Outreach Monks

Resource Page Link Building: The Complete 2026 Guide (With Templates & Success Rates)

Resource Page Link Building

If you have ever tried to find easy wins in link building, resource pages are as close as it gets. They are curated lists that exist specifically to point readers toward useful content. The page owner wants to link out. You just need to give them a good reason to link to you.

The reality check: resource page link building is not passive. You still have to find the right pages, qualify them properly, and pitch with enough relevance that the editor says yes. But when it works, it works well — placements on active, topically relevant resource pages are stable, long-lasting, and pass real link equity.

In 2026, resource page links score a 67% value index compared to editorial mentions at 100% and guest posts at 73% — making them a strong, time-efficient middle-tier tactic. For sites that do not yet have the DR or publishing track record for guest post placements on major industry sites, resource pages are often the fastest route to real DR 40–60 backlinks.

This guide gives you a complete system: how to find pages at scale, a qualification checklist with actual thresholds, two email templates in readable text (not screenshots), the broken link variant that increases success rates by 40–60%, and how this tactic fits into a 2026 link building campaign.

What Is Resource Page Link Building?

A resource page is a page on a website that curates helpful links for a specific audience. Think ‘Best tools for freelance designers’ or ‘Useful guides for new homeowners’ — a page that exists purely to point readers to valuable external content.

Resource page link building is the process of getting your content listed on those pages. You are not writing content for someone else’s site (that is guest posting). You are not finding broken links and offering replacements (though that is a related tactic covered below). You are identifying pages that are actively useful to your target audience, checking that your content fills a gap, and making a concise case to the page owner.

What makes this tactic worth doing in 2026:

  • The page owner is already link-friendly — they built a resource page because they want to curate useful links for their audience
  • Links from resource pages are editorially stable — they change infrequently because the page owner chose them deliberately
  • Relevance is high by design — resource pages are topically organised, so a link on a relevant resource page carries strong contextual signal
  • No content creation required — unlike guest posting, you only need a quality asset that already exists on your site

See how resource page link building fits into a full strategy: 15 Link Building Strategies That Actually Work in 2026

Why Resource Page Link Building Still Works in 2026

Some link building tactics that worked in 2020 have become significantly harder. Resource page link building has stayed reliable for a specific reason: it is not a hack. It is a genuine exchange of value — you offer a useful resource, they give their audience a useful link.

Here is what the 2026 data shows about this tactic’s place in the link building mix:

Factor Resource Page Links Guest Post Links Editorial/PR Links
Value index 67% 73% 100%
Time to placement 2–4 weeks 4–8 weeks 2–12 weeks
Content required Existing asset only New 1,500+ word article Research/data study
Response rate 5–15% 3–8% 3–15%
Broken link variant +40–60% success lift N/A N/A
DR range typical DR 30–70 DR 40–80 DR 60–90+
Effort per link Low to medium High Very high
Best for Quick foundation building; sites DR 20–50 Authority growth; any DR Brand building; AI visibility; DR 50+

The key insight from this comparison: resource pages are the most time-efficient mid-tier tactic available. If you have a genuinely useful asset — a comprehensive guide, a free tool, an original data study — and you need DR 40–60 backlinks faster than a full guest posting campaign can deliver, resource page outreach is your best route.

Step 1: How to Find Resource Pages in Your Niche

Finding resource pages at scale comes down to three methods. Use all three, not just one — each surfaces different opportunities.

Method 1: Google Search Operators

The fastest way to find resource pages is to tell Google exactly what you are looking for. These search operators consistently surface curated resource pages across almost every niche:

Search Operator What It Finds Example (Fitness Niche)
[keyword] inurl:resources Pages with ‘resources’ in the URL fitness inurl:resources
[keyword] intitle:links Pages titled as link collections nutrition intitle:links
[keyword] “useful resources” Pages using the phrase ‘useful resources’ running “useful resources”
[keyword] “helpful links” Pages using ‘helpful links’ phrase yoga “helpful links”
[keyword] “resource guide” Named resource guide pages SEO “resource guide”
[keyword] inurl:links.html Classic resource list pages web design inurl:links.html

 

Practical note:

Always review search results manually. Google operators surface candidates, not confirmed opportunities.
Some results will be unrelated pages that happen to use these words. Skim each result before adding it
to your prospect list.

