Reciprocal link
A  reciprocal link is a mutual link between two objects, commonly between  two websites to ensure mutual traffic. have websites. If Bob's website  links to Alice's website, and Alice's website links to Bob's website,  the websites are reciprocally linked. Website owners often submit their  sites to reciprocal link exchange directories, in order to achieve  higher rankings in the search engines. Reciprocal linking between  websites is an important part of the search engine optimization process  because Google uses link popularity algorithms (defined as the number of  links that led to a particular page and the anchor text of the link) to  rank websites for relevancy.
Resource Linking
Resource  Links are a category of links, which can be either one-way or two-way,  usually referenced as "Resources" or "Information" in navbars, but  sometimes, especially in the early, less compartmentalized years of the  Web, simply called "links". Basically, they are hyperlinks to a website  or a specific webpage containing content believed to be beneficial,  useful and relevant to visitors of the site establishing the link.
In  recent years, resource links have grown in importance because most  major search engines have made it plain that -- in Google's words --  "quantity, quality, and relevance of links count towards your rating."
The  engines' insistence on resource links being relevant and beneficial  developed because many of the methods described elsewhere in this  article -- free-for-all linking, link doping, incestuous linking,  overlinking, multi-way linking -- and similar schemes were employed  solely to "spam" search-engines, i.e. to "fool" the engines' algorithms  into awarding the sites employing these unethical devices undeservedly  high page ranks and/or return positions.
Despite  cautioning site developers (again quoting from Google) to avoid  "'free-for-all' links, link popularity schemes, or submitting your site  to thousands of search engines (because) these are typically useless  exercises that don't affect your ranking in the results of the major  search engines -- at least, not in a way you would likely consider to be  positive," most major engines have deployed technology designed to "red  flag" and potentially penalize sites employing such practices.
Forum signature linking
Forum  signature linking is a technique used to build backlinks to a website.  This is the process of using forum communities that allow outbound  hyperlinks in their member's signature. This can be a fast method to  build up inbound links to a website; it can also produce some targeted  traffic if the website is relevant to the forum topic. It should be  stated that forums using the nofollow attribute will have no actual  Search Engine Optimization value.
Blog comments
Leaving  a comment on a blog can result in a relevant do-follow link to the  individual's website. Most of the time, however, leaving a comment on a  blog turns into a no-follow link, which is almost useless in the eyes of  search engines, such as Google and Yahoo! Search. On the other hand,  most blog comments get clicked on by the readers of the blog if the  comment is well-thought-out and pertains to the discussion of the other  commenters and the post on the blog.
More Info : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methods_of_website_linking
