Relevance vs authority: the recurring fight
An old argument resurfaced across a few threads this week.
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A case study on a niche affiliate blog claimed a DR28 contextual insert from a topically tight page outperformed a DR60 insert from an off-topic roundup.
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Counterpoint: a forum veteran called it survivorship bias and asked for the losers in the dataset.
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Also circulating: an agency post proposing a simple rule — relevance for sites under 100 referring domains, raw authority once you're past that.
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Worth a read: a Reddit comment reframing it as "relevance gets you indexed and counted, authority moves the needle once you're already counted."
Editor's note: nobody in the thread shared link counts alongside results, which is why this argument never ends.
Pick of the week: the under-100-domains rule of thumb. Crude, but it gives newer sites a default.
An old argument resurfaced across a few threads this week.
—
A case study on a niche affiliate blog claimed a DR28 contextual insert from a topically tight page outperformed a DR60 insert from an off-topic roundup.
—
Counterpoint: a forum veteran called it survivorship bias and asked for the losers in the dataset.
—
Also circulating: an agency post proposing a simple rule — relevance for sites under 100 referring domains, raw authority once you're past that.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit comment reframing it as "relevance gets you indexed and counted, authority moves the needle once you're already counted."
Editor's note: nobody in the thread shared link counts alongside results, which is why this argument never ends.
Pick of the week: the under-100-domains rule of thumb. Crude, but it gives newer sites a default.
Relevance vs authority: the recurring fight
An old argument resurfaced across a few threads this week.
—
A case study on a niche affiliate blog claimed a DR28 contextual insert from a topically tight page outperformed a DR60 insert from an off-topic roundup.
—
Counterpoint: a forum veteran called it survivorship bias and asked for the losers in the dataset.
—
Also circulating: an agency post proposing a simple rule — relevance for sites under 100 referring domains, raw authority once you're past that.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit comment reframing it as "relevance gets you indexed and counted, authority moves the needle once you're already counted."
Editor's note: nobody in the thread shared link counts alongside results, which is why this argument never ends.
Pick of the week: the under-100-domains rule of thumb. Crude, but it gives newer sites a default.
An old argument resurfaced across a few threads this week.
—
A case study on a niche affiliate blog claimed a DR28 contextual insert from a topically tight page outperformed a DR60 insert from an off-topic roundup.
—
Counterpoint: a forum veteran called it survivorship bias and asked for the losers in the dataset.
—
Also circulating: an agency post proposing a simple rule — relevance for sites under 100 referring domains, raw authority once you're past that.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit comment reframing it as "relevance gets you indexed and counted, authority moves the needle once you're already counted."
Editor's note: nobody in the thread shared link counts alongside results, which is why this argument never ends.
Pick of the week: the under-100-domains rule of thumb. Crude, but it gives newer sites a default.
Outreach angles people say are landing
A few outreach-focused items worth grouping this week.
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An agency blog shared response rates by angle: "broken link you have" beat "I'll pay you" 3:1 on first contact, because the first reads like a favor.
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Worth a read: a Reddit thread where editors of small blogs explain what makes them ignore insert pitches — bulk tone, no named page, no reason the link helps their reader.
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Also circulating: a template swap in a Slack group leading with a genuine content fix and only mentioning the link in the second email.
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Counterpoint: one reply argued transparency upfront filters time-wasters faster, even if reply rate drops.
Editor's note: the split is favor-framing vs honesty-framing. Both work; they just attract different sellers.
Pick of the week: naming the specific page in the first line. Generic pitches die on sight.
A few outreach-focused items worth grouping this week.
—
An agency blog shared response rates by angle: "broken link you have" beat "I'll pay you" 3:1 on first contact, because the first reads like a favor.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit thread where editors of small blogs explain what makes them ignore insert pitches — bulk tone, no named page, no reason the link helps their reader.
—
Also circulating: a template swap in a Slack group leading with a genuine content fix and only mentioning the link in the second email.
—
Counterpoint: one reply argued transparency upfront filters time-wasters faster, even if reply rate drops.
Editor's note: the split is favor-framing vs honesty-framing. Both work; they just attract different sellers.
Pick of the week: naming the specific page in the first line. Generic pitches die on sight.
Insert marketplaces: what's being said
A roundup of marketplace chatter, no endorsements.
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A forum thread compared the big link marketplaces on one axis: how much overlapping inventory they share. Verdict — a lot, so "exclusive" rarely means exclusive.
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Also circulating: an agency post warning that marketplace metrics are seller-supplied and rarely re-verified after listing.
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Worth a read: a Reddit comparison of vetting depth, noting most platforms check domain metrics but not whether the specific page gets traffic.
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Counterpoint: a reply argued marketplaces are fine for volume, terrible for your money pages — use direct outreach there.
Editor's note: the consistent thread is that platforms sell domain access, and you're left to judge the page.
Pick of the week: the inventory-overlap point. Buy the same link twice across two platforms and you've wasted half your budget.
A roundup of marketplace chatter, no endorsements.
—
A forum thread compared the big link marketplaces on one axis: how much overlapping inventory they share. Verdict — a lot, so "exclusive" rarely means exclusive.
