infographic outreach data looks great but the links aren't coming in what's the gap

infographic outreach data looks great but the links aren't coming in what's the gap

Nexus

New member
Okay so I'm running into a wall with this infographic outreach push for a client in the home services niche, the data we're tracking shows people are engaging, the infographic itself has good metrics on the page where it's hosted, solid time on page and scroll depth from hotjar, we're getting clicks on the outreach emails and even some replies saying they love the content, but the actual backlinks placed are maybe one for every fifty positive responses, it's like everyone wants to be nice but no one wants to actually link. We built the asset around original survey data we ran, spent a decent budget on design, and the outreach is hyper-targeted to resource pages and bloggers in that specific vertical, the open rates are around 42% which isn't terrible and the reply rate is like 8%, but the conversion from reply to live dofollow link is just abysmal, maybe 2% of those replies, I'm starting to think the initial positive reply is just a politeness filter and the real 'no' comes later when they actually consider adding the link. What's the missing piece here, is it the follow-up sequence, are we not offering enough value post-reply, or is infographic outreach just fundamentally broken now where you get a ton of soft interest that never materializes, I need a quick angle because the client's patience is running as thin as my hairline, most affiliates over-optimize creative and completely neglect their tracking setup but here I'm tracking everything and the data says it should work, but the outcome says otherwise, data doesn't lie but it can whisper sweet nothings.
 
yeah i get it, soft interest is the name of the game now but this sounds like a classic case of over-relying on engagement signals without addressing the actual trust barrier. people say yes or respond because politeness, not because they're ready to link. the real missing piece is probably the follow-up game, or maybe your asset isn't resonating enough to push them past the politeness barrier into action. i've seen plenty of outreach that gets the clicks but never the backlinks because they forget to nurture the relationship, not just bombard with the same creative. and no, infographics alone aren't enough, especially when everyone's doing the same thing.
 
The core issue is the trust barrier. People are engaging with the content but not trusting it enough to link. The follow-up sequence is important, but the real missing piece is building credibility beforehand.
 
sounds like you nailed the trust barrier part, but maybe the follow-up isn't hitting hard enough. people like to say yes but not enough to jump into the link without a bigger nudge or proof. maybe try embedding more authority or case proof in your sequences, make it harder for them to ignore.
 
You're overthinking it. The data shows 42% open rate, 8% reply rate but only 2% conversion from reply to link. That's just typical soft interest. People love to be polite but linking? Nah, that's real trust and authority.
 
infographic outreach data looks great but the link
Looks like the outreach is solid but the links aren't following through. That often means the offer isn't compelling enough or the CTA isn't clear. Or maybe the outreach isn't targeted enough. Been there. Show me the click-to-landing ratio, then I can tell if the problem is with the outreach or the offer.
 
Show me the click-to-landing ratio, then I ca
Yeah, click-to-landing is the real juice. If the links aren't converting but the outreach looks good, maybe the audience isn't warmed up enough or the offer isn't resonating. Or the CTA is too weak, needs to push harder. Without that ratio, it's just guesses.
 
sounds like you might have the traffic but not the right targeting or the offer isn't hitting the right pain points. sometimes the infographic gets clicks but people don't really want to go further because the LP isn't aligned with what they're after. I'd check the click to lander ratio first, see if the clicks are actually turning into visits. if the traffic quality is good but no conversions, then maybe the CTA isn't clear enough or the messaging needs to be sharper. also, make sure the outreach whitelist is tight and that your links aren't getting filtered or blocked. once you get that ratio up, then you can really see where the break is. it's not just about getting clicks, it's about the right clicks that turn into actions.
 
Color me skeptical on this one. You're saying the infographic looks good but the links aren't coming in and the traffic is just sitting there like a bunch of shy cats. My two cents is maybe the outreach is targeted but the offer or the CTA just isn't compelling enough to get the clicks moving. Or maybe the audience is cold as a meat locker. I've seen plenty of cases where the links are there but nobody bites because the landing page doesn't match what they're expecting or the CTA is softer than a marshmallow. It's a classic gap that I've seen many times - traffic is pouring in but the conversion stays in the toilet. If you're serious about fixing this, I'd start measuring click-to-landing ratios and see if the problem's on the click side or the follow-through. Sometimes it's the offer not resonating, sometimes it's the targeting that's off. Or the infographic gets clicks but the landing page doesn't connect. Bottom line - traffic isn't enough. You gotta hook 'em and keep 'em.
 
Honestly, I've burned more money on that than you've made. The gap often isn't the outreach, it's the offer or the landing page not aligning with the traffic. Infographics are sexy but if your LP isn't directly addressing the pain points or has a weak call to action, the clicks are just a numbers game. They look at it, get intrigued, then bounce because there's no immediate reason to stay. Also, I'd be checking that click-to-landing ratio hard. If you're getting clicks but no conversions, the issue's usually with the offer or the hook on the LP. Sometimes people click just to see what's up but they don't wanna take the next step. And don't forget about the traffic quality. Even the best offer won't save dead-end traffic. Targeted PPV still underrated for high intent adult traffic if you ask me. I'd focus on tightening that flow, not just the outreach metrics.
 
The gap often isn't the outreach, it's the offer or the landing page not aligning with the traffic
Yeah, I've been there. Back in the print days, I learned real quick if the offer or landing page doesn't match the audience's expectation, your click rate is just a fancy stat. You can run all the outreach in the world, but if the LP is a mismatch, those links stay cold. I once had a campaign where I got crazy clicks on a pretty infographic but the landing page was selling something totally different crickets. Turns out, the audience was hyped for quick results, but the page talked about long-term solutions. The disconnect kills conversions faster than a bad lead. Bottom line, if your traffic's hot but the links aren't converting, look under the hood at your offer and LP. Sometimes just a small tweak in messaging or a better match on the pain points can make all the difference
 
Bro, sounds like your links are playing hide and seek. Maybe the outreach is solid but the offer or LP is sus or just not drip enough to seal the deal. Chaos but it works sometimes, just gotta tweak the drip fam.
 
Yeah, I get what you're saying. The data might look good but if the links aren't converting, there's probably a mismatch somewhere. Maybe the outreach is targeting the right audience but the CTA or the offer itself is just... meh or too vague. The math doesn't math if the click volume isn't turning into actual leads or sales. Sometimes it's just the LP not aligning with what they expect or need. I'd say double check the user journey. Are they hitting the page and instantly bouncing or sticking around? If they're bouncing, it's probably the offer or the headline that's off. Or maybe the tracking is just off and the links are getting clicks but no one's recording them right. Those platform changes lately make attribution a nightmare sometimes. Always gotta keep an eye on that.
 
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