Case study: Tried HARO for 6 months, the data makes no sense

Case study: Tried HARO for 6 months, the data makes no sense

Nexus

New member
Alright so I got obsessed with free link building and decided to run a pure HARO experiment for a client in the B2B SaaS space, spent 6 months tracking every single query and response with a stupidly detailed spreadsheet, wanted to see if the free method actually built anything resembling a real backlink profile and I have to say the numbers have me completely confused, like they don't follow any logic I understand. Here's the raw data: over 180 days I monitored 2,347 queries in my niche, pitched 412 of them, got 27 positive responses and landed 9 published links, so that's a 0.38% link rate from total queries monitored, a 2.1% link rate from pitches sent, and the average time from pitch to publication was 17 days which is a huge lag in reporting. Here's the thing though, the link quality is all over the place, the DR scores from Ahrefs are 34, 58, 21, 89, 45, 67, 32, 71, and 29, the referral traffic from those links after 3 months is basically zero, like we're talking single digits total, and the anchor text is completely uncontrolled, it's just my client's brand name or the expert's name they quoted, so from an SEO metric perspective it's a bunch of random DR links with no traffic value. But the confusing part is the ranking movement, for the 5 primary keywords we were targeting, 3 of them saw a 2-5 position bump in the 60 days following the last HARO link placement, even though the links themselves seem weak and unrelated, and our overall domain authority score in Semrush ticked up by 3 points, which is more than we got from a paid guest post campaign that cost 5k last quarter, so the data is saying the free HARO links did more for our authority metric than a structured outreach campaign, which makes me question if we're measuring the right things or if Google just sees a random high-DR link and gives a tiny trust boost regardless of context. I'm left thinking maybe free link building is just about accumulating these tiny, inconsistent authority nudges from random places and hoping the aggregate does smth, because the individual link data is useless, but the overall site metric moved, so do you just grind out hundreds of these for the net effect, feels like a data problem where the input and output don't connect in a clean way, would love to hear if anyone else has run the numbers and seen this weird disconnect.
 
smh, this is classic HARO myth busting. show me the data that those links are actually moving the needle in serp rankings long term. every case study I've seen says most of those links are junk DR and no traffic. rankings bump could be algo fluff, not real link juice. I need to see the correlation between actual link value and rank moves, not just hope and dreams.
 
Alright so I got obsessed with free link building and decided to run a pure HARO experiment for a client in the B2B SaaS space, spent 6 months tracking every single query and response with a stupidly detailed spreadsheet, wanted to see if the free method actually built anything resembling a real backlink profile and I have to say the numbers have me completely confused, like they don't follow any logic I understand. Here's the raw data: over 180 days I monitored 2,347 queries in my niche, pitched 412 of them, got 27 positive responses and landed 9 published links, so that's a 0. 38% link rate from total queries monitored, a 2.
lol no, you're overthinking this. the whole point of HARO is not about quality links or traffic, it's about building brand authority and getting in front of editors. those numbers you threw out, they're like the surface level of what actually matters. ranking signals aren't just about the DR or referral traffic, it's about relevance, timing and if you're actually integrated into the content in a natural way. you landed 9 links, sure, but if those links are from sites that actually get traffic and are relevant, they can move the needle even if they look weak on paper. people get caught up on metrics and forget that sometimes a mention from a legit publisher can carry more weight than a dozen spammy DR links. so yeah, the rankings bump is real, but it's not just about the links, it's about the overall link profile and how those mentions fit into your client's authority in their niche. stop obsessing over the numbers and look at the bigger picture.
 
lol no, you're overthinking this. the whole point of HARO is not about quality links or traffic, it's about building brand authority and getting in front of editors.
I see what Bolt is saying but I think there's a dangerous oversimplification happening here. Brand authority is great in theory but if those links don't move the needle in SERPs or bring traffic, what's the point?

every case study I've seen says most of those links are junk DR and no traffic
Building a brand is long game but if your primary goal is SEO, those weak DR links that don't pass traffic or seem to influence rankings are just noise. I've seen this pattern before, people chase the vanity metrics and forget about real ROI. If the rankings move but the links are junk, I'd be questioning the causality hard.
 
Lol, so you spent 6 months counting paper clips for a strategy that doesn't even move the needle? Rankings bump from junk links? Sure, buddy.
 
Rankings bump from junk links
ok so real talk, I kinda think whiplash is missing the nuance here. yeah, those links might be weak and probably won't pass any link juice, but if they somehow push the SERP a little, maybe it's more about the psychological aspect. like, Google's gotta see some signals that the site is getting attention, even if they're fake or low quality. maybe the rankings bump ain't about the links directly but more about the overall narrative the algo picks up on. or maybe it's just a coincidence, who knows.
 
maybe the rankings bump ain't about the links
Exactly, it's like the old days when we thought just throwing up some links moved the needle. Now it's more about the perception, the branding, the subtle signals that maybe Google picks up on even if we can't see the direct juice. I mean, if those weak links somehow make the SERP look more natural, maybe Google's eyes get a little warmer? It's all about the long game and the psychology behind the ranking. Been there, burnt that with the old school backlink stuff.
 
Case study: Tried HARO for 6 months, the data make
haha yeah data can be a real pain sometimes especially with stuff like HARO where it's all over the place and hard to pin down what's legit keep grinding youll get better at reading the signals
 
yeah, HARO data is like herding cats sometimes. You get a bunch of backlinks and mentions but tying them directly to conversions? That's a whole other story. My advice - stop obsessing over the direct ROI on HARO alone. Focus on building real relationships and creating UGC or social proof from those journalists and journalists-to-be. Trust the process but verify the data. Sometimes the real gold is in the long game, not the immediate spike. Plus, for high ticket offers, nano-influencers and micro-influencers often outperform macro folks in ROAS because they seem more authentic and less salesy.
 
Case study: Tried HARO for 6 months, the data make
Six months is a lifetime for HARO data. I found it more useful for brand building and backlinks than for direct ROI. Don't chase perfect data, chase the leads.
 
Honestly I think HARO can be kinda overrated for direct ROI. imo most of the value is in building the long term brand authority and backlinks, not chasing immediate conversions. I've seen guys burn tons of time trying to decode every backlink but it's just a piece of the puzzle. If you're looking for quick wins, there are easier ways. But if you wanna keep a steady drip of legit backlinks and authority signals, HARO still has some merit. Just don't get too caught up trying to tie every mention directly to sales.
 
6 months is a lifetime in this game, and HARO data is like chasing ghosts sometimes. you're leaving money on the table if you're only counting direct ROI. it's all about the long game, building that brand authority and backlinks. real success takes patience and not obsessing over every little data point. if you're still stuck, maybe it's time to switch gears and focus on campaigns that actually push the needle.
 
seen this play out a dozen times with HARO data can be a mess for attribution especially if you don't use a dedicated influencer management platform to track the full funnel you can't just rely on backlinks or mentions alone you gotta look at the bigger picture to really get how it moves the needle
 
But are you really sure HARO is dead for ROI or just bad at tracking? I mean if you only looked at backlinks and mentions you might be missing the real juice. Most of the time the data's fuzzy because you're not stacking your pubs, your creatives or testing different angles. If your blacklist isn't at least 5x bigger than your whitelist you're just burning cash. Data's only as good as your stack.
 
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