Method 2: Competitor Backlink Analysis

Your competitors have almost certainly earned some resource page links. Finding those pages gives you a list of sites that already link to content in your niche — they have already demonstrated willingness.

  1.     Open Ahrefs or SEMrush and enter a competitor’s domain in Site Explorer
  2.     Go to their Backlinks report
  3.     Filter by Referring Page Title containing ‘resources,’ ‘links,’ or ‘tools’
  4.     Export the filtered list — these are your highest-priority resource page targets

 Why this works well: sites linking to competitors in your niche will often accept comparable content from you — especially if your resource is more comprehensive or more recently updated. This is the same competitor gap logic that drives keyword research, applied to link opportunities.

See: How to Analyse Competitor Backlinks for Link Opportunities

Method 3: Find Broken Links on Resource Pages

This is the highest-converting variant of resource page link building, and it deserves its own section — but as a discovery method, it adds a critical second step to the Google operator approach.

Once you find a resource page, check it for broken links before you pitch. Resource pages have the highest broken link density of any page type — averaging 7.2% dead links per Ahrefs 2026 data. That means roughly 1 in 14 links on a typical resource page is a 404 error.

How to check: Install the ‘Check My Links’ Chrome extension (free). Open the resource page and run the extension — it highlights valid links in green and broken links in red within seconds. If you find a broken link pointing to content similar to what you have, your pitch becomes a favour rather than a request.

Step 2: How to Qualify Resource Pages (With Thresholds)

Finding resource pages is the easy part. Qualifying them properly is what separates a campaign that produces high-value links from one that wastes time on pages that contribute nothing.

The original version of this article said to prioritise ‘quality and authority’ — without giving a single number. Here are the actual thresholds we use at Outreach Monks:

Qualification Criterion Minimum Threshold Why It Matters
Domain Rating (DR) DR 30+ minimum; DR 40+ preferred Confirms the domain has real link equity to pass
Monthly organic traffic 500+ visits/month to the domain Google’s API data confirms links from zero-traffic pages pass no value
Linking page indexed Page must appear in Google (test: site:URL) Unindexed pages = zero SEO value regardless of DR
Last updated Resource page updated within 18 months Stale pages are rarely crawled; link value degrades
Topical relevance Direct niche match — no off-topic stretches Google’s NLP evaluates contextual fit; off-topic links pass weak signals
Outbound link count Fewer than 150 outbound links on the page Link equity dilutes significantly as outbound links increase
Content quality on host site Editorial content, not thin filler Low-quality host sites are actively devalued by March 2026 spam update
No obvious link selling No ‘sponsored listing’ or ‘paid inclusion’ Paid resource page links are a link scheme per Google guidelines

 

Red flag: Sites with DR 50+ but under 200 monthly organic visits are common ghost domains — purchased for their historical DR without real editorial activity. High DR + no traffic = near-zero link value in 2026. Always verify traffic in Ahrefs before adding a site to your outreach list.

 

Step 3: Make Sure Your Asset Is Resource-Page Worthy

Before you send a single outreach email, your linked asset needs to pass a quick self-evaluation. Resource page curators receive requests constantly. They add content that makes their page more useful and ignore the rest.

Your asset is resource-page worthy if it does one of these things:

  • Teaches something comprehensively: A complete guide, step-by-step tutorial, or in-depth explainer that covers a topic better than what is already on the resource page
  • Provides unique data: Original research, a survey, or aggregated statistics that others in the niche cannot replicate — these earn citations naturally
  • Offers a free tool or calculator: Interactive assets are the most linkable content category in 2026 — they provide ongoing value every time a user returns
  • Solves a specific problem: A very targeted resource (e.g., ‘A checklist for first-time home buyers in flood zones’) earns resource page spots precisely because of its specificity

What does not work for resource page pitching: thin blog posts, product pages, sales landing pages, or content covered by five other links already on the target page. Curators look for gaps, not duplicates.

