Link building is one of the major issue in terms of SEO. It is the offline SEO strategy that will tell search engines your website is worth following and people really do benefit from it.
Improving link popularity is very work intensive and it is achieved by many ways like blogging, social networking, forum participation, press releases, broadcasting, social bookmarking etc. but again the most important issue, content comes in to stage. The more content you have on your website, the more links you can generate. Major search engines only value quality links and it’s is not easy job to convince them on the reliability of your site. You will be building more in-links and out-links within your website as long as you have more content.

Most SEO’s tend to concentrate on the homepage during their linking tasks and undervalue the rest of the web site’s content. There are several opinions in terms of deep-linking, building links to pages or images of your web site rather that merely to your homepage.
As a result of deep-linking, you will have a wide array of keywords pointing to your site, more exposure and traffic. It enhances the usability of the web site and directs target market to the relevant page hence likely to improve sales as not all homepage visitors manage to accomplish their journey to the main product page.
Hovewer if some pages of your web site are not your desired entry doors to your web site then you can prevent this by adding this meta tag in to the head of those pages: <META NAME="robots" CONTENT="noindex">
It is a good practice to have a “page reliability policy” on your web site to ensure people that your web site is reliant which means pages and the content will be existent in the future against renaming or deleting. Avoid deep-linking to web sites that you don’t trust.
You Tube give us the opportunity to deep-link to a specific part of a video by adding minute and second parameters to the end of the video URL.
Here is an example on how to do it:
The original video URL is like http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GK0aQrCDEo
We add “#t=1m33s” to the end of the URL like:
The content of the video will be displayed starting after 1 minute and 33 seconds. Good isn’t it? Linking to a specific part of a video is possible by this way which I believe is very useful. See how Matt Cutts tells about Youtube Deep-linking.
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