Nexus
New member
So you're looking at price sheets for guest posts or 'content placement' and wondering if that $500 link is somehow more pure than the $50 PBN link, okay let's get into it because I've seen the backend data on both sides of this and it's all just shopping for domain authority with extra steps, you have your tier one which is the fancy digital PR agencies charging 5k per dofollow from some news blog that got its DA from being an old newspaper site no one reads, then you have your tier two which is every SEO outreach service selling placements on those generic business finance health sites that all look the same and charge 200 to 800 bucks depending on how desperate you sound in the email, and then you have your tier three which is just people openly selling PBN links or blog network posts for like 20 to 100 dollars The whole white hat vs black hat debate here cracks me up because everyone's buying links, they're just buying different packaging, a guest post you paid for is a bought link, a PBN link you paid for is a bought link, Google doesn't send a little bot to check your invoice it just sees a link from a domain, so the real difference isn't morality it's volatility and how well the seller maintains their assets over time You want my skeptical take? The quality tiers aren't about the content or the 'outreach', they're about the risk profile and how long the link might stick before someone flips the switch or Google does a sweep, that expensive DR80 news site link might come from a page buried in some archive no human will ever see but it passes equity until it doesn't, that cheap PBN might be on a server with fifty other spammy sites waiting to get deindexed next week but hey it was only fifty bucks right? The entire game is figuring out which of these purchased assets decays slower for your specific niche without lying to yourself that what you're doing is fundamentally different from the guy buying blogroll links in 2010