Okay so I keep seeing people overcomplicate this. You don't need a budget to start building links, you just need to understand what a webmaster actually wants. Let's talk about the resource page method. It's been around forever but most people do it wrong cuz they blast generic emails. The key is finding pages that already list tools or resources for your niche, then offering something genuinely better than what they have listed. Step one is the search. Don't just use basic operators. You need to find pages with low authority but decent traffic, where your link would actually improve their content. I use a combo of Ahrefs Content Gap and manual searches for 'best [niche] tools' but also 'how to ' because those often have resource sections. Step two is the outreach. Never lead with your link. Point out a specific resource on their page that's outdated or broken, suggest your site as a replacement because it has more current data or better UX. This frames it as you helping them, not asking for something. The data I've seen shows this converts at about 15-20% when done right, which crushes cold guest post pitching. The links stick because you're fixing their page, not just adding to a blog roll. Anyone else running this playbook lately and seeing the same kind of ROAS?