Still sending the same old link building emails from a throwaway Gmail address?
Still blasting the same template to 500 people?
Still pretending to be someone you are not?
Come on, you dirty old linkbuilder.
We both know the game has changed.
A few years ago, you could get away with lazy outreach. You could scrape a list, load it into a tool, send a half-personalised email, and get a few links from people who did not yet know how annoying SEOs could be.
Now everyone gets pitched.
Journalists get pitched.
Bloggers get pitched.
Webmasters get pitched.
Business owners get pitched.
University staff get pitched.
Local associations get pitched.
Anyone with a website and an email address gets pitched.
And most of those emails are terrible.
So if your outreach still looks like every other SEO outreach email, you are already losing.
This article is about upgrading your outreach so you get more replies, build better relationships, stay out of spam folders, and stop relying only on mass email campaigns.
Because link building outreach is not dead.
Bad outreach is dead.
Good outreach just needs more effort.
Old-school outreach usually looks like this:
This used to work just enough to keep people doing it.
But the response rate has dropped for many campaigns because the internet has become allergic to lazy outreach.
The problems are obvious.
People have seen every version of:
I came across your amazing article and thought my resource would be a valuable addition.
They know.
You know.
Their dog knows.
It screams link building.
A brand-new Gmail address with no history, no profile, no signature, and no relationship is not exactly trustworthy.
If you are asking someone to change their website, link to your client, or promote your content, looking like a random spammer does not help.
Email providers are much better at filtering suspicious outreach.
If you send too much, too fast, with poor authentication, weak engagement, spammy wording, or a sketchy sending pattern, you may never reach the inbox.
Most website owners, journalists, editors and marketers get too much email.
If your pitch does not matter to them immediately, it is gone.
Cold email sales people have become very good at deliverability, personalisation, sequencing, segmentation and multichannel outreach.
Many link builders are still stuck in 2014.
That needs to change.
The biggest mindset shift is this:
Outreach does not mean email.
Email is one channel.
A useful one, yes.
But not the only one.
Outreach can include:
If you only use cold email, you are playing on hard mode.
The best outreach often happens before the email is sent.
Before we talk about tools, warm-up, cards, social outreach and landing pages, we need to cover the obvious.
Your pitch needs to be worth replying to.
Deliverability will not save a weak offer.
A fancy sending setup will not make people care.
A handwritten card will not fix a terrible link request.
Good outreach starts with a good reason.
Ask yourself:
If the answer is no, the problem is not your sending tool.
The problem is the pitch.
If you are doing serious outreach, stop sending from a random Gmail address.
It looks cheap.
It looks disposable.
It looks like you are hiding.
Use a proper domain.
Ideally, use a real person at a real brand.
For example:
Avoid sending from the client’s main domain if you are doing higher-volume outreach and do not know what you are doing.
You do not want to damage the deliverability of the domain that sends invoices, customer support emails and sales messages.
A common setup is to use a secondary outreach domain or subdomain.
For example:
But be careful.
Do not create a suspicious fake identity.
The outreach should still be transparent.
The goal is to protect deliverability, not deceive people.
This is not optional anymore.
Before sending outreach, make sure your email setup is technically correct.
At minimum, you want:
In plain English:
SPF helps mail servers know which services are allowed to send email for your domain.
DKIM adds a signature that helps prove the email was not altered.
DMARC tells receiving servers what to do when authentication fails.
You do not need to become an email deliverability engineer, but you do need to get the basics right.
If your email authentication is broken, your outreach may go straight to spam.
And if your email never reaches the inbox, your copywriting genius does not matter.
Cold email sales people understand this.
Many link builders still do not.
A brand-new email address that suddenly sends 300 outreach emails is suspicious.
Warm up your mailbox gradually.
That means:
There are tools that help with warm-up, but tools are not magic.
The safest warm-up is still a natural sending pattern, good targeting, low bounce rates, and actual replies.
If your campaign gets ignored by everyone, email providers notice.
If people reply, click, and engage, that helps.
Outreach quality and deliverability are connected.
A lot of SEO outreach tools are built around scraping and blasting.
Cold email sales tools are often better at sequencing, inbox rotation, deliverability controls, personalisation and reply management.
You want tools that help you:
The tool does not have to be complicated.
But if you are still sending everything manually from a Gmail tab, you will struggle to stay organised.
And if you are blasting from a cheap outreach tool with no deliverability discipline, you will burn inboxes.
Use proper tools.
Use them carefully.
Most outreach campaigns fail because the list is bad.
Not because the subject line needs one more emoji.
A smaller, better-targeted list will usually beat a giant scraped list.
For link building, targeting means:
Do not send the same pitch to 1,000 websites and call it scale.
That is not scale.
That is littering.
Better outreach starts with better prospecting.
Bad personalisation:
I loved your article about marketing. It was very insightful.
Good personalisation:
Your page lists internship resources for international business students, and our internship is specifically open to international students in marketing and sales.
Bad personalisation:
I saw you write about travel and thought you might like this.
Good personalisation:
Your visitor guide still links to the old embassy domain, which now redirects to unrelated spam. We created an updated emergency travel resource for visitors to Bulgaria.
Bad personalisation:
I have been following your blog for a while.
Good personalisation:
You listed three nearby restaurants on your convention visitor page, but none that offer group bookings after 9pm. We are a five-minute walk from the venue and handle late group reservations.
Personalisation is not about flattering someone.
It is about proving relevance.
Show them why your pitch belongs on their specific page.
Most outreach emails are too long.
People do not need your life story.
They need to know:
A simple structure:
That is enough.
Example:
Subject: Local hotel option for campus visitors
Hi Sarah,
I noticed your page lists hotels near campus for visiting parents and guest speakers.
We run The Hamilton Inn, which is a 7-minute walk from the main entrance and offers discounted weekday rates for university visitors.
More details are here:
[URL]
Would it be useful to include us as an option on the page?
Best,
[Name]
That is much better than a 600-word “collaboration opportunity.”
Some link builders still use fake personas.
Fake names.
Fake students.
Fake assistants.
Fake “content managers.”
Fake Gmail accounts.
Fake excuses.
Just stop.
It is unnecessary, and it makes the industry worse.
You can be direct without being stupid.
If you are doing outreach for a client, be transparent enough that you are not deceiving people.
You do not need to lead with:
I am an SEO trying to build links.
But you also should not pretend to be a journalist, professor, customer, student, or unrelated third party if you are not.
A simple signature with your real name and company is enough.
Long-term, your reputation matters.
Especially if you want to do serious link building in industries where relationships count.
Email is crowded.
Social platforms can be easier for starting a relationship.
This works especially well for:
You can interact before pitching.
For example:
Do not fake friendship.
Just become familiar.
A cold email from a stranger is easy to ignore.
An email from someone whose name they have seen a few times is different.
LinkedIn is especially useful for B2B outreach, association outreach, local business outreach, expert roundups, guest article pitches and partnership campaigns.
A good LinkedIn flow:
Connection request example:
Hi [Name], I saw you manage partnerships at [Organisation]. I work on local visibility and thought it would be useful to connect.
First message after connecting:
Thanks for connecting. I noticed [Organisation] has a visitor page listing nearby accommodation. We work with [Hotel], which is [distance] from your venue and often hosts event visitors. Is that something you ever update?
That is a much softer path than a cold email.
Some audiences are easier to reach outside email.
Journalists may be active on X or Bluesky.
Developers may be active on GitHub, Hacker News or niche Slack communities.
Academics may be active on ResearchGate, Google Scholar, university pages, Mastodon, LinkedIn or X.
Local businesses may be active on Facebook or Instagram.
Creators may respond better on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok or newsletter replies.
The channel depends on the person.
The goal is not to “automate social outreach.”
The goal is to reach people where they actually pay attention.
This is underrated.
Everyone gets email.
Almost nobody gets a relevant handwritten card.
There are companies that write handwritten cards at scale and send them by post.
You can use this for high-value prospects.
Not for 10,000 random websites.
But for the 50 prospects you really care about.
Physical cards can work well for:
A physical card is not always about asking for a link directly.
It can be used to start a relationship.
Example:
Hi Sarah, I came across your visitor guide for the convention centre and thought it was genuinely useful. We run a restaurant five minutes away and often host event groups. I’ll send you an email with the details, but wanted to introduce ourselves properly. Best, [Name]
Then send the email a few days later.
That email is no longer quite as cold.
For local link building, physical mail can be excellent.
Imagine you run a hotel near a university.
Instead of only emailing the visitor office, you send a neat card or small printed one-pager:
This feels more real than an email.
It is especially useful when the prospect is local and the relationship could create bookings, not just links.
Direct mail can also work for:
The goal is to become the obvious local recommendation.
Nobody wants a random link building phone call.
But for local partnerships, phone can work.
Do not call and say:
Can you add our link?
Call with a real business reason.
For example:
We are a hotel near your campus and often host visiting parents. I saw your visitor page lists nearby accommodation. Who would be the right person to send our details to?
That is normal.
