I asked 12 SEOs for the link building strategy that’s working best for them right now.

Here are the tactics they shared, how to do them, and tips for success. 

Our link building experts
find their email address and reach out to them. 

Here’s an example email Jason used: 

Example outreach email from Jason Acidre

I don’t recommend copying Jason’s email word for word, but here’s his and Alex Tachalova’s advice on what to include: 

Some key pointers for emails: 

  • Briefly highlight why your product or service merits inclusion on their list.
  • Reference other reputable lists that have already featured your product or service.
  • Inquire about their criteria and requirements for inclusion.
  • Offer free tool access, complimentary products for review, or case studies that they can review (if you’re providing a service).
Jason Acidre

Our pitches generally include: 

  • The client’s previous features in listicle posts.
  • A suggestion to collaborate on enhancing the quality of their listicle post, given the client’s industry expertise.
  • An analysis of top-ranking listicle posts to identify missing tools or information that could offer a competitive edge and improve their post’s rankings.
Alexandra Tachalova

As Jason points out, this strategy has benefits beyond improving rankings for your website. It also exposes your brand to more people as you’re consistently listed as a top option in your industry. 

For example, Jason got his client mentioned in nearly every top-ranking listicle for “best dropshipping suppliers.” That’s a lot of extra brand exposure! 

the selfie battle I have with Tim Soulo, this is one of the most effective link-building strategies we’re using right now. 
Jason Hennessey

How to do it

Start by finding a trending topic journalists care about. Google News and Google Trends are good places to start. 

We start by identifying current trends using tools like Google Trends and monitoring industry news. 

Jason Hennessey

We use lots of techniques from monitoring news sources in real time to conducting research with Google News to understand the types of topics that have been previously covered at specific times of year. 

Amanda Walls

You can also use the Growth metric in Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer.

For example, if I enter “vaping” and sort by the Growth column, I see lots of lung health searches breaking out in the past three months: 

Growth for terms related to lung health and vaping in the past three months, via Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer

I also see this echoed in Google News: 

Google News results for vaping features many stories about lung issues

It’s then a case of sourcing some unique data, publishing it in an easy-to-utilize format, and sending it to journalists. Matt Diggity shared a few great sources with me: 

For government databases you have usa.gov for the states. Data.gov is another alternative. UK Data Service is the equivalent for the UK. Eurostat is great for other countries in the EU. And Statistics Canada is for… yeah, Canada. Internationally, World Bank Open Data and United Nations Data are treasure troves. Pew Research Center is great for social issues, public opinion, and demographic trends. FBI Crime Data Explorer is great for crime stats. And the CDC is great for health data. 

Matt Diggity

Amanda also often uses freedom of information (FOI) requests for data, as she did for her piece on the UK’s illegal vape hotspots:

UK illegal vaping hotspots campaign

This campaign earned links from 72 referring domains and got featured in many online newspapers: 

The campaign earned links from 72 referring domains according to Ahrefs
Lancashire Post article that links to the campaign
Example feature in the Lancashire Post
Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herald article that links to the campaign
Example feature in the Ardrossan & Saltcoats Herand
South Wales Guardian article that links to the campaign
Example feature in the South Wales Guardian

How do you find journalists? 

Here’s Jason’s advice: 

We start by researching those who have previously covered similar topics or industries. We use tools like Muck Rack, Cision, or even X to find journalists by searching for keywords related to our story. We look at bylines in relevant publications to see who is writing about related subjects and review their past articles to understand their interests and writing style. 

Jason Hennessey
HARO and other alternatives, but Eva recommends a more proactive approach. She builds relationships with journalists relevant to her clients so they come directly to her for tips and quotes.

How can you find these people? 

Eva uses keyword alerts: 

I have Google Alerts set up for relevant keywords related to a brand or topic. For example, I have the words “vet,” “dog behaviour,” and “cat behaviour” set up for a pet insurance brand so I can see the related coverage mentioning these words. 

Eva Cheng

You can also use Ahrefs Alerts. The benefit of this over Google Alerts is that you can filter by language, traffic, Domain Rating (DR), etc. to separate the wheat from the chaff: 

Setting up alerts for "cat behaviour" in Ahrefs Alerts

Alternatively, use Content Explorer to find people who’ve talked about topics recently. Just search for a keyword and filter for pages published in the last 90 days. 

For example, if I search for “vet,” I see this recent article on a DR 83 site from Jessie Quinn: 

Content Explorer shows the author of the post

It looks like she’s written a couple of pet-related articles recently: 

This author has written a few pet-related articles

Her profile also says she writes for many well-known sites and has a pug called Daphne: 

She also has a pet of her own

This journalist would clearly be a great person to build a relationship with! 