—
Also circulating: an agency post warning that marketplace metrics are seller-supplied and rarely re-verified after listing.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit comparison of vetting depth, noting most platforms check domain metrics but not whether the specific page gets traffic.
—
Counterpoint: a reply argued marketplaces are fine for volume, terrible for your money pages — use direct outreach there.
Editor's note: the consistent thread is that platforms sell domain access, and you're left to judge the page.
Pick of the week: the inventory-overlap point. Buy the same link twice across two platforms and you've wasted half your budget.
If you're into what we post, @TooFastTooLinked is the natural next follow — they work the link velocity beat hard. Strong opinions on link velocity: is 'building too fast' a real penalty or boomer…
Is the host page even indexed?
A quietly useful theme this week: the page you paid for isn't in the index.
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Worth a read: a Reddit thread where buyers ran site: queries on delivered URLs and found a chunk weren't indexed at all.
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Also circulating: an agency post recommending a 30-day post-placement re-check, since hosts sometimes noindex or prune later.
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A forum tip: paste the target URL into Search Console's URL inspection if the host will share access — rare, but worth asking.
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Counterpoint: one reply noted an unindexed page can still get indexed once it has a fresh outbound link, so don't reject on day one.
Editor's note: an insert on a deindexed page is a paid link to nowhere. Easy check, often skipped.
Pick of the week: the 30-day re-check. Placements rot quietly after the invoice clears.
A quietly useful theme this week: the page you paid for isn't in the index.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit thread where buyers ran site: queries on delivered URLs and found a chunk weren't indexed at all.
—
Also circulating: an agency post recommending a 30-day post-placement re-check, since hosts sometimes noindex or prune later.
—
A forum tip: paste the target URL into Search Console's URL inspection if the host will share access — rare, but worth asking.
—
Counterpoint: one reply noted an unindexed page can still get indexed once it has a fresh outbound link, so don't reject on day one.
Editor's note: an insert on a deindexed page is a paid link to nowhere. Easy check, often skipped.
Pick of the week: the 30-day re-check. Placements rot quietly after the invoice clears.
Velocity and aged placements
Several items this week touched pacing.
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An agency blog argued the advantage of aged-content inserts is they look natural by definition — the page existed before your link, so there's no obvious campaign footprint.
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Worth a read: a Reddit thread cautioning that buying 20 inserts in a week from one vendor recreates the footprint you were avoiding.
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Also circulating: a forum rule of thumb to drip placements and vary vendors rather than batch.
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Counterpoint: a reply said velocity paranoia is overblown for sites that already publish and earn links steadily.
Editor's note: the natural-footprint benefit of aged content evaporates the moment you batch-buy it.
Pick of the week: drip + vendor variety. The whole point of aged content is to not look like a campaign.
Several items this week touched pacing.
—
An agency blog argued the advantage of aged-content inserts is they look natural by definition — the page existed before your link, so there's no obvious campaign footprint.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit thread cautioning that buying 20 inserts in a week from one vendor recreates the footprint you were avoiding.
—
Also circulating: a forum rule of thumb to drip placements and vary vendors rather than batch.
—
Counterpoint: a reply said velocity paranoia is overblown for sites that already publish and earn links steadily.
Editor's note: the natural-footprint benefit of aged content evaporates the moment you batch-buy it.
Pick of the week: drip + vendor variety. The whole point of aged content is to not look like a campaign.
Vetting the host's own outbound links
A sharp little theme surfaced this week.
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Worth a read: an agency post arguing you should check who else the host page already links to — a page selling to gambling and pharma is a page to skip.
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Also circulating: a Reddit thread on scanning the host domain's outbound footprint for an unnatural ratio of commercial dofollow links.
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A forum tip: pages with a tidy mix of editorial and resource links are worth more than raw metrics suggest.
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Counterpoint: a reply said neighbors matter less than people think post-Penguin, since links are devalued individually now.
Editor's note: domain metrics tell you nothing about the company the host keeps.
Pick of the week: the outbound-neighbors scan. Two minutes, and it kills the worst placements before you pay.
A sharp little theme surfaced this week.
—
Worth a read: an agency post arguing you should check who else the host page already links to — a page selling to gambling and pharma is a page to skip.
—
Also circulating: a Reddit thread on scanning the host domain's outbound footprint for an unnatural ratio of commercial dofollow links.
—
A forum tip: pages with a tidy mix of editorial and resource links are worth more than raw metrics suggest.
—
Counterpoint: a reply said neighbors matter less than people think post-Penguin, since links are devalued individually now.
Editor's note: domain metrics tell you nothing about the company the host keeps.
Pick of the week: the outbound-neighbors scan. Two minutes, and it kills the worst placements before you pay.
Where in the page your link sits
Placement position came up across a couple of threads.
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A case study on a marketing blog claimed links in the first third of body content passed more than links dropped into a closing paragraph or footer-adjacent block.
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Worth a read: a Reddit thread arguing the surrounding sentence matters more than position — co-occurrence of your target terms near the anchor.
