For a long time, reci­pro­cal links have rema­ined at the fore­front of most inbo­und lin­king stra­te­gies. This is going to have to chan­ge. Google now disco­unts all reci­pro­cal links. The algo­ri­thm has been alte­red to iden­ti­fy the exchan­ge of links by two par­ties for the pur­po­se of incre­asing the­ir num­ber of inbo­und links.

The con­cept of reci­pro­cal lin­king defies Google’s ori­gi­nal inten­tion with the algo­ri­thm. Quali­ty con­tent sho­uld attract links. The exchan­ge of links is nothing more than a mutu­al agre­ement to unju­sti­fia­bly pro­mo­te others’ con­tent with the end goal of pro­mo­ting your own. Google doesn’t par­ti­cu­lar­ly like this (see Link Schemes).

Some even cla­im that Google is now able to iden­ti­fy three-way lin­king sche­mes (i.e. websi­te A links to websi­te B, who links to websi­te C, who links back to A). Whe­ther this is true or not is hard to say. One thing is for cer­ta­in tho­ugh: inbo­und lin­king stra­te­gies sho­uld NOT be cen­te­red aro­und reci­pro­cal lin­king. This manu­fac­tu­red form of link cre­ation is not well-rece­ived and is ulti­ma­te­ly a waste of time. Inste­ad, focus on cre­ating uni­que, high-quali­ty con­tent in a given niche. The links will ensue.