If your best asset is not yet resource-worthy, consider what it would take to make it so. Adding original data, a downloadable tool, or a significantly expanded how-to section can turn a good post into a great resource page candidate. See: Creating Linkable Assets That Attract Backlinks

Step 4: Writing Your Outreach Email (With Copyable Templates)

The pitch email is where most resource page campaigns succeed or fail. Keep it short, specific, and focused on what the addition does for their audience — not what a backlink does for you.

Response rates for resource page outreach range from 5–15% for relevant, personalised pitches. Generic template emails typically land below 3%. The difference is almost entirely in whether the opening line references their specific page content.

Template 1: Standard Resource Addition Request

Subject: [Resource Page Title] — one addition you might like

Hi [First Name],

I was reading your resource page on [topic] at [URL] — it’s one of the more complete collections I’ve come across for [audience type].

I wanted to flag one resource that might be a good addition: [Your Resource Title] — [Your URL]. It covers [specific angle or topic not already listed], which I noticed isn’t currently included.

Happy for you to check it out and decide if it fits. No obligation either way.

[Your Name], [Role at Organisation]

 

Template 2: Broken Link Replacement Pitch

 

Subject: Broken link on [Site Name]’s [Page Title]

Hi [First Name],

I was browsing your resource page at [URL] and noticed the link to [brief description of the broken resource] is returning a 404 error.

I have a resource on [your site] that covers the same topic: [Your Resource Title] — [Your URL]. It’s a [brief description: comprehensive guide / free tool / data study] on [topic].

Feel free to swap it in if it’s useful — genuinely happy to help fix the page regardless.

[Your Name]

 

Why the broken link template outperforms:

You are solving a problem for the site owner before asking for anything. The broken link removal + replacement is a single action for them, not an addition.

This framing accounts for the 40–60% higher success rate of the broken link variant over cold addition requests.

 

Follow-Up Sequence

Most replies come within the first week — but not all. A structured follow-up sequence increases your total response rate by 40%:

Touchpoint Timing What to Send
Initial email Day 1 Full pitch as above
Follow-up 1 Day 5–7 One line: ‘Hi [Name] — just circling back on my note below in case it got buried. Happy to clarify anything.’
Follow-up 2 Day 12–14 Add a small new hook if possible: ‘One thing I should mention — [new data point or update to your resource].’
Final close-out Day 21 ‘No worries if the timing is off — I’ll check back in a few months. Good luck with [something relevant to their site].’

Step 5: Track Progress and Optimise Your Campaign

Every resource page campaign needs a simple tracking system. A Google Sheet with six columns is all you need. Without tracking, you repeat the same sites, miss follow-up windows, and have no data to improve from.

Column What to Record
Target URL Full URL of the resource page you pitched
Domain / DR Site name and Ahrefs DR at time of outreach
Contact name/email Editor or webmaster contact details
Date emailed Date of initial outreach
Status Pending / Replied / Placed / Declined / No response
Link placed URL If successful, the URL where your link was added

 

Review your tracker monthly. Calculate your placement rate (links placed ÷ pitches sent). If you are below 3%, revisit your qualification criteria — you are likely pitching pages where your content is not a strong fit. If you are below 8% response rate, revisit your pitch personalisation.

Monitor acquired links in Ahrefs to confirm indexation within 60 days. If a placed link is not indexed after 60 days, the page may have a technical issue — contact the publisher or flag the site as low priority for future campaigns.

See: Backlink Monitoring — How to Track and Protect Your Link Profile

The Broken Link Building Variant: Why It Works So Much Better

We mentioned this tactic in the discovery section, but it deserves a full explanation because it is materially more effective than cold addition requests — and widely underused.

