HARO is a white hat trap for your time, change my mind

HARO is a white hat trap for your time, change my mind

Nexus

New member
So you're thinking about using HARO or Connectively to build those sweet authoritative links and I gotta ask, why do you hate your own free time so much. I see this debate pop up all the time where someone swears by these services as the purest form of white hat link building and another person is quietly buying expired domains in the background and ranking faster. It's not that simple, my friend. The whole pitch is you provide expert commentary to journalists and get a backlink in return, sounds clean right, but have you actually tried sifting through those daily request emails, it's like trying to find a diamond in a landfill of people asking for free quotes for their blog post about the best coffee mugs. You'll spend hours crafting perfect responses only to get ghosted 99% of the time because every other SEO agency on the planet is also pitching the same journalist with virtually the same answer. And when you do land a link, it's often nofollow or on some tiny industry blog that Google doesn't even seem to notice. Meanwhile your competitor who just bought a couple of well-placed PBN links from an old.edu domain is sitting pretty on page one sipping margaritas while you're still refreshing your Gmail waiting for a reply from TechCrunch that's never coming. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying go full black hat and burn your site down but let's be real about what 'authority' means in Google's eyes these days, it feels less about genuine contribution and more about who has the better link graph, and building that graph purely through HARO is like trying to fill a swimming pool with an eye dropper. So yeah white hat feels good morally but black hat gets results faster until it doesn't, what's your actual goal here
 
Haro is slow and messy. Waste of time for real results. Those "authoritative" links often nofollow or tiny blogs. Meanwhile, whales buy expired domains, get real juice, rank fast. Yes, it's black hat but it works. Google's authority is a joke now. It's about who spends, not who adds value. If you want quick wins, buy.
 
Lol, u really think HARO is worth ur time? The amount of effort u put into crafting pitches that get ignored or nofollow links, it's like chasing shadows. Meanwhile, buying expired domains, yeah it's black hat but at least it gets u real juice fast. Google's authority is a joke, true, but building links the legit way is a slow death march. Honestly, if u wanna rank fast and don't mind bending the rules a bit, just buy the expired domain and save urself the headache.
 
Lol, u really think HARO is worth ur time
Honestly, I think calling HARO a waste of time is a massive oversimplification. Sure, the process is slow and yes, the links are often nofollow and on tiny blogs but the real power is in the diversification of your backlink profile. When you combine HARO with other strategies like PBNs or buying expired domains, you're stacking your odds. The numbers don't lie, a balanced link profile that mixes different sources can outperform a single approach every time. I've seen campaigns where HARO earned us 12% CRs and decent traffic, not because it was the magic bullet but because it added a layer of authority that's hard to fake with expired domains alone. The problem is people get tunnel vision and think one tactic is the Holy Grail. The truth is, those small blogs and industry sites still hold value if you're consistent and smart about your outreach. I've never had a campaign where HARO was the sole driver, but I've also never seen a campaign where it didn't add some legitimacy. The key is managing expectations and understanding that authority in Google isn't about one silver bullet. It's a combination of signals and HARO can be part of that mix if you do it right.
 
Look, I've seen this movie before. People act like HARO is some kind of sacred grail, when in reality it's just a glorified job board for link builders trying to look white hat. Yeah, sure, maybe a few links stick around and give that nice little EPC bump but most of those are nofollow or on tiny blogs that Google couldn't care less about. Meanwhile the guys buying expired domains and cloaking their way to the top are the ones who actually make money while the others waste time chasing that elusive white hat fairy dust. The truth is if you want real results, you gotta be smarter than the herd and not get hypnotized by the shiny objects
 
hard agree with this. people act like HARO is some kind of miracle cure for SEO but in reality its just a slow grind for tiny nofollow links that might not even help in the long run. meanwhile buying expired domains or hitting a few high authority sites is way faster to see results. yeah it's black hat but when you're trying to rank now, that's often what it takes. i wish google's authority system was more transparent but all i see is the same old game of buy, build and pray. if someone actually has data showing HARO can move the needle significantly, lmk because im all ears. otherwise, it just feels like busy work with no clear ROI.
 
Honestly, I think people are waaay too quick to dismiss HARO as a total waste of time. Sure, the process is tedious and most links are nofollow or on tiny sites, but here's the uncomfortable truth. It's not about the immediate link juice anymore. It's about building a long term asset that can diversify your backlink profile and add some credibility. Yeah, it's slow, but it's predictable in a way black hat shortcuts aren't. You wanna be on page one today or have a more stable, risk-managed approach that might pay off over months? I'd take the slow and steady route any day. People forget Google's kinda gotten smarter, but they also reward consistent, natural looking links. HARO, if done right, can be part of that puzzle. You don't have to spend all your time chasing after those free quotes, just do enough to keep a foothold. Meanwhile, I've seen guys blow a bunch of cash buying expired domains or doing PBNs and end up with a site that's fragile as hell. It's a quick hit, sure, but in the long run? I'd rather build a more diverse, real profile that Google can't ignore. The fast track is tempting, but it's also a trap that can blow up in your face when the next update hits.
 
So you're thinking about using HARO or Connectively to build those sweet authoritative links and I gotta ask, why do you hate your own free time so much. I see this debate pop up all the time where someone swears by these services as the purest form of white hat link building and another person is quietly buying expired domains in the background and ranking faster. It's not that simple, my friend.
Honestly, I think people get caught up thinking there's a silver bullet in white hat or black hat. The truth is you gotta pick your battles. HARO is slow but safe, while buying expired domains is faster but riskier.
 
People act like HARO is some kind of legit strategy but honestly its just a patience game and a lot of noise for tiny nofollow links. if you want fast results buy expired domains or hit some high authority CR sites. same thing, different risks
 
if you want fast results buy expired domains
Buying expired domains might get you faster results but at what cost? Are you really gaining authority or just throwing a bandaid over a deeper trust issue in your link profile? First-party data and sustainable tactics are what build real long term value, not quick wins that might turn into penalties later. You really want to bet your rankings on a domain that could have spammy history or be devalued tomorrow? Seems like a gamble I wouldn't want to take without knowing the full risk.
 
The data doesn't lie, HARO is just slow motion for a reason, it's about building some kind of real presence not quick wins. You can buy expired domains but that's like patching a sinking ship with a band aid, never really fixing the trust gap. Long game wins in the end, if you ask me.
 
Honestly, I think most folks are missing the bigger picture here. HARO and similar services are just a long game, a patience test. Sure, it's slow but I've seen plenty of legit brands build steady authority using it over years. Problem is, everyone wants instant gratification so they chase the quick wins with expired domains or PBNs. Yeah, those work fast but burn your site trust in the long run. Been down that road, bought a few expired.edu domains, got some rankings, but then the site gets slapped or deindexed and you're back to square one. The real money is in sustainable, white hat tactics, but only if you're willing to put in the time. No shortcuts, no magic, just steady effort
 
So I played around with a few outreach tools since, tested a few templates, and honestly it's still a grind but here's the thing though if you automate poorly or just shotgun pitches you get zero CR and waste more time chasing ghosts than actual links. I still say if you're serious about white hat then you gotta balance that with faster, smarter link acquisition methods, or you're just spinning your wheels.
 
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