Outreach is where link building strategy meets execution. The best content in the world won't earn links if no one knows it exists. This guide covers how to find prospects, craft compelling pitches, and build relationships that yield links.
The Outreach Mindset#
Before tactics, understand the principles that separate effective outreach from spam.
You're Asking for a Favour#
Unless you're offering something of genuine value, you're asking someone to do something for you. Approach with appropriate humility:
- Respect their time: Be concise
- Respect their intelligence: Don't use manipulative tactics
- Respect their choice: Accept no as an answer
Value Must Be Clear#
Why should they link to you? The answer should be immediately obvious:
- For their audience: Your content helps their readers
- For their content: Your resource improves their page
- For their goals: Linking benefits their SEO or brand
Relationships Outperform Transactions#
One genuine relationship yields more links than 100 cold emails:
- Repeat opportunities from the same contacts
- Referrals to other link opportunities
- Higher response rates to future outreach
Prospecting: Finding the Right Targets#
Where to Find Prospects#
Competitor Backlinks
Who links to your competitors? They might link to you too.
- Analyse competitor backlink profiles
- Filter for relevant, quality sites
- Identify pages where your content fits
Search Operators
Find resource pages and relevant sites:
"your topic" + "resources"
"your topic" + "useful links"
"your topic" + intitle:resources
"your topic" + "recommended"
inurl:resources "your topic"
inurl:links "your topic"
Industry Publications
Map publications in your space:
- Trade publications
- Industry news sites
- Influential blogs
- Podcast show notes
Social Monitoring
Track conversations where links might fit:
- Twitter discussions about your topic
- Reddit threads seeking resources
- LinkedIn posts from industry voices
Qualifying Prospects#
Not every site is worth pursuing. Evaluate:
Traffic and Visibility
Does the site have real visitors?
- Check SimilarWeb for traffic estimates
- Look for social engagement signals
- Verify the site is actively maintained
Relevance
Is the site topically related?
- Does their audience overlap with yours?
- Would your content genuinely fit?
- Is the context appropriate?
Authority
Does the site carry weight?
- Domain authority/rating (use as a guide, not absolute)
- Quality of existing content
- Reputation in the industry
Link Probability
Does the site actually link out?
- Check if they link to external resources
- Look for resource pages or roundups
- Verify links aren't all nofollow
Prioritising Your List#
Create a scoring system:
| Factor | High (3) | Medium (2) | Low (1) | |--------|----------|------------|---------| | Relevance | Perfect fit | Related | Tangential | | Authority | DA 50+ | DA 25-50 | DA < 25 | | Traffic | 10k+/month | 1-10k/month | < 1k/month | | Link Probability | Actively links | Sometimes links | Rarely links |
Focus on high-scoring prospects first.
Finding Contact Information#
Email Discovery Methods#
Website Contact Pages
Check obvious locations:
- Contact or About pages
- Author bios
- Team pages
- Footer information
Email Finder Tools
Use tools to discover emails:
- Hunter.io (find and verify emails)
- Snov.io (email finder)
- VoilaNorbert (email lookup)
Find the right person:
- Content managers
- Marketing managers
- Editors
- Site owners
Pattern Recognition
Once you find one email, apply the pattern:
- firstname@domain.com
- firstname.lastname@domain.com
- firstinitial.lastname@domain.com
Who to Contact#
Target the right person:
For blog posts: The author or editor For resource pages: The content manager or webmaster For company sites: Marketing manager or content lead For small sites: The owner directly
Avoid generic addresses (info@, contact@) when possible—they often go unanswered.
Crafting Effective Outreach Emails#
Email Structure#
Every outreach email needs these elements:
Subject Line
Clear, specific, not clickbait:
- Good: "Resource for your SEO tools page"
- Bad: "Quick question" or "Partnership opportunity?"
Opening (Personalisation)
Show you know their work:
- Reference specific content
- Mention something genuine
- Avoid generic flattery
Value Proposition
Why they should care:
- What you're sharing
- Why it's relevant to them
- What's in it for their audience
The Ask
Clear, low-commitment:
- Specific but not demanding
- Easy to say yes to
- Leaves room for their judgement
Sign-Off
Professional, brief:
- Your name and title
- Optional: Company or site name
- No essay-length signatures
Template: Resource Page Outreach#
Subject: Resource suggestion for your [specific page]
Hi [Name],
I was researching [topic] and found your [page name]—it's
one of the most comprehensive resources I've seen on [aspect].
I noticed you don't currently include anything about [specific
subtopic]. I recently published a guide that covers this:
[brief description of what it is].
Here's the link if you think it might be a good fit: [URL]
Either way, keep up the great work on [their site/page].
Best,
[Your name]
Template: Broken Link Outreach#
Subject: Broken link on [page name]
Hi [Name],
I was reading your [page name] and noticed that the link to
[dead resource name] appears to be broken.
I have a similar resource that covers [topic]: [brief
description]. It might work as a replacement if you're
looking to fix the broken link.
Here it is: [URL]
Hope that helps!
[Your name]
Template: Content Mention#
Subject: Re: Your article on [topic]
Hi [Name],
Just finished reading your piece on [topic]—particularly
appreciated your point about [specific insight].
It reminded me of some research we recently published that
backs this up with data: [one-sentence description].
Thought it might be useful for future pieces or as an
addition to this one: [URL]
Thanks for the consistently valuable content.
[Your name]
Template: Expert Quote Offer#
Subject: Expert comment for your [topic] coverage
Hi [Name],
I've been following your coverage of [topic area] and noticed
you often include expert perspectives.
I'm [your name], [your role] at [company], and I'd be happy
to provide quotes or insights for future pieces on [specific
topics you can speak to].
