Skyscraper Technique: Still Valid or Dead? My Newbie Take

Skyscraper Technique: Still Valid or Dead? My Newbie Take

Locus

New member
So I recently stumbled onto the skyscraper method while trying to figure out some link building stuff and honestly I was pretty skeptical at first. It sounded too simple, just find popular content, make it better, then outreach for backlinks. I decided to give it a shot on a niche site I was working on, mainly because I saw it mentioned everywhere but no one really broke down if it still works today. After my first round of outreach, I gotta say the results are kinda mixed. Some backlinks came through, but the quality was iffy. Turns out a lot of those high authority sites I targeted are not accepting guest posts anymore, or the email responses are dead silent. So I looked into the data and saw a few folks claiming the technique is outdated, especially with how tough it is to get high-quality outreach links now. But I also saw some case studies showing decent gains if you pick your targets right and craft the content carefully. So, for a newbie like me, it feels like maybe the skyscraper is still standing, but you gotta be super selective about who you reach out to and what you consider a win. I think it's kinda like white hat vs black hat debate. You can do it legit by focusing on relevance and quality, or go full spammy and hope for the best. Not sure which route is smarter yet but I'll keep testing. Would love to hear from anyone experienced - does this method still hold up or just a relic of the past?
 
skyscraper works if you do it right but it's not magic. The real deal is building real relationships and making content that actually adds value. Just finding popular stuff and blasting out emails is noisy and yields junk links. Focus on relevance and quality and you might get some decent backlinks without wasting time. It's still legit if you do it like a pro, not spammy.
 
skyscraper works if you do it right but it's not magic. The real deal is building real relationships and making content that actually adds value.
building real relationships and making content that adds value is all well and good but let's be honest here, most people just want quick wins and cheap backlinks. Sure, real relationship building works if you're patient and have a legit brand but in this game most are capped out or just don't have the time. Skyscraper is about scale and hitting a bunch of targets fast, not about friendship or giving a damn about the quality of the outreach. I think people overcomplicate it, just gotta pick the right targets and not be spammy. If you want legit links, yeah go build trust, but if you want scale and fast results, that's not the main route.
 
Skyscraper is not dead, just more like a vintage car that needs a tune-up. Sure, outreach is tougher, but if you're picking targets smart and making legit content, it still moves the needle. Show me the receipts on the links that actually convert.
 
Skyscraper is not dead, just more like a vintage car that needs a tune-up. Sure, outreach is tougher, but if you're picking targets smart and making legit content, it still moves the needle.
I get what you're saying about it being like a vintage car needing a tune-up, but honestly I think that analogy is a bit optimistic. The core problem with skyscraper is that it was always more of a volume game. Picking smart targets and making legit content sounds good but in practice most of the outreach is still spammy noise.
 
After my first round of outreach, I gotta say the
After your first round, do you think the mixed results are more about the technique itself or just the execution and target selection? cuz honestly I've seen plenty of people blow a lot of outreach and still call it a win if they learn from the failures. Are you testing enough angles or just sticking to a limited list? Prove me wrong
 
So I recently stumbled onto the skyscraper method while trying to figure out some link building stuff and honestly I was pretty skeptical at first. It sounded too simple, just find popular content, make it better, then outreach for backlinks.
Not to be that guy but do you really think it's the simplicity of the formula that's the problem or the fact that most people don't bother with real research and high quality outreach? I mean, if it was just about finding popular content and copying it, everyone would be ranking number one. Have you considered that maybe the real skill is in how you differentiate and build trust, not just how you find content to mimic?
 
So I recently stumbled onto the skyscraper method
Ah, the skyscraper method - the classic 'find popular stuff, make it shinier, hope for backlinks' trick. I tried that too, like seven years ago when it was the hottest thing. Honestly, I think it's kinda like trying to polish a turd - it can work if you do it right, but most people just slap up some content and hope the links fall into their lap. It's not dead, but it's definitely not the easy win it used to be. You gotta put in real research, target the right people and craft content that doesn't scream 'copycat'. Otherwise, you're just shouting into the void. And yeah, the outreach part? Pain in the ass these days.
 
This method is like a broken clock sometimes right twice a day, data doesn't lie but the game changed. High quality outreach is more important now, but even then it's a crapshoot. You gotta know when to call it quits and pivot. For newbies, it's a good start but don't bet the farm on it. Keep testing, keep learning, that's the only way.
 
I get where you're coming from about the skyscraper technique, but I gotta say I think it's kinda on its way out. Back in the day, it was a good way to get quick backlinks and some traffic, but now with algorithms smarter than a dad joke, it feels kinda spammy. The real value now is building social proof through genuine engagement and long-term content strategies. If you only focus on chasing backlinks or trying to outdo others with a "bigger" piece, you might burn out quick or get slapped with Google penalties. Remember, social proof isn't just about links or shares, it's about creating a whole funnel of trust starting with your creative. Don't put all your eggs in that skyscraper basket unless it's a really good one.
 
I get where you're coming from about the skyscraper technique, but I gotta say I think it's kinda on its way out
Here's the thing Phantom, I think you're half right but also missing the point. The skyscraper isn't dead, it's just evolved. You can't just build a bigger, better article and call it a day. It's about relevance and timing now. If you still think backlinks are the only goal, yeah, maybe it's outdated.
 
yeah totally agree the skyscraper still has its place but it's all about the vibe check now like relevance and timing matter more than just throwing up a bigger piece of content to get backlinks it's kinda like micros and creators - you gotta stay relevant and keep up with the algorithm's mood otherwise you're just shouting into the void ugh late night ramblings some
 
Honestly I think the skyscraper can still work but only if you understand its limits. The math doesn't math if you're just creating bigger content without a real hook or relevance. The backlinks and traffic are nice but the core issue is always tracking and attribution. If your analytics are fudgy or the platform changes rules mid-game, all that effort can go poof. So yeah it's alive but fragile, kinda like chasing shiny objects without a solid back-end
 
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