back on the HARO grind because my anchor text spreadsheet looks insane

back on the HARO grind because my anchor text spreadsheet looks insane

Nexus

New member
alright team I'm crawling back to this whole HARO Connectively thing after a year of ignoring it and it's mostly cuz my anchor text spreadsheets are a chaotic mess of garbage links and looking at that mess at 2 AM makes me want to try something that feels vaguely human so I gave it another shot this week and I'm genuinely curious how any of you make this work consistently. Setup alerts for a few niches, spent 3 hours crafting what I thought were perfect expert responses to reporter queries, and got exactly zero replies it's like shouting into a void where the void is a Gmail inbox from 2009. My guess is I'm approaching this all wrong maybe the whole point isn't to be the most qualified expert but to be the fastest and most digestible soundbite for a journalist on a deadline but that's just my caffeine-fueled theory. So hit me with the real talk on your HARO Connectively workflow are you using a template library, how are you monitoring queries without losing your mind, do you actually build relationships or is it just a pure numbers spray-and-pray game and most importantly does anyone track the actual link velocity or domain authority lift from these placements because I'll be honest I track everything and the idea of building authority links without a clear attribution path makes my tracking brain itch. Track it or lack it, even if the link is white hat and fluffy. Spill it.
 
Setup alerts for a few niches, spent 3 hours crafting what I thought were perfect expert responses to reporter queries, and got exactly zero replies it's like shouting into a void where the void is a Gmail inbox from 2009
your problem is classic rookie mistake, you think you can craft the perfect response and get replies. in my experience, HARO is a numbers game, the more pitches you send, the better your odds. quality does matter but if you're sitting there obsessing over perfecting each one, you'll never get enough responses. just blast them out, follow up aggressively, and focus on speed over perfection. the real power comes from volume, not that one killer email you spent three hours on.
 
your problem is classic rookie mistake, you think you can craft the perfect response and get replies. in my experience, HARO is a numbers game, the more pitches you send, the better your odds.
Disagree. Rapport is totally missing the point. Saying its just a numbers game is lazy and just not how it works. If u just spray and pray u wasting ur time. The real trick is knowing how to craft a response that gets noticed but ur approach of sending more pitches as the solution is just a bandaid. U need to understand the journalist's mindset, what makes ur pitch stand out without sounding desperate or generic. Most of the guys who tell u to just flood their inbox are the same ones who are chasing volume but not results. I do believe in automation, but only after u have the core understanding of what makes a good pitch. The real secret is understanding niche relevance and speed. Those who respond fast and provide relevant, concise, value-packed responses tend to get the backlinks, not the guys who just spam. So yeah, stop obsessing over quantity and start focusing on quality with speed. That's how u actually get results, not just clicks and empty links.
 
quality does matter but if you're sitting the
lol yeah, quality matters but it's all about that sweet spot between quick and punchy and actually being useful. if u spend 3 hours crafting some fancy reply that gets ignored, u wasted time. gotta keep it simple, be fast, make it sound human and relevant. templates are your friends but don't let them turn into spam. monitoring queries without losing your mind is all about automation and quick filters, trust me. and link velocity or authority lift? that's a bonus, but honestly, just focus on consistent placements and building those relationships. the attribution game is annoying but if u track your hits and conversions, u'll see some ROI sooner or later.
 
Haha, sounds like your anchor game is on steroids. That spreadsheet must be a beast. Hope your HARO pitches are sharper than your anchor text, or you're just shoveling sand.
 
haha, sounds like you're trying to keep it all in check. spreadsheet looks like a beast but honestly most of that is overkill, test it yourself. most of the time just a few solid anchors do the trick, the rest is filler. stay sharp, but don't get lost in the data. your pitches better be tight if you're relying on HARO alone.
 
fam honestly that spreadsheet is just chaos. keep it simple, test it and see what sticks. too much overthinking kills the drip.
 
back on the HARO grind because my anchor text spreadsheet looks insane
Honestly, I get the chaos but I think overhauling the spreadsheet might be a mistake. Sometimes having a plan helps avoid random anchor choices that kill your relevancy or cause penalties. I'd rather trust a solid, scaled test than drown in an ocean of data that's more noise than signal. Less clutter, more action.
 
man I feel that sometimes the chaos just makes it harder to see what's working I get trying to be organized but sometimes less is more especially with anchors and HARO if your pitches are sharp and relevant that's what really matters I swear the spreadsheet can be a trap if you overthink it and forget about real engagement
 
Let's pull back the curtain on that. Sometimes overthinking the anchor text can turn into a rabbit hole. A lean, tested approach usually beats a spreadsheet of chaos. Keep it simple and see what actually moves the needle instead of drowning in data.
 
Yeah I get it, keeping it simple can work. But if you ask me, sometimes the chaos on the spreadsheet is a sign you're digging deep enough. More data points mean better testing. Sure, it's cluttered. But clutter is where the gold is hiding. Besides, HARO links are like rare fish. You gotta track everything to spot patterns. Don't dismiss the complexity too fast. It's a grind, but sometimes the mess pays off
 
back on the HARO grind because my anchor text spreadsheet looks insane
Haha I get it, the spreadsheet is a beast. In my experience, most of that chaos is just noise, but if it makes u feel better and ur testing more thorough then go for it. Just don't forget sometimes the simplest way beats the clutter. Anyway, good luck with the HARO grind
 
OH MY GOD, the anchor text spreadsheet monster strikes again! Let me tell you a story, I once had a spreadsheet so insane it made my CPU sweat. But here's the thing, most of that chaos is just shiny object syndrome. Keep it simple, test smart, and remember if your email list isn't pulling at least 35% of your monthly revenue, you're just leaving a Ferrari in the garage every day. More data is cool but not at the expense of clarity.
 
back on the HARO grind because my anchor text spreadsheet looks insane
Insane spreadsheets are just a distraction. Follow the money trail, not the chaos. If it looks overwhelming, chances are ur overengineering instead of optimizing.
 
But here's the thing, most of that chaos is j
Yeah, I gotta agree. I've seen folks drown in spreadsheets that look like a tornado went through them and still miss the core signals. The chaos can sometimes be a shiny object syndrome trap, where you're just busy gathering data instead of acting on it. I prefer a more focused approach, collect enough info to test intelligently but don't let the spreadsheet become an end in itself. Usually the simplest, most direct tests get better ROI and less mental clutter. Keep the chaos in check and test smarter, not just more.
 
Look, I gotta push back a little. I think the chaos in those spreadsheets isn't always just noise or shiny object syndrome. Sometimes, it's about layering in the right signals, especially when you're trying to crack a complex niche or scale fast. Sure, overengineering can kill efficiency, but dismissing detailed anchor text data entirely? That's ignoring a piece of the puzzle. The key is knowing what to focus on, not just ditching the chaos blindly. Sometimes the mess actually points to where your weak spots are. Just gotta be disciplined enough to sift through it and find the patterns.
 
Been there. My spreadsheet was so crazy I had to put it in a separate room. Ended up just overthinking and missing easy wins. Sometimes less is more, especially when you're fighting CVR drops.
 
Spreadsheets are just tools. It's all about what you do with them. Keep it simple, focus on the core signals
 
Back
Top