Resource page link building is one of the most reliable white-hat link building strategies. Resource pages exist specifically to link to helpful content—making your outreach a genuine service rather than a cold pitch.
When executed well, resource page link building generates contextually relevant links from pages that already pass authority to external sites by design.
What Are Resource Pages?#
Resource pages are curated collections of links to helpful external resources on a specific topic. They exist to serve readers by organizing the best resources in one place.
Common formats:
- "Useful links" pages
- "Recommended resources" pages
- Curated lists and roundups
- "Further reading" sections
- Industry directory pages
Examples:
- A marketing blog's page listing "50 Best Marketing Tools"
- A university's page of "External Career Resources"
- An industry association's "Member Resources" section
- A nonprofit's "Helpful Links for Patients"
Why Resource Page Link Building Works#
Resource pages offer specific advantages:
Pre-qualified intent: Page owners are actively looking to link to helpful resources.
Contextual relevance: Links appear within topically relevant content.
Editorial placement: Links are chosen, not automated—appearing natural to search engines.
Win-win dynamic: Your resource helps their page; their link helps your SEO.
Scalable: Systematic processes can identify hundreds of opportunities.
Finding Resource Page Opportunities#
Search Operators for Resource Pages#
General resource pages:
[keyword] + "useful resources"
[keyword] + "helpful links"
[keyword] + "resources" + inurl:resources
[keyword] + "recommended sites"
[keyword] + "useful links"
[keyword] + "further reading"
Educational resources:
site:edu [keyword] "resources"
site:edu [keyword] + "useful links"
site:edu [keyword] + "external resources"
Government resources:
site:gov [keyword] "resources"
site:gov [keyword] + "helpful links"
Industry-specific:
[industry] + "resource page"
[industry] + "link directory"
[industry] + "recommended resources"
Advanced Search Combinations#
High-authority opportunities:
[keyword] + "resources" + site:edu
[keyword] + "resources" + site:gov
[keyword] + "resources" + site:org
Finding pages that link to competitors:
"[competitor resource]" + "resources"
"[competitor brand]" + "useful links"
inurl:resources "[competitor name]"
Tool-Based Prospecting#
Backlink analysis:
- Identify competitor content that has resource page links
- Analyze their backlink profile
- Export linking pages that appear to be resource pages
- Prospect those pages for your content
Content explorer approach:
- Search for resource pages in tools like Ahrefs Content Explorer
- Filter by referring domains (pages with links to give)
- Filter by domain authority
- Export and qualify
Qualifying Resource Page Opportunities#
Not all resource pages are worth pursuing. Evaluate opportunities using:
Page Quality Factors#
Domain authority: Prioritize higher-DA sites (40+) for maximum impact
Page authority: Check the specific page's authority, not just domain
Traffic: Pages with organic traffic are more valuable
Relevance: How closely does the page topic match your content?
Link count: Pages with fewer links pass more authority per link
Page Health Indicators#
Active maintenance: When was the page last updated?
Working links: Do existing links still work, or is it abandoned?
Response likelihood: Is there clear contact information?
Link standards: What quality of resources are currently listed?
Disqualification Criteria#
Skip pages that:
- Haven't been updated in years
- Are filled with broken links
- Only link to internal content
- Require payment for inclusion
- Have spammy link profiles
- Are irrelevant to your content
Creating Link-Worthy Resources#
Before outreach, ensure you have content worth linking to.
What Resource Pages Link To#
Comprehensive guides: In-depth content covering topics thoroughly
Useful tools: Calculators, generators, utilities
Research and data: Original studies, surveys, statistics
Templates and downloads: Practical resources users can apply
Curated lists: Well-organized collections of information
Content Requirements#
For successful resource page outreach, your content should:
- Provide genuine value to the resource page's audience
- Be comprehensive enough to merit recommendation
- Be evergreen (not time-sensitive)
- Be well-designed and user-friendly
- Be free to access (no required signup to view)
Content Audit#
Before outreach, evaluate your content:
- Does this content solve a real problem?
- Would I recommend this if I didn't work here?
- Is this better than what's currently on the resource page?
- Does this match the resource page's audience?
If you answer "no" to any question, improve the content first.
