Domestic link building service company emerges

by yueseo on 2008-10-18 18:05:11

SEO in Chinese is many years behind English. Often when I browse foreign blogs, their blog introductions frequently mention more than ten years of SEO experience. In terms of SEO services, China also lags behind foreign countries. It's not the ranking services that are behind; works like "WoW Gold" are "created" by Chinese teams (whether they are individuals or not remains uncertain). However, from an overall service perspective, there is a significant gap. Most Chinese operations are small workshops with simple processes, low service quality, and primarily offer ranking services for low-end customers, some even resorting to black hat tactics. The emergence of link-building service companies can be considered as the beginning of an era.

The Beta version of LinkBuilder's external name is this website, and the company owning the site is heard for the first time. In the Chinese SEO field where ranking services and training services are rampant, the appearance of a link-building company signifies a diversification of the Chinese SEO service industry. However, it will likely take a long time to establish a truly complete service system and industrial chain.

The current challenge faced by Chinese SEO services is not the inability to improve rankings, but rather unpredictable search engine risks (such as manual intervention by Baidu), while SEO training is considered by many as a way to make money through persuasion. Of course, everyone has their own opinion, and we won't go into that discussion here. Transitioning to link-building services may not be a bad attempt, but service quality and price are definitely what most demanders care about. From the content on LinkBuilder, currently there are three items: one-way links, three-way links, and directory submissions, which insiders should all understand. In terms of pricing, the three-way link cost hasn't been disclosed, but relatively speaking, the other prices are quite high, since these are all PR-less link-building services, and the target clients generally have knowledge of SEO, so the pricing strategy needs improvement.

Only by improving the overall environment can the industry develop. Currently, the SEO industry is in an awkward gray area, so we advocate that everyone does not openly discuss or promote black hat tactics. As for whether you use them or not is your own business, which is beyond control, as long as you can bear the consequences. Just don't curse Baidu or complain everywhere due to this, affecting the public environment or maliciously guiding newcomers.