Resource pages have a 7.2% average broken link rate per Ahrefs 2026 data — the highest of any page type. That is roughly one dead link for every 14 links on a typical resource page. When you find one and have replacement content, your pitch transforms from ‘please add me’ to ‘here is your broken link fixed, and here is a great replacement.’

Why editors say yes more often:

  • You are solving a visible problem on their page — broken links hurt their readers and their own SEO
  • The addition is framed as a fix, not a request — the psychology is completely different from a cold pitch
  • The decision is easier — they are replacing one link with another, not deciding whether to add something new
Outreach Type Typical Response Rate Placement Rate
Cold addition request (relevant) 5–15% 3–8%
Broken link replacement (perfect match) 15–25% 10–20%
Broken link replacement (partial match) 8–15% 5–10%

 

For a full broken link building system: Broken Link Building Guide — Strategy, Tools & Templates

 Resource Page Link Building vs. Other Tactics: When to Use Each

Resource page outreach is one of several white-hat link building approaches. Here is how to decide when it is the right choice for your current situation.

Your Situation Best Tactic
New site (DR 0–25) needing first 20 referring domains Resource pages + local citations + unlinked mention reclamation — fastest low-barrier options
Existing asset (guide, tool, study) that deserves more links Resource page outreach first, then broken link building, then guest post pitching using the asset as a reference
Need DR 60+ links for competitive keyword Guest posting on industry publications or digital PR — resource pages rarely reach DR 70+
Blog content that is strong but not a standalone linkable asset Guest posting — resource pages require a self-contained resource, not a narrative blog post
Have identified a competitor’s broken resource page links Broken link building — highest success rate of any tactically similar approach
Building authority for AI search visibility Combine resource page links with AI-optimised brand mentions — see below

Resource Page Links and AI Search Visibility in 2026

AI search systems — Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity — do not randomly cite content. They cite brands and content that appear consistently across authoritative, topically relevant sources. Resource page links contribute to this in two ways.

First, a link on a well-maintained, DR 50+ resource page in your niche signals topical authority to Google’s traditional ranking system — the same signals that influence which content AI Overviews draw from. Second, being listed on a respected industry resource page is a form of editorial endorsement that AI entity recognition systems use to categorise your brand.

This is why the best long-term approach in 2026 is not resource pages alone — it is combining them with guest posting and AI-optimised brand mentions. Resource pages build the foundation. Brand mentions in contextual editorial content build the entity recognition that makes AI systems more likely to cite your brand in answers.

How to Scale Resource Page Link Building Without Losing Quality

 

One of the most common questions about resource page outreach: how do I do this at volume without it becoming generic? Here is the approach that works.

  • Build Niche-Specific Prospect Lists in Batches

Run your Google operator searches and competitor backlink analysis in dedicated prospecting sessions — aim to build a list of 50–100 qualified prospects before starting outreach. This separates the research phase from the outreach phase and makes quality control faster.

  • Use a Personalisation Formula, Not a Template

Rather than sending the same template to every prospect, use this formula: [Specific page reference] + [specific gap your resource fills] + [brief description of the resource]. This produces personalised emails without requiring 30 minutes of research per prospect. The opening line should always reference the specific resource page by its actual title or URL. 

  • Batch Your Broken Link Checks

Run Check My Links on 20–30 resource pages in a single session before starting outreach. Mark any page with broken links as priority — these go into your broken link template queue rather than standard addition requests. A session of 30 checks typically surfaces 3–5 broken link opportunities.

  • Deduplicate Against Your Existing Link Profile

Before spending time on any outreach, paste your prospect list URLs into Ahrefs Link Intersect or your backlink report to confirm which sites already link to you. Pitching a site that already links to you is wasted effort and can look unprofessional to the editor. 

