straight I bet my ranking goes from #4 or #5 to #1. Then at the end of the month I can stop paying Google, or keep paying and have an even stronger position in the market.
Links don’t have to be viewed as an either or thing. You can mix and match. Even today I continue to buy links for a site that has over 1,000,000 backlinks.
Chirag Jain
September 8th, 2007 6:58 pm
its great no other words to say great! great!……………………
Thiru
September 8th, 2007 9:19 pm
Commenting on other niche blogs, in my opinion, is a great tip that has paid dividends for me.
CatherineL
September 8th, 2007 10:04 pm
Great interview. I love SEO book too by the way, it’s helped me heaps. And I’ve only done some of the things I learned from the book so far.
Sean
September 8th, 2007 10:43 pm
Anything recommended by Darren is good enough for me! I am getting it right now.
I hope it will be good..
Tariq Bamadhaj
September 9th, 2007 8:26 am
That’s definitely a great interview and I am definitely considering getting that book.
David Scrivner
September 9th, 2007 1:23 pm
Darren -
I would first like to say that I really love your blog. I have been looking for something like this that would help me learn how to be a successful blogger.
The interview is great so far. I think that using just a few of the tips that Aaron had will help me to focus my efforts more efficiently. Since I am new to blogging, how do you think the best way to get started is? Thank you for the awesome post.
Film Asia
September 9th, 2007 10:47 pm
Pretty generous in answering the questions. Expect more goodies from this guy in the next interview
Bobby Revell
September 9th, 2007 11:56 pm
Hi Darren, Nice interview! Two months ago I didn’t even know what seo stood for and it seems to be on everyone’s minds now. One thing I have learned is that knowledge is power in blogging and the challenge of evolving with this constantly changing environment is something that I love most. Learning and experimenting to sharpen what we do everyday is what will make a blogger successful. I am but an infant in blogging but I do love it. Thanks for the great interview!
Mikey
September 10th, 2007 2:17 am
I have learnt alot about SEO and my own website articles are higly ranked see for yourself my website has only been live less than a month http://www.WhichWebsite.com
How to scrapbook
September 10th, 2007 5:50 am
How timely is this post I was trying to figure out how to get the word out about how to scrapbook. Im in the middle of scrapbooking my kids first few years and started blogging about it. Very cool !
Kieran
September 10th, 2007 8:45 am
>
But doesn’t this amount to basically “buying” SEO? If so then what is the long-term viability of this strategy? Is it something that will eventually disspear because of Google’s dissaproval or is link-buying something that will never be able to be quantified in a formula and therefore perpetually slip under the alogorythm screening process?
aaron wall
September 10th, 2007 10:59 am
I have some good sites that do not get much traffic. I also have fairly average sites that dominate their makets. The difference between the two is SEO.
SEO is a subset of marketing, which has existed for thousands of years. Without marketing markets would not exist.
Google tries to control and shape human behavior on some levels, but they will never be able to stop all marketing, not for the least of reasons because they want to slap their ads on just about everything. You can’t be pro advertising and anti marketing without looking a bit weird. :)
Dave
September 10th, 2007 9:14 pm
Great interview. I spent a great deal of time a couple of years ago ensuring that my site was ‘SE friendly’ as best I could.
Amazing how a couple of years later, I can look back and be thankful that the time spent was worth it, as it helped my site grow to what it is today. I have, however, been neglecting the SEO side of things and possibly need to start re-investing time to ensure that my site remains in its current position.
The biggest factor for me is the trade off between adding content and working on link building and/or general martketing. I’ve found that I get few natural links coming into my site, so this is possibly where I should concentrate my time, but is the time spent in this area worth it when the site has survivied mostly off the back of new content being added? Plus, I’d much rather spend time adding content to the site than trying to market the site.
Not being a believer in the ‘build it and they shall come’ philosphy, I understand that initial marketing and work in regard to SEO is very very very important, but as a long term proposition, should it be treated as separate factor to your general day-to-day content, and thus consume time in its own right, or should your website be designed in such a way that the content is the driving force behind its place in the SERPS?
Technobuzz.net
September 10th, 2007 10:13 pm
Great post and great interview
http://www.technobuzz.net/
Scarlett T.
September 11th, 2007 12:27 am
Great write up! If you are looking for full SEO,specialization in text linking, you should check http://www.linkworth.com out.
http://digitalproducts.wordpress.com/
September 26th, 2007 6:59 am
Good interview, nice tips.
SEO boosted my blogs traffic immensely, it is highly recommended!!
Ted
October 1st, 2007 12:39 pm
I have read alot of articles and books on seo and ranking high on Google. I am convinced that it can be done but it takes time and patience. Links are the most important tool since if you have authority sites linking to your site then Google give you a higher page rank which in turn leads to higher traffic.
I have zero links on my site, so someone please give me a link and let’s help each other rank #1 in Google.
Ted
Debt Specialist
http://creditcard-debtsolutions.blogspot.com
Liz
October 8th, 2007 8:59 am
For those of us just beginning, it’s nice to come here and find a leg to stand on.
MarketingTraffic
October 29th, 2007 11:21 pm
Great it is, i m going to get this book. what say? ;)
————
http://marketingtraffic.blogspot.com
Simon
December 8th, 2007 2:38 am
Aaron Wall sounds like he knows his stuff. The guarentee looks pretty good as well.
http://www.homejobsite.com
Best Of The Web
January 11th, 2008 8:54 pm
Really Great Interview….. Aaron Wall Is One Of The Most Popular SEO…. I Really Liked It…
http://smashingzone.blogspot.com
mac flash
April 30th, 2008 3:01 pm
yer great stuff, learning a lot now about SEO:-)
Gambler
May 2nd, 2008 12:18 pm
Thanks, i hope i will generate more and more traffic with SEO tips.
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