backlinkslink buildingSEO5 min read

What Are Backlinks? The Complete Guide

Everything you need to know about backlinks - what they are, why they matter, types of backlinks, and how to build them effectively.

Written by Sarah Chen

A backlink is a hyperlink from one website to another. When Site A links to Site B, Site B has received a backlink from Site A. It's that simple.

But while the concept is straightforward, the impact of backlinks on SEO is profound. They've been a core ranking factor since Google launched, and despite numerous algorithm updates, they remain crucial in 2026.

Before Google, search engines relied primarily on on-page factors like keyword density to rank pages. Larry Page and Sergey Brin revolutionized search with PageRank - an algorithm that treated links as votes of confidence.

The more quality links a page had, the more authoritative it appeared. This concept transformed how we think about web ranking and spawned an entire industry around link building.

Despite Google's algorithm becoming exponentially more sophisticated, backlinks remain one of the top ranking factors because:

  1. They're hard to manipulate at scale - Earning genuine links requires real effort
  2. They reflect real-world endorsements - People link to content they find valuable
  3. They create the web's structure - Links are how search engines discover and understand the internet

According to Google's documentation on how search works, links between pages help Google discover new content and determine which pages are most authoritative.

These are the standard links that pass SEO value. They tell search engines to follow the link and count it as a ranking signal. Learn more about dofollow vs nofollow links.

Links with a rel="nofollow" attribute tell search engines not to pass ranking signals. However, Google now treats this as a "hint" rather than a directive.

The rel="sponsored" attribute indicates paid placements. Required by Google's guidelines for advertising links.

Links from user-generated content (comments, forums) should use rel="ugc" to indicate their nature.

The gold standard - links given naturally by other websites because your content is genuinely valuable.

Links you create yourself (directories, comments, forums). Generally less valuable and can be risky if overdone.

Relevance#

A link from a website in your industry carries more weight than a random, unrelated link. Topic relevance matters enormously.

Authority#

Links from established, trusted websites pass more value. A single link from a major news site can be worth hundreds of links from unknown blogs. Learn about Domain Authority and how it's calculated.

Context#

Where a link appears on a page matters. Editorial links within content are worth more than footer or sidebar links.

Anchor Text#

The clickable text provides context about the linked page. Natural variation in anchor text is healthier than exact-match keyword targeting.

How quickly you gain links matters. A natural profile shows steady growth, not sudden spikes (unless you've had something go viral).

Content Marketing#

Create content so valuable that people naturally want to link to it. This is the foundation of sustainable link building.

Types of link-worthy content:

  • Original research and data
  • Comprehensive guides (like this one!)
  • Useful tools and calculators
  • Infographics and visual content
  • Industry surveys and reports

Guest Posting#

Write quality articles for other websites in your niche. Focus on providing genuine value, not just getting a link.

Many websites curate lists of helpful resources. If your content is genuinely useful, you can reach out to be included.

Find broken links on relevant websites, then offer your content as a replacement. You're helping them fix an issue while earning a link.

Digital PR#

Create newsworthy content or stories that journalists want to cover. This earns high-authority editorial links. Explore our Digital PR hub for comprehensive strategies.

The Skyscraper Technique#

  1. Find popular content in your niche
  2. Create something significantly better
  3. Reach out to people linking to the original
  4. Offer your improved version as an alternative

HARO (Help a Reporter Out)#

Respond to journalist queries to earn mentions and links in news articles. The key is being genuinely helpful and responsive.

Unlinked Brand Mentions#

Use tools to find mentions of your brand that don't include a link. Reach out and ask for the link to be added.

Study where your competitors get their links. Many of those opportunities are available to you too. See our guide on competitor analysis.

Find links you've lost (due to page moves, site changes, etc.) and work to restore them.

Key Takeaways#

  1. Backlinks remain essential for SEO success
  2. Quality matters far more than quantity
  3. Focus on earning editorial links through great content
  4. Diversify your link building strategies
  5. Monitor and maintain your backlink profile
  6. Be patient - link building is a long-term investment

Building a strong backlink profile takes time and effort, but the rewards are substantial and long-lasting.

Ready to get started? Get your first backlink today.

Turn This Research Into Links

Claim a permanent dofollow backlink on the grid, or speed up your campaign with the verified backlink bundle.