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Also circulating: an agency note warning against inserts shoehorned into unrelated sentences, which read as paid to both readers and reviewers.
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Counterpoint: a reply said modern systems weight the whole page topic, not the paragraph.
Editor's note: when you buy an insert, you rarely control position — but you can reject placements buried at the bottom.
Pick of the week: insisting on body placement, not a tacked-on closing line.
Placement position came up across a couple of threads.
—
A case study on a marketing blog claimed links in the first third of body content passed more than links dropped into a closing paragraph or footer-adjacent block.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit thread arguing the surrounding sentence matters more than position — co-occurrence of your target terms near the anchor.
—
Also circulating: an agency note warning against inserts shoehorned into unrelated sentences, which read as paid to both readers and reviewers.
—
Counterpoint: a reply said modern systems weight the whole page topic, not the paragraph.
Editor's note: when you buy an insert, you rarely control position — but you can reject placements buried at the bottom.
Pick of the week: insisting on body placement, not a tacked-on closing line.
When inserts go wrong: cleanup chatter
The darker side of inserts got a few mentions this week.
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Worth a read: a Reddit thread on vendors that quietly remove links months later, so you pay once and the link expires.
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Also circulating: an agency post on tracking every placement in a sheet with a monthly live-check, because nobody emails you when a link drops.
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A forum tip: keep the original outreach and invoice — your only leverage when a link vanishes early.
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Counterpoint: a reply argued disavowing insert links is almost always overkill; just stop buying from that source.
Editor's note: the recurring lesson is monitoring, not disavowing. Most insert problems are silent removals, not penalties.
Pick of the week: a monthly live-link audit. Treat placements as inventory that depreciates.
The darker side of inserts got a few mentions this week.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit thread on vendors that quietly remove links months later, so you pay once and the link expires.
—
Also circulating: an agency post on tracking every placement in a sheet with a monthly live-check, because nobody emails you when a link drops.
—
A forum tip: keep the original outreach and invoice — your only leverage when a link vanishes early.
—
Counterpoint: a reply argued disavowing insert links is almost always overkill; just stop buying from that source.
Editor's note: the recurring lesson is monitoring, not disavowing. Most insert problems are silent removals, not penalties.
Pick of the week: a monthly live-link audit. Treat placements as inventory that depreciates.
Guest post vs niche edit: the cost math
The old comparison got fresh numbers this week.
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An agency blog laid it out: guest posts cost more and take longer, but you own the content and surrounding context; inserts are faster and cheaper but you rent space on someone else's page.
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Worth a read: a Reddit thread arguing inserts win on speed-to-index because the page is already crawled and ranking.
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Also circulating: a forum point that guest posts on a thin new page can underperform an insert on an aged, trafficked one.
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Counterpoint: a reply said guest content lets you control anchor surroundings, which inserts never do.
Editor's note: the honest takeaway is they're different tools — inserts buy existing authority, guest posts build new context.
Pick of the week: the speed-to-index angle. If you need movement this quarter, aged inserts are the faster lever.
The old comparison got fresh numbers this week.
—
An agency blog laid it out: guest posts cost more and take longer, but you own the content and surrounding context; inserts are faster and cheaper but you rent space on someone else's page.
—
Worth a read: a Reddit thread arguing inserts win on speed-to-index because the page is already crawled and ranking.
—
Also circulating: a forum point that guest posts on a thin new page can underperform an insert on an aged, trafficked one.
—
Counterpoint: a reply said guest content lets you control anchor surroundings, which inserts never do.
Editor's note: the honest takeaway is they're different tools — inserts buy existing authority, guest posts build new context.
Pick of the week: the speed-to-index angle. If you need movement this quarter, aged inserts are the faster lever.
Traffic over domain metrics: the regulars agree
A rare moment of consensus this week.
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Worth a read: an agency post arguing organic traffic to the specific host page beats any domain-level score, because traffic implies the page is trusted and crawled often.
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Also circulating: a Reddit thread where buyers shared that their best-performing inserts all sat on pages pulling steady search traffic, regardless of domain rating.
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A forum tip: ask the seller for the host page's traffic, not the domain's — and watch how fast they dodge.
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Counterpoint: a reply noted traffic tools undercount, so a "zero traffic" page may still get a trickle.
Editor's note: domain metrics are inflated and gamed; page traffic is harder to fake.
Pick of the week: requiring page-level traffic data. The dodge itself is a signal.
A rare moment of consensus this week.
—
Worth a read: an agency post arguing organic traffic to the specific host page beats any domain-level score, because traffic implies the page is trusted and crawled often.
—
Also circulating: a Reddit thread where buyers shared that their best-performing inserts all sat on pages pulling steady search traffic, regardless of domain rating.
—
A forum tip: ask the seller for the host page's traffic, not the domain's — and watch how fast they dodge.
—
Counterpoint: a reply noted traffic tools undercount, so a "zero traffic" page may still get a trickle.
Editor's note: domain metrics are inflated and gamed; page traffic is harder to fake.
Pick of the week: requiring page-level traffic data. The dodge itself is a signal.