Or:
We run a restaurant next to the convention centre and offer group bookings for event visitors. Who manages your visitor information page?
The phone call is not the pitch.
It is a way to find the right person.
This is one of my favourite upgrades.
Instead of only sending pitches, create a page that explains what kind of link opportunities, collaborations, partnerships, interviews, data, quotes, and contributions you are open to.
I now get pitches in my inbox instead of always making time to spam others.
That is a much better place to be.
An outreach landing page can attract:
It turns outreach from purely outbound into partly inbound.
Your outreach landing page should be clear and practical.
Include sections like:
Explain the company or expert behind the page.
List the topics you can comment on, write about, provide data for, or collaborate on.
Mention that journalists, bloggers, podcasters or editors can request quotes.
If you have proprietary data, say so.
For example:
Explain what topics you can contribute on.
Mention that you are open to interviews, webinars or podcast appearances.
Mention the types of organisations you collaborate with.
Link to your best guides, reports, tools, studies, or examples.
Make it easy to contact you.
Use a form and an email address.
Say what kind of requests you are likely to respond to.
This filters out junk.
We can provide commentary on [topics].
Email: [email]
Or use the form below.
This page does not need to be complicated.
It just needs to make you easy to pitch.
Your outreach is only as strong as what you are promoting.
Good assets include:
If you always pitch boring blog posts, outreach will be hard.
If you pitch something genuinely useful, outreach becomes easier.
This is especially true when combined with an outreach landing page.
Do not send everyone the same pitch.
Segment by why they might link.
Examples:
Reason to link:
This is a useful resource for your audience.
Reason to link:
Your current link is dead or bad. This is a better replacement.
Reason to link:
We cited your research and made it accessible to a wider audience.
Reason to link:
Your visitors need nearby businesses like this.
Reason to link:
We are a member and can contribute useful insight.
Reason to link:
We have data, expertise or commentary for your story.
Each segment needs a different message.
If your template works for everyone, it probably works for no one.
Follow-ups matter.
But most people overdo them.
One follow-up is usually enough for link building.
Sometimes two, if the opportunity is genuinely high-value and the relationship makes sense.
Bad follow-up:
Just bumping this to the top of your inbox.
Worse follow-up:
Any thoughts?????
Good follow-up:
Just a quick follow-up in case this got buried. Your page still links to the old domain, which now appears to show unrelated spam. We created an updated resource here if useful: [URL]
The follow-up should add clarity, not pressure.
Your sender reputation matters.
But your personal reputation matters too.
Do not be the person everyone remembers as the annoying SEO.
A few rules:
The best link builders are not just good at email.
They are good at relationships.
The best time to build a relationship is before you ask for something.
This applies to:
Ways to build relationships:
Then, when you eventually pitch something, you are not a stranger.
Do not only measure links.
Track the full funnel:
Sometimes the immediate link is not the biggest win.
A relationship can produce multiple links over time.
A speaking opportunity can produce a link, traffic and leads.
A journalist relationship can produce several future mentions.
A local partnership can generate real customers.
Measure the bigger picture.
Here is what upgraded outreach might look like for a high-value local link campaign.
You want a restaurant listed on a convention centre’s visitor page.
Old way:
Upgraded way:
That sounds like more work.
It is.
That is why it works better.
Most competitors will not do it.
You have proprietary search trend data.
Old way:
Upgraded way:
Again, more work.
Again, better results.
Your outreach landing page should include:
Possible page titles:
It does not.
Deliverability gets you into the inbox.
The pitch gets you the reply.
New inboxes need time.
Do not blast hundreds of emails from a fresh address.
It may work short-term.
It damages trust long-term.
You do not need to mention their dog, favourite football club or latest holiday.
Just explain why your pitch is relevant.
Some people are much easier to reach on social than by email.
Outreach is easier when the thing you promote is genuinely worth sharing.
Create an outreach landing page and make yourself easier to pitch.
Segment your outreach.
Different reasons to link need different messages.
If your link building outreach is not working, the answer is not always “send more emails.”
Sometimes the answer is:
The lazy link building email is dying.
Good.
It deserved it.
The future belongs to link builders who understand sales, PR, relationships, deliverability, content quality and timing.
So upgrade your outreach.
Use the tools cold email sales people use.
Warm up your email addresses.
Stop hiding behind throwaway inboxes.
Reach people where they actually pay attention.
Send a card when the prospect is worth it.
Create a page that invites journalists, bloggers, associations and partners to contact you.
And stop thinking of outreach as spamming people until someone gives in.
The best outreach does not feel like spam.
It feels like relevance.