How are people finding do follow blogs legitimately?

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This has been making me pull out my hair. I find blogs centered around my niche and make relevant comments, but it seems every blog I post on is no follow (according to SeoQuake). If I do manage to find a dofollow link, then the post usually requires an admin's approval before my post appears in public (which isn't that bad, but they sometimes refuse keywords as usernames).

Should I just give up looking for blog legitimately and start using the dofollow directories?
#search engine optimization #blogs #finding #follow #legitimately #people
  • Great question.. I would like to know myself. I use Google Alerts to alert me when a relevant blog post in my niche is made in hopes I can post a comment link somehow. But I'm yet to stumble upon a blog that has dofollow comment links.
    • [1] reply
    • You can use Google blog search, just look for those blogs goes with your topic.Nofollow no longer works so well, maybe 6 out 10 nofollow links count as backlinks, trust me. Or you can search: dofollow blogs, then you will see many lists of dofollow blogs collected by nice people.
  • I have the best of luck finding blogs on lists posted by members of forums like warrior forum. You have to go through a lot of bad ones to find the good but it is well worth it!
  • The easiest method is to simply spy on your competition's backinks, or better yet, the sites that rank well in the online gambling and generic/online drug market. Why reinvent the wheel when it already has been invented for you.
  • Why is all this energy expended on the nofollow and dofollow attributes? First off, there is no dofollow, as best as I know. That is only the absence of a nofollow tag. And I think it was Matt Cutts from Google that said they don't really take a whole lot of notice of that any more.

    But, besieds that, how unnatural do you think it would look if you had nothing but dofollow links, and not a single nofollow link? That would look very unnatural to any search engine, and so how much of your work do you think might get passed over as spam or otherwise disregarded?

    If you are passing up the opportunity to get back links because they have a nofollow attribute, then you are wasting a lot of opportunity.

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    This has been making me pull out my hair. I find blogs centered around my niche and make relevant comments, but it seems every blog I post on is no follow (according to SeoQuake). If I do manage to find a dofollow link, then the post usually requires an admin's approval before my post appears in public (which isn't that bad, but they sometimes refuse keywords as usernames). Should I just give up looking for blog legitimately and start using the dofollow directories?