Conclusion

Resource page link building isn’t flashy—it won’t land DR 85 links—but it consistently delivers reliable DR 40–60 backlinks with relatively low effort. The key steps are simple: find relevant pages, qualify them properly, and send a short, personalised email.

Most people fail because they skip proper qualification (targeting pages with no traffic) and rely on generic templates instead of clear, adaptable emails. Fix these, add broken link building to your process, and this becomes one of the most dependable link-building tactics.

If you want it handled professionally, Outreach Monks manages everything—from prospecting and qualification to personalised outreach and tracking—with live Google Sheet reporting and a 6-month link replacement guarantee.

Frequently Asked Questions

What Is A Realistic Success Rate For Resource Page Outreach?

For relevant, personalised pitches, expect 5–15% response rates and 3–8% placement rates. The broken link variant — where you identify a dead link on a resource page and offer your content as a replacement — achieves 15–25% response rates and 10–20% placement rates. Generic, untargeted emails typically get below 3% responses.

How Do I Find Resource Pages Quickly?

The fastest methods are Google search operators (e.g., ‘[keyword] inurl:resources’, ‘[keyword] “useful links”‘, ‘[keyword] intitle:links’) and competitor backlink analysis in Ahrefs or SEMrush, filtered by pages with ‘resources,’ ‘links,’ or ‘tools’ in the title. Combined, these two approaches can surface 50–100 qualified prospect pages in a single research session.

What Makes A Resource Page Worth Targeting?

Use this qualification checklist: DR 30+ (DR 40+ preferred), 500+ monthly organic visits domain-wide, page indexed in Google, updated within the last 18 months, direct topical relevance to your content, fewer than 150 outbound links on the resource page, and no obvious paid listing scheme. Any page failing two or more of these criteria is likely not worth the outreach effort.

What Type Of Content Works Best For Resource Page Pitching?

Comprehensive how-to guides, original data studies, free tools and calculators, and definitive reference articles are the strongest resource page candidates. Thin blog posts, product pages, and sales landing pages rarely get accepted. The simplest self-check: would an editor include this in a list they are personally proud of? If not, the asset needs strengthening before pitching.

How Is Resource Page Link Building Different From Guest Posting?

Guest posting requires you to write a new article for someone else’s site — you are creating content in exchange for a link. Resource page link building requires no new content creation — you are getting existing content listed on a curated page. Resource pages are faster to execute, typically produce slightly lower authority links than high-end guest posts, but are significantly less time-intensive per link.

How Many Emails Should I Expect To Send Per Link Acquired?

At a 5% placement rate, expect roughly 20 outreach emails per link acquired. At 10% (broken link variant, well-qualified prospects), roughly 10 emails per link. Track your own campaign metrics from the first batch of 20–30 pitches to establish your baseline, then optimise from there.

Does Resource Page Link Building Work For AI Search In 2026?

Yes — being listed on respected, topically relevant resource pages contributes to the entity recognition signals that AI search systems like Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, and Perplexity use to identify credible sources. However, for AI search visibility specifically, combining resource page links with contextual brand mentions in editorial content delivers stronger entity signals.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Resource page link building continues to be a reliable strategy for gaining high-quality backlinks in 2025. As search engines increasingly favor authoritative and relevant content, securing a place on resource pages is more important than ever. 

Resource pages are lists of helpful content compiled by website owners for their audience. When done right, getting a backlink from these pages can drive organic traffic and enhance your site’s authority. 

This guide will provide you with a step-by-step approach to finding relevant resource pages. We will also discuss about making persuasive pitches and securing valuable backlinks that will help improve your SEO rankings and online presence in 2025.

So, let’s dive right in!

What Is Resource Page Link Building?

Resource page link building is about securing a spot on a blogger or influencer’s curated list of relevant links, valuable tools, services, or products within their niche.

This practice helps build high-quality backlinks to your website.

While, a resource page is a page on a website that compiles relevant links and resources on a specific subject.

For example, a resource page on fitness can include links to helpful blogs and websites related to fitness, training, education, and nutrition.

