
Website awards
Website awards are small, sometimes animated pictures that have a little
bit of text and some cute graphics in them. They are a bit like trophies
from sport events - one would easily believe that they have no actual purpose
and are just designed to look good and to make the owner proud of himself.
Is it that simple? Well, if it were you wouldn't have to read this article.
Awards actually have a function, but the way they work is not quite common
knowledge. Even many webmasters who display awards on their sites don't have
a clue on what is actually happening.
Let's start by looking at this topic from the award winner's side. What does
he actually get? Well, first of all he receives the graphic that the award
distributor has made. Only on rare occasions it has any value; unless the
site that gave it is extremely known and respected, the graphic alone will
not raise the prestige of the page that won it.
Second, the winner usually receives a link from the site that gave the award. The value of this link
depends on where it is placed and how much traffic the linking page gets.
If it's a prominent link on a busy site, it's worth something. If it's a
tiny link on a low-traffic site, it won't do the winner much good.
Alright, we've pretty much covered what the winner gets. But does the person
who gives out awards get anything, or is he left empty handed? Sometimes
it is better to give than to receive, and I feel that this is one of the
cases where the rule applies.
If done right, giving out awards can be a good promotion method, as it has
two major positive effects. First, it creates a link popularity boost as
it is possible and even common to pass out cut 'n paste HTML-code along with
the award itself. This code is then used to install the award to the winner's
site and to link it back to the site that gave the award. Most award winners
seem to comply with this linking procedure without giving it a second thought.
This boost in link popularity helps the person that gave the award in appearing
near the top in search engines, especially if he is wise enough to give the
awards mostly to sites that deal with similar topics as his own site. The
relevancy of the links is important due to search engine algorithms - read
the link popularity article for more
information.
Distributing awards also creates some visitors through the awards visible
on the winner's websites. Sure, not many people click on an award, but if you
give out 1000 of them and every one gets clicked just twice a month, that's
2000 visitors/month for the site right there!
Who's the real winner?
In conclusion, the person giving out awards usually benefits more from them
than the one receiving the award. If you're planning to apply for awards,
prefer big sites that offer a prominent link on their site for winners. If
you want, you might also try to win smaller awards just to gain some links.
I wouldn't even think about placing the actual awards on my site; the real
prize is the link that can be gained from the site that gives the award,
not the award itself.
On the other hand, if you're planning to hand out awards, it might be a good
idea. There are plenty of webmasters out there who haven't read this article
and will gladly accept just about any award, place it on their site and link
it to your site.
The only thing you'll need is graphic skills to make the
award picture and a set of linking instructions to pass out to the "lucky"
winners. It might be wise to limit the sites that can apply for the award
to the ones with a similar topic as your site so that you will gain a lot
of relevant, not random, links that will help you in your search engine related
promotion efforts.
To find awards you can win (keep my advice in mind and don't be fooled by
the pretty award pictures), visit
Award sites and
Website awards. If you're giving
out an award of your own, you may also submit it to those sites in order
to drive more award-hungry people to your site.
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