You will want to stick mostly with the web results (indicated by the globe icon) and the blog results which looks like the speech balloon. From these 2 sources you should be able to find many related pages.
Sometimes you won’t find related content, and this is to be expected. But most times you will.
From here the usual link building tactics should come into play. Click on the links which Blinkx returns and review the site(s) to see if they are indeed relevant to your content. If they are, see if there is a way you can submit your page to the site.
For example, if its a blog, you may be able to comment on the blog post. Add you comment as something like: “I read this article and found it very useful. I also found this page (and insert a link to your page) which is related and provides more information” or something to that effect.
If commenting is out of the question, perhaps you could email the blog owner directly and send him the link to your page. He may add it to his post for you.
If it’s any other “regular” website, you could see if there is an Add URL link on the page, and you can submit your page that way, or you can look for webmaster or site owner contact information and email them, again submitting the page URL to them and let them know the content is relevant to the specific page on their site.
In the end.... As with any link building, one can see that this can be (and very likely will be) a very time consuming process.
However, to build those quality deep links this is just one more tactic you can use to find those hidden gems.
And it should be pretty obvious that you can use this system for more than deep link building. I’ve found Blinkx to be very effective at matching any content. While it seems to do better with deep content (because it is usually more topical) it is also fairly effective at matching broader content on pages which span multiple topics.
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