Outreach Strategy#
Finding Contact Information#
Priority order:
- Page author or curator (if listed)
- Website contact form
- General email addresses
- Social media (last resort)
Finding emails:
- Check page bylines
- Look for "Contact" pages
- Use email finder tools (Hunter, Voila Norbert)
- Check LinkedIn for staff emails
Crafting Effective Pitches#
Subject line approaches:
Resource suggestion for your [topic] page
Quick addition for your [page title]
[Resource type] for your readers
Email structure:
Hi [Name],
[1 sentence connecting to their specific page]
I noticed your [resource page title] and thought [your resource] might be helpful for your readers.
[1-2 sentences on what your resource is and why it's valuable]
Here's the link: [URL]
Either way, thanks for putting together that resource list—I bookmarked a few things from it myself.
[Your name]
Pitch Examples#
For a marketing resource page:
Hi Sarah,
I came across your content marketing resources page while researching distribution strategies—really useful collection.
I wanted to suggest our guide on content promotion frameworks. It covers 23 specific tactics with templates and examples, and might complement the content creation resources you already have listed.
Here's the link: [URL]
Either way, I bookmarked your social media tools section for my team.
Thanks,
[Name]
For an educational resource page:
Hi Professor [Name],
I found your recommended resources for [course name] while researching [topic]. Great list for students.
Our team recently published a comprehensive guide on [topic] that might be useful: [brief description]. It includes [specific valuable elements].
Link here if you'd like to review: [URL]
Thanks for curating these resources—I'm sure your students find them helpful.
[Name]
Follow-Up Protocol#
- Wait 5-7 days before following up
- One follow-up is appropriate
- Keep it brief: "Just floating this back up in case you missed it"
- Accept no response as an answer after two attempts
Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them#
Mistake 1: Mass Templated Outreach#
Problem: Generic emails to hundreds of pages with no personalization
Solution: Quality over quantity. Personalize each pitch with specific page references.
Mistake 2: Pitching Irrelevant Content#
Problem: Suggesting content that doesn't match the resource page topic
Solution: Only pitch content that genuinely fits the page's focus
Mistake 3: Pitching Promotional Content#
Problem: Suggesting product pages or commercial content
Solution: Only pitch genuinely helpful resources with minimal commercial intent
Mistake 4: Ignoring Page Quality#
Problem: Pursuing any page that ranks for "resources"
Solution: Qualify opportunities by DA, traffic, and relevance
Mistake 5: Over-Following Up#
Problem: Multiple follow-ups that become spam
Solution: One follow-up maximum, then move on
Scaling Resource Page Link Building#
Building a System#
Weekly process:
- Prospect new opportunities (2-3 hours)
- Qualify and prioritize (1 hour)
- Outreach (2-3 hours)
- Track and follow up (1 hour)
Monthly process:
- Review performance metrics
- Adjust prospecting queries
- Improve content based on feedback
- Update outreach templates
Tools for Scaling#
- Prospecting: Ahrefs, SEMrush, Moz
- Email finding: Hunter, Voila Norbert
- Outreach management: BuzzStream, Pitchbox, Respona
- Tracking: Google Sheets, Airtable
Tracking and Measurement#
Track for each campaign:
- Pages prospected
- Pages qualified
- Outreach sent
- Responses received
- Links acquired
- Average DA of links
Calculate:
- Response rate (responses / outreach sent)
- Success rate (links / outreach sent)
- Links per hour invested
Measuring Success#
Link Metrics#
- Total links acquired: Count of successful placements
- Domain authority: Average DA of linking pages
- Relevance score: Topical alignment of links
- Link diversity: Variety of linking domains
Process Metrics#
| Metric | Good | Excellent | |--------|------|-----------| | Response rate | 10% | 20%+ | | Success rate | 5% | 10%+ | | Average DA | 30+ | 50+ | | Links per month | 5-10 | 15-30+ |
ROI Analysis#
Time invested = Hours on prospecting + outreach + follow-up
Cost = Time invested × hourly rate
Links acquired = Successful placements
Cost per link = Total cost / Links acquired
Typical benchmark: $50-150 per link (time cost)
What to Read Next#
- Scholarship Link Building - .edu link opportunities
- Link Building Strategies Hub - Explore all industry strategies
Resource page link building succeeds through relevance and genuine value. Focus on creating content worth recommending, then systematically identify pages where it genuinely belongs.