6
5 Comments

Tip: Build links by using Google Ads to target queries with link intent

Manually getting backlinks takes some elbow grease, but there's a way to do it passively if you've got a few bucks. Get exposure and links by using Google Ads to target queries with link intent.

Ahrefs experimented with using Google Ads as a link-building strategy. They spent $1,245 over the course of a month and got linked by 13 unique domains. Every link was on-topic and most were high-enough quality to be beneficial. In the end, they paid $41.60 per link ($77.26 per high-quality link). That's not bad, especially considering that it was passive. It's hard to quantify the actual impact of the campaign, but it certainly got them exposure and probably brought in some conversions too. And it's likely to have contributed to them getting to #2 in the SERP for one of the keywords. Just take a new (or existing) piece of content that people are likely to link to — stats are great for this. Then set up a search campaign in Google Ads and target a list of queries with link intent. Make sure to test it out before going all-in. And don't expect immediate results. Ahrefs didn't start getting links for a couple of weeks, and some took months.

More 30-second growth tips?

We share a tiny, bite-sized tip for growing your business a few times a week. Click here to see more and get Growth Bites in your inbox 👌

posted to Icon for group Growth
Growth
on March 2, 2021
  1. 2

    That’s nasty I love it 😁

  2. 2

    Very interesting. I am working on a big piece of content right now. I will definitely think about giving this a try. Cheers!

Trending on Indie Hackers
I got my first $159 in sales after realizing I was building in silence User Avatar 53 comments I spent more time setting up cold email than actually selling. Here is what fixed it. User Avatar 42 comments Three Days Before Launch, I Let My Own Tool Tear Me Apart User Avatar 35 comments I got tired of rewriting the same content for 9 different platforms. So I built Repostify. User Avatar 29 comments A pattern I keep seeing in EdTech: traffic isn't usually the problem. User Avatar 23 comments I thought I was building a news visualization tool. Users thought it was a catch-up tool. User Avatar 21 comments