How? Eva says it all starts with a simple “hello”:

Reach out and introduce yourself and your client to journalists and niche publications who cover related topics regularly. Offer them the opportunity to receive exclusive commentary when requested. After a journalist has covered your campaign or expert commentary, always drop them a note to say thank you. You never know it can also lead to another request or opportunity for your client. 

Eva Cheng

Oh, and don’t rely on AI when actually replying to requests, whether direct or via platforms like HARO. Greg explains why: 

AI is not yet capable of replacing a high quality writer. Simply copy/pasting their content over to a journalist outreach email is a fantastic way to earn your client a spot on a journalist or publication’s ban list. When our writers use AI, they use it for idea generation to overcome writer’s block. This is how I recommend using it. 

Greg Heilers

Create map-o-graphics and pitch journalists

Data-driven digital PR campaigns, like maps, are our most effective method for driving backlinks at the moment. 

George Driscoll

How to do it

Start by brainstorming topics with map potential that make sense for your brand. 

Ask yourself, what would a journalist and user expect you to be an expert on? For a cocktail brand, doing a map on speakeasy bars around the world would make perfect sense, or a map on the rooftop bars with the best reviews, etc. 

George Driscoll

If you’re struggling for ideas, search for a topic in Content Explorer and filter for pages with lots of backlinks. These are proven ideas you know people want to link to.

For example, if I search for “tax,” I see over 300 referring domains to a page listing countries where you have to pay “tourist tax”: 

This list of countries with tourist taxes has links from 325 referring domains

This immediately sparks an idea: map out countries with the most and least expensive “tourist taxes.” 

Once you have your map, send it to journalists who might be interested in covering it. 

Find journalists who write about that kind of content, either literally map based data, or perhaps in the example above, they write about travel. 

George Driscoll

George did this for his map of which states will pay the most taxes over their lifetime… 

George's campaign for which states pay the most taxes in their lifetime

… earning links from 188 referring domains in the process: 

George's campaign earned links from 188 referring domains according to Ahrefs

As Jason suggested earlier, tools like MuckRack, Cision, and X can be useful for finding journalists interested in your topic. But you can also just search Content Explorer for pages published about a topic in the last 90 days, and extract journalist names from there. 

Using Content Explorer to find journalists who've covered a topic in the last 90 days

Rank statistics pages for low-hanging “fact finder” keywords

Our unique process for this has worked amazingly well for us for years now. In fact, we’ve just finished some internal research and found our assets like this generate an average of 102 referring domains. 

Darren Kingman

How to do it

  1. Enter a topic into Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer
  2. Go to the Matching terms report
  3. Filter for keywords that include terms like “statistics,” “facts,” “graph,” etc.
Finding stats keywords in Keywords Explorer

This will find keywords people search for when looking for facts and figures for their articles. Rank for these, and your page will often earn links on autopilot. 

Here’s Darren’s advice on what make a good keyword: 

The most important thing is that there isn’t just one or two top-ranking pages soaking up all the links. If there’s 3 or 4 that have 100+ and a couple with 20+ or so, that’s all good. It shows there’s a nice spread and journalists/linkers are happy to mix it up themselves. 

Darren Kingman

This is exactly how the SERP looks for “uk salary statistics:” 

The top search results for "uk salary statistics" have lots of referring domains

In fact, Darren and his team created one of the top-ranking pages. As of today, it’s earned links from 98 referring domains: 

Darren's page, which earned links from 98 referring domains

And this is without outreach! 

Importantly, we don’t do outreach for these campaigns. They’re designed to remove that element of time and therefore making it more affordable for clients compared to our other activities. 

Darren Kingman

How do you create a winning page? It’s all about picking low-hanging opportunities and beating the competition on the content front. 

We’re often looking for opportunities where the ranking pages aren’t properly fulfiling a user’s intention. They may not have many images to engage users, the key stats might be buried in a wall of copy, etc. So we’re utilising content marketing 101 to see where we might be able to elevate a page and make it more engaging. 

Darren Kingman

Further reading

promotion offering $1,000 to anyone willing to binge watch 15 hours of The Office: 
Dish promotion where you could earn $1k for watching The Office

It earned links from 150 referring domains, including big media sites like Thrillist, Business Insider, CNET, Mental Floss, and many others. 

Dish's campaign earned links from 150 referring domains

Struggling for ideas? Try asking ChatGPT: 

Hey ChatGPT. I found a unique promotion online where Dish Network offered to pay people $1,000 to binge watch 15 hours of The Office. My brand is [brief description]. Give me a few ideas for a similar promotion I can run.

Here’s one idea it came up with for a coffee brand: 

ChatGPT is a great way to come up with ideas for your brand

Not bad! 