Here's my background: [one sentence on relevant expertise]
Would it be helpful if I sent over a perspective on
[current topic you could comment on]?
Best,
[Your name]
[LinkedIn or credentials link]
Personalisation That Works#
Levels of Personalisation#
Level 1: Basic (minimum acceptable)
- Use their name
- Reference their site by name
- Mention the specific page you're targeting
Level 2: Content-Aware
- Reference specific content they've written
- Mention a point you genuinely appreciated
- Connect your content to their interests
Level 3: Relationship-Building
- Comment on their recent work
- Reference shared connections or interests
- Show ongoing engagement with their content
Personalisation Don'ts#
Don't fake it
Empty flattery is obvious:
- "I love your site" (with no specifics)
- "You're an authority in the space" (hollow)
- Compliments that could apply to anyone
Don't over-personalise
It can come across as stalking:
- "I saw you were in Barcelona last week"
- Overly personal references
- Too much detail about them
Don't waste their time
Get to the point:
- Long introductions aren't personalisation
- Multiple paragraphs of flattery delay your ask
- Value their time with conciseness
Follow-Up Strategy#
Most responses come from follow-ups, not initial emails.
Follow-Up Timing#
First follow-up: 3-4 days after initial email Second follow-up: 5-7 days after first follow-up Third follow-up: 7-10 days after second (optional)
Stop after: 2-3 follow-ups with no response
Follow-Up Templates#
First Follow-Up
Subject: Re: [original subject]
Hi [Name],
Just floating this back to the top of your inbox in case
it got buried.
[One sentence reminder of what you shared]
Let me know if you have any questions.
[Your name]
Second Follow-Up
Subject: Re: [original subject]
Hi [Name],
Completely understand if this isn't a fit or you're too
busy—just wanted to follow up one more time.
[Link] is the resource if you'd like to take a look.
Either way, no worries and best of luck with [their site].
[Your name]
When to Stop#
Respect silence:
- Three follow-ups with no response = move on
- Negative response = thank them and stop
- "Not right now" = note for future follow-up
Handling Responses#
Positive Responses#
When someone agrees to link:
- Thank them promptly (within 24 hours)
- Provide any needed materials (images, specific link format)
- Make it easy (provide exact URL, suggested anchor if asked)
- Follow up to confirm (check back in a week if link hasn't appeared)
- Express genuine appreciation (short thank-you after link goes live)
Questions or Requests#
When they need more information:
- Respond quickly and thoroughly
- Provide whatever they need
- Don't be defensive about questions
Negotiations#
When they suggest changes:
- Be flexible on anchor text
- Accept placement suggestions
- Consider their editorial needs
Negative Responses#
When they decline:
- Thank them for their time
- Ask if different content would fit
- Don't argue or push back
- Note feedback for improvement
No Response#
When you get silence:
- Follow up appropriately (see above)
- Move on after 2-3 attempts
- Don't take it personally
Scaling Outreach#
Tools for Efficiency#
Outreach Platforms
- Pitchbox
- BuzzStream
- Mailshake
- Hunter Campaigns
Features to use:
- Email sequencing for follow-ups
- Template management
- Response tracking
- CRM for relationship management
Maintaining Quality at Scale#
Segment your prospects
Different segments need different approaches:
- High-value targets: Fully personalised
- Medium-value: Personalised templates
- Lower-priority: Quality templates with basic personalisation
Never fully automate
Automation helps with:
- Scheduling and sending
- Follow-up reminders
- Tracking and reporting
But always manually:
- Write personalisation
- Review before sending
- Respond to replies
Team Considerations#
Define ownership
- Who owns which prospects?
- How do you avoid duplicate outreach?
- Who handles responses?
Maintain consistency
- Shared templates with customisation
- Brand voice guidelines
- Quality standards
Measuring Outreach Success#
Key Metrics#
Response Rate
Percentage of emails that get any response.
- Average: 5-15%
- Good: 15-25%
- Excellent: 25%+
Positive Response Rate
Percentage resulting in interest or links.
- Average: 2-5%
- Good: 5-10%
- Excellent: 10%+
Link Acquisition Rate
Emails sent per link acquired.
- Average: 50-100 emails per link
- Good: 25-50 emails per link
- Excellent: < 25 emails per link
What to Track#
- Emails sent (by template, segment)
- Opens (if tracking enabled)
- Responses (positive, negative, questions)
- Links acquired
- Time to response
- Best-performing templates
Improving Performance#
Analyse what works:
- Which subject lines get opens?
- Which templates get responses?
- Which prospect types convert?
- What follow-up timing works best?
Iterate based on data, not assumptions.
Common Mistakes#
Sending to Wrong Contacts#
Emailing info@ or irrelevant people wastes effort. Find the right person.
Generic Templates#
"Dear Webmaster" and obviously templated emails get deleted. Personalise meaningfully.
Asking Too Much#
"Can you link to my site?" is vague and demanding. Be specific and make it easy.
Giving Up Too Soon#
One email rarely works. Proper follow-up dramatically improves results.
Ignoring Relationships#
Transactional outreach burns contacts. Build relationships for ongoing opportunities.
Poor Timing#
Mass emails on Monday morning get buried. Test timing for your audience.
Summary#
Effective outreach requires:
The right mindset:
- You're asking for a favour
- Value must be clear
- Relationships beat transactions
Smart prospecting:
- Find relevant, quality targets
- Qualify before outreach
- Prioritise highest-potential prospects
Compelling emails:
- Clear subject lines
- Genuine personalisation
- Obvious value proposition
- Specific, low-commitment ask
Persistent follow-up:
- 2-3 follow-ups per prospect
- Appropriate timing
- Graceful exit when needed
Continuous improvement:
- Track metrics
- Test approaches
- Learn from responses
Master outreach, and you'll convert great content into great links.