You can try Ontolo's link building query generator tool:
http://ontolo.com/link-building-query-generator-V2
Citation Labs also has great link building tools for finding prospects:
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Job Title: VP Services
Company: ConversionRateOptimization.co
Favorite Thing about SEO
The constant learning
You can try Ontolo's link building query generator tool:
http://ontolo.com/link-building-query-generator-V2
Citation Labs also has great link building tools for finding prospects:
Test them on a dummy site if you have the budget, or on some pages that already link to you.
The question that matters is what does SEO need from URLs?
That they be static.
That they feature your keywords.
What does Big Commerce do?
Provide static URLs (at least, based on what you've shown; I'm not a salesman or anything and have no affiliation)
Features product name (which presumably you control, and can thus include long tail KWs).
Granted, it's slightly less easy to type out the product page URLs for anyone wanting to link (they need to remember the caps and .html) but that's the least of your issues. I'd imagine you can just set up a 301 to make the urls typed in redirect if they get the casing wrong.
Lastly, regarding custom URLs, consider scalability. If the store succeeds ... are you really going to give each product page a custom URL manually? Not likely... So it's not that important.
Test them on a dummy site if you have the budget, or on some pages that already link to you.
The question that matters is what does SEO need from URLs?
That they be static.
That they feature your keywords.
What does Big Commerce do?
Provide static URLs (at least, based on what you've shown; I'm not a salesman or anything and have no affiliation)
Features product name (which presumably you control, and can thus include long tail KWs).
Granted, it's slightly less easy to type out the product page URLs for anyone wanting to link (they need to remember the caps and .html) but that's the least of your issues. I'd imagine you can just set up a 301 to make the urls typed in redirect if they get the casing wrong.
Lastly, regarding custom URLs, consider scalability. If the store succeeds ... are you really going to give each product page a custom URL manually? Not likely... So it's not that important.
Moz has taught me so much - that makes me uniquely grateful to this company and its community.
I started in SEO in December 2005 and read everything I could get my hands on. Even then Moz was a popular resource (though there were 'only' 6000 RSS subscriers at the time... the then popular technology).
Since then I've done lots of stuff - SEO, PPC (ads in search, display and social), conversion rate optimization including landing page design and copywriting and usability, market research, email marketing, affiliate marketing, domain investment/speculation, blogging, content marketing, public speaking (SMX, Pubcon, Affiliate Summit, McGill University, Google Tel Aviv and more), sales and more. I've been a consultant, worked for agencies and been in house, though the greatest amount of time has been as a consultant.
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