But who should you tell about your wacky campaign once you have it? Here’s a smart tip from James: 

It’s as simple as reaching out to the same publications and journalists who’ve covered similar things before. You can find plenty of these already online from movies and tv shows. 

James Norquay

For example, you can just export the 150 sites linking to The Office campaign via Site Explorer and reach out to them. 

Find people linking to similar campaigns in Site Explorer, then reach out to them

Pitch sites linking to resources with accessibility issues

I have to give credit to Russ Jones (RIP) who was one of the most switched on link builders and SEOs I have ever met for this tip he shared with me. 

James Norquay

How to do it

Start by finding relevant pages with lots of backlinks in Ahrefs: 

  1. Search for a topic in Content Explorer
  2. Filter for pages with 100+ referring domains
  3. Filter out subdomains, homepages, and multiple pages per domain
Finding pages with lots of backlinks in Content Explorer

In the example above, there are 1,952 pages about tax with links from over 100 websites. One of them is this federal income tax calculator with 1,500 referring domains: 

Example of a page with a federal income tax calculator that has backlinks from over 1,500 referring domains

Next, run a free audit with a tool like AccessScan to check how accessible the page is for people with disabilities: 

Running a compliance audit with AccessScan

In this case, the page is non-compliant. This means that over 1,500 sites are linking to a resource that isn’t accessible for users with vision, motor and cognitive impairments—including a few government and education websites: 

Filtering for educational and government backlinks in Site Explorer

Here’s what James says to do next: 

You reach out to the website and say the resource on your page is not accessible to visually impaired users. This is a highly successful outreach method vs just sending emails at scale asking for guest posts. 

James Norquay

Of course, this does mean you need to create an alternative resource that is compliant. But that’s easily worth it when there’s a pool of hundreds or thousands of potential linkers. 

Guest posting… with the help of AI

I know it might sound a bit old-school, but guest posting still delivers great results. However, the days of mass emailing generic pitches are over. The strategy is the same—offering valuable content for a link—but the execution needs a fresh approach. 

Bibi Lauri Raven

How to do it

First, you need to find sites that might be open to a guest post. 

To do that: 

  1. Run an “In title” search for a broad industry term in Content Explorer
  2. Filter for sites with a Domain Rating (DR) between 30-60 (this removes big sites that probably won’t accept guest posts)
  3. Go to the “Websites” tab
Searching for guest post prospects in Content Explorer

Here you will see the top 100 sites getting the most search traffic to content about your topic. These are good sites to pitch a guest post, as they’ve already written about similar topics before. 

Bibi recommends using AI to help with your pitch: 

Ai is an awesome tool [for pitching]. It can help you create everything from catchy subject lines to compelling pitches and even eye-catching visuals. 

Bibi Lauri Raven

For example, she used AI to create Midjourney images that combined cats and dogs with her target niche. When she reached out to trucking companies, this charming approach got a lot of positive attention. 

One of the images Bibi used in an outreach campaign

If zany or “out there” isn’t really your jam, that’s fine. As Bibi says, it’s not a necessity. The point is to use AI to improve your pitches and make them more creative. 

You don’t always need to be funny or wild, but AI lets you create highly targeted content in formats that would typically require a whole team with specialised skills. So, even though guest posting might seem basic, the possibilities are endless with AI. Just keep experimenting with it! 

Bibi Lauri Raven

Find a page with links, make something better, pitch it as a replacement (aka the “skyscraper” technique)

[/blockquote]

Most people assume that “skyscraper” is dead because it worked well in 2017, then got abused until it didn’t work anymore. But we’re finding that it’s starting to open up again now.

Eric Carrell

How it works

This is arguably the most famous link building technique there is, but if you’ve been hiding in a cave for the last decade, here’s how it works in a nutshell: 

How the Skyscraper Technique works

For example, this list of best headphone recommendations has 469 referring domains… 

Example of a potential skyscraper prospect

… but it hasn’t been updated since 2021: 

The page hasn't been updated for years and is now out of date

Given how fast the headphone industry moves these days, this means that hundreds of sites are linking to a completely outdated list of recommendations. 

To take advantage of this, you would: 

  1. Publish an up-to-date list of headphone recommendations (aka. “skyscraper” content)
  2. Pitch this as a replacement to everyone linking to the outdated post.

Here’s a quick tip from Eric to help maximise your results: 

Give people extra incentive to link by offering to share their content on your social networks. We do this when promoting our clients’ content and it still works relatively well. 

Eric Carrell

Further reading

Keep learning

Thanks to everyone who contributed to this post. If you want to learn even more about building links, check out these posts and courses: 

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