Fitness resource page link building

Often, the resource pages are owned by the experts in your niche. Therefore, getting your website listed on such resource pages will give your site credibility and authority in your niche.

How Resource Page Link Building Works?

No magic formula; it is quite simple.

Including your link on a resource page will increase the traffic to both your and their (source) sites.

And this happened because a resource page function to link to only valuable content on other websites.

It’s all about quality, quality, and quality.

So, if you have an impressive resource, you can sit back and relax because it is a good fit for a resource page; it will automatically fetch a link.

Steps to Build Links From Resource Pages

Securing a link in authoritative resource pages can greatly help boost your website’s credibility and reader’s trust. Here’s how you can do resource page link building with ease:

Step 1: Finding Resource Pages

There are a few different ways to find resource pages that can help you build links. We will discuss all these ways in detail here.

1) Using Google Strings

Google keyword search strings can be a great way to discover resource pages in your niche.

This method utilizes specific keywords and operators to refine your search results.

These pages, often curated lists of helpful links, tools, or information, can be goldmines for research, link building, or simply discovering new resources. 

For instance, you can use the following search strings to find resource pages:

  • Keyword intitle:links
  • Keyword inurl:resources
  • Keyword” useful resources”
  • Keyword “best resources”

📝Note

  • These strings may not always lead directly to resource pages. It’s best to manually review the search results and identify the relevant resource pages yourself.

 

For instance, if your website is related to fitness, you can use search strings like fitness:

  • fitness intitle:resources
  • fitness inurl:links

Here’s the type of resource page you will get after searching Google with the above-given strings:

Fitness resource Page link building

Well, it is vital to use a variety of search strings to find the most relevant resource pages.

2) Analyzing Competitors Backlink

Tools like Ahrefs, Moz, and Majestic can even help you find resource pages for your niche.

You simply have to enter your competitors’ website URLs and try to find which pages link to them.

Here’s a snapshot of Moz to check the linking domains of Backlinko.

Moz competitor backlink analysis

These pages could be potential resource page opportunities for your website. With such tools, you would be able to check the quality of the backlinks pointing to your website and know areas that require improvement.

3) Finding Broken Links

Broken link building is an amazing tactic that exploits the sad truth about the Internet: links break. You find such broken links on resources and replace your content with them, snatching some valuable backlinks, thus improving your SEO.

To do this, you have to find relevant resource pages using Google strings. Then, you can use extensions like Check My Links to identify broken links on that resource page.

This tool can help you identify broken links for which you can contact the website’s owner.

Here’s how you will get the broken links using this tool:

  • Install the Check My Links extension from the Chrome webstore.
  • Open the resource page and simultaneously open the extension.

Check my link to identify broken links

You will see valid links, valid indirect links, and invalid links. You have to focus on the invalid links and ask the owner to replace that link with yours.

Step 2: Analyze Your Collected Information

You may come across thousands of resource pages during your search. But you need to focus on the ones that are most relevant, worthy, and of the highest quality.

However, you can prioritize page authority over domain authority. Because the authority of a page is a measure of how credible the information on that page is.

The higher the page authority, the more the “link juice” will be sent to your website.

Step 3: Outreaching and Crafting a Persuasive Pitch

Now that you have identified a potential resource page opportunity, the next step is to create an effective pitch and outreach strategy.

1) Reaching Out the Website Owner

You might consider using a blogger outreach service to assist in this crucial step. These services have several benefits to them, such as experience acquired in making persuasive pitches, established relationships with owners of websites, and saving you much time and effort.

If you want to do it yourself, there are platforms that can help.

Outreach tools such as BuzzStream and Pitchbox help simplify outreach work, reaching out to website owners and asking them to add your site on the resource page of their site.

Here’s a list of features offered by Pitchbox:

Pitchbox features to be used in resource page link building

These tools will automate the outreach process and guide the tracking of the outreach activity.

