7 Ways to Get Backlinks in 2020
1. Unlinked brand, product, name, etc. mentions
This is simply just going to Google, doing a search for these things within quotes, and looking at the first several pages of results to ensure that all of those results are linking back to your site. They likely are not, so those will be your opportunities to send a message or an email asking for the webmaster or the writer to provide a link back to your site with your mention. It's one of the easiest things to do. So is unlinked images.
2. Unlinked images
This is a gold mine if you're working with a website that has a lot of proprietary images or really great graphic design, maybe you have infographics or some things that are special to the brand or the domain. Use Google reverse image search and put in the images that you think might have been taken or used on other websites. You will immediately see what those websites are and whether or not they link back to your site. So again, very similar to this first one. You're basically just asking for them to credit the website and link back accordingly.
3. Redirect your 404 pages with backlinks
This is completely within your control. No outreach required. In fact, Moz Link Explorer provides this really, really easily within Moz Pro. You basically take a look at all of your pages that have backlinks, and you can filter by status code. You just change that to 400s, 404s, and you can see all of the pages to your website that currently have backlinks but the page is no longer there. All you want to do with that is just simply 301 redirect that old broken page to a new relevant page, and you're kind of saving that authority that is being sent to your site. A lot of people forget about that one. It's great.
4. Keep an eye on recently lost links
The keyword here is "recently." If you can engage with another website that has recently either by accident or changed things around on purpose on the page, you are more likely to reclaim your lost link. It's also just important to really understand why.
Is that website going through a redesign?
Have they gotten rid of pages?
Did a competitor come in and provide a better resource than what you currently had?
There are all sorts of reasons why you really want to identify what's going on.
5. Move backlink targets
This is a new tactic that was recently brought to our attention by the brilliant Sarah Hollenbeck at Siege Media. I highly recommend you checking out this article that's basically all about moving backlink targets, which has never really occurred to me, where you basically have backlinks to older resources or older content or products that you want to be restructured to newer or more important pages on your website. It goes into great detail about this and can help explain just how you can do this successfully and what that means for your site. So really, really neat. We highly suggest that.
6. Sites that list competitors, but not you
Check out sites that list competitors but not you. These might be resource pages or roundups of information of sorts. You can play around with this in Google as well by providing competitors within quotes and then minus your company or the website you're working on. It really starts to give you an idea of what websites might be great opportunities for a backlink, because you fit within that vein. It makes sense.
7. Sites that provide topic/industry + geo information
Similarly, sites that provide topic or industry plus geo information, so again finding those resource pages, those roundups. Oftentimes you will see these on lots of .edu sites or even .gov. So you can do some different searches around if you were Columbia, outdoor clothing in Minnesota. Play around with this a bit. This could be in the Midwest, in the United States. You can change these words around and really start to identify some higher-quality link prospects.
Courtesy & Copyright
https://creativesaints.com/
http://graphicwebdesign.in/
https://www.papeel.com.br/
https://due.com/blog/
https://neilpatel.com/blog/seo-essentials/
https://moz.com/blog?page=6
https://www.seo-theory.com/
https://moz.com/blog/how-to-get-backlinks
https://www.theedigital.com/blog/top-seo-blogs-to-follow