DR/DA metrics - do they really matter?

DR/DA metrics - do they really matter?

Locus

New member
Alright, I'll admit it, I've been obsessing over DR and DA scores like they're the holy grail of link building. Every outreach email, every guest post pitch, I'm checking the damn metrics like my life depends on it. But here's the thing, after wasting a ton of time chasing high DR links from whitelisted sites that are basically ghost towns, I gotta ask, do these numbers actually mean anything? Or are we all just feeding into shiny objects syndrome, pretending a 50 DR backlink from some obscure niche blog is gonna make my site fly? I've seen sites with sky-high DR that can't rank for shit, and then there are tiny blogs with low DA that send me traffic and conversions like no tomorrow. So I'm stuck in this frustration loop, chasing the metrics that probably don't matter, while my actual rankings and traffic stay stubbornly dead. Anyone else feeling this way or just me wasting my precious time on phantom metrics?
 
big picture guys, DR and DA are just vanity metrics. you chase high scores on sites that don't matter, your traffic and conversions stay dead. focus on LPs, CTR, CPL, actual engagement, not some number that doesn't translate into real results
 
so you're saying all that link juice from some high DR ghost town is pointless? but what if the problem isn't the metrics but your approach? i mean, how much are you reaaally vetting those links beyond the DR score? maybe you chasing shiny scores is just a symptom of not having a proper outreach process. what if instead of fixating on DR and DA, you focused on building real relationships with legit sites that actually send traffic? or are you worried that means you're not doing enough vanity chasing? i've seen plenty of guys burn money on the high DR crap just to find out it's dead ends, but maybe you're missing the real game - quality over quantity. how much effort are you really putting into the conversion side of things? maybe your issue isn't the links but the landing pages and funnels. just food for thought.
 
i mean, how much are you reaaally vetting those links beyond the DR score
back in the day i used to think links were just about the metrics, but then i saw sites with perfect DR get zero traffic and others with trash scores crush it. vetting beyond the number is just common sense, but most guys get lazy and chase the shiny. real link quality is about relevance, placement, and engagement, not just the score.
 
I've seen sites with sky-high DR that can't rank for shit, and then there are tiny blogs with low DA that send me traffic and conversions like no tomorrow
that's cap, most of these shiny metrics are just vanity, fr. a low DA blog with a engaged audience will outperform some high DR ghost town any day. links from those high DR sites often dead weight unless they got real traffic and engagement. metrics are just a small part of the puzzle, focus on real quality and actual outreach that hits your niche, not just numbers. lfg
 
Boulder, I get what you're saying, but it's not just about the approach, it's about the quality of the links behind the metrics. Sure, vetting is key, but chasing shiny DR numbers on ghost towns just wastes time. You gotta find real engagement and relevance, not just high scores.
 
DR/DA metrics - do they really matter
gonna have to say they matter less than most people think. those metrics are basically vanity numbers, more about how sites are structured than real authority or trust. smh, focus on actual links and conversions instead of chasing a DR number. i'll eat my hat if a high DR page doesn't tank in a campaign if the links aren't legit or relevant. they're just shiny objects for link builders, not the secret sauce for traffic or sales.
 
DR/DA metrics - do they really matter
DR/DA is like the weight on a scale, looks important but doesn't tell you if the cake tastes good. Yeah they matter a little but if your traffic converts, who cares if DA is 10 or 50? Focus on CR and CTR not just the numbers that make your buddy feel fancy.
 
DR/DA metrics - do they really matter
DR/DA is like the weight on a scale, looks important but doesn't tell you if the cake tastes good. Yeah they matter a little but if your traffic converts, who cares if DA is 10 or 50.
counterpoint: you're comparing a vanity number to actual conversion, but isn't building authority the whole point of those metrics? if your DA is 10 and you still rank, maybe it doesn't matter. but if you're trying to get links and boost rankings, those numbers can be the map. smh, people get caught up in the wrong metrics
 
DR/DA metrics - do they really matter
sorry but that's just not how i see it. DR/DA might seem vanity but they give you a quick idea of site quality, trust flow, and potential. more trust = higher epc, simple as that.
 
Look, those metrics are like the old military map symbols. They give you a quick read but don't tell you if the mission's gonna succeed. You can have a high DR and still get no traffic to convert. Bottom line: focus on actual engagement and traffic quality, not just the numbers.
 
DR/DA metrics - do they really matter
honestly, they matter about as much as ur shoe size. yeah they can give u a quick idea but if the traffic converts, who cares if the site has a high DR. focus on the money in ur pocket, not the vanity metrics. free game.
 
been here a long time and seen this before. DR and DA are like trying to judge a book by its cover. they can give u a rough idea but not the whole story. i've had sites with low DR get decent traffic and convert just fine. same for high DR sites that don't do squat. it's all about the actual traffic and engagement. those metrics can be manipulated or misleading if u rely on them too much. imo, they're more like a quick glance not a definitive score. ur best bet is to focus on actual metrics that matter, like bounce rates, time on site, conversion rates. those tell u if ur content is resonating, not just some numbers pulled from a link profile. be cautious with relying on vanity metrics. they can make u feel good but don't put food on the table.
 
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