To increase your chances of getting your website added to the resource page, carefully select every word in your pitch.

2) Crafting a Pitch

When crafting your pitch, explain why adding your website to their resource page would be valuable.

Be sure to personalize your pitch and make it clear why your website stands out from the competition.

For example, you could highlight unique content, research, and tools that your website offers.

Be very professional and respectful to the owners of websites when communicating with them.

Be sure your pitch reflects that you have actually looked at their website, done your homework, and understood their audience.

It’s definitely not about sugarcoating but rather about presentation.

Here’s an outreach email template you can use to pitch:

Email Template for outreach for resource page link building

Always follow up with the site owners if you never get a reply from them.

That is, a polite and friendly follow-up email will display your determination to pursue and willingness to establish a connection with the website owner.

After all, you are seeking a quality backlink, so you will have to put in the extra effort.

Step 4: Analyze Progress and Results

Keep track of your progress and results after starting your resource page link building campaign.

This can help refine your outreach strategy so that you can get your website placed on resource pages related to your niche.

To monitor your progress and results, keep track of the websites you’ve reached out to and the responses you have received.

You can also make an Excel file of the resource pages you have found and the ones you have reached out to. 

Here’s an Excel file template:

Excel sheet template for Collecting data for resource page link building
This way, you can check which strategies are actually working and which ones need to be refined.

On the other hand, if you keep tracking the backlinks that have been added to your website from resource pages, it can help you ensure that the backlinks are high-quality and relevant to your niche.

And the most important thing is to be patient and persistent in your resource page link building campaign.

It can take time to build high-quality backlinks, but the benefits are worth the effort.

Insights for Finding a Resource Page

Here are a few things to look for in a resource page. By doing so, you can determine if it is a good fit for your website and if it is likely to provide high-quality backlinks.

Here’s how you can analyze a resource page:

1. Look for Relevancy

The first step is to determine if the resource page is relevant to your website. Look for keywords or topics that are related to your niche.

If the resource page is not relevant, it is unlikely to provide high-quality backlinks.

💡 Fact

  • Ahrefs reports that backlinks from relevant websites contribute significantly to organic traffic growth, particularly when the resource page content aligns with your site’s niche.

 

2. Look for Quality

The next step is to determine if the resource page is of high quality. Look for signs that the resource page is curated by an expert in the niche.

This can include the following:

  • quality of the content on the resource page
  • number of links on the resource page
  • quality of the websites that are linked to on the resource page

3. Look for the Website’s Authority

Determine the authority of the website. Websites that are authoritative in your niche are more likely to provide high-quality backlinks.

Look for these metrics:

You can use the Ahrefs domain rating tool to measure:

Domain rating of Outreach Monks

4. Look for the Outbound Links

Determine the number of outbound links on the resource page.

If the resource page has too many outbound links, it may be considered spammy and could harm your website’s search engine rankings.

5. Look for the Type of Resource

Look for the type of resource that the resource page provides. Does it link to blog posts, infographics, or other types of content?

Determine if the resource page is likely to link to your website’s content type.

By analyzing these factors, you can determine if a resource page is worth pursuing for link-building purposes.

Conclusion

There are many benefits of resource page link building, such as building high-quality backlinks, establishing credibility and authority in your niche, showing expertise to visitors, and more.

But if you find building top-quality genuine backlinks for your site, you can hire a reputable link-building service like Outreach Monks. We have a team of experienced link builders who can help you develop an effective link-building strategy. We can help you improve your website’s search engine rankings and establish your website as an expert in your niche.

With Outreach Monks, you can save time and concentrate on other significant factors of your business while still building a strong backlink profile.

 

Picture of Sahil Ahuja

Sahil Ahuja

Sahil Ahuja, the founder of Outreach Monks and a digital marketing expert, has over a decade of experience in SEO and quality link-building. He also successfully runs an e-commerce brand by name Nolabels and continually explores new ways to promote online growth. You can connect with him on his LinkedIn profile.

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