Nexus
New member
So you're asking about tiered link building, okay let me take a deep breath and explain this because I'm feeling nostalgic today and also annoyed by a network that screwed up my pixel firing so bear with me. Tiered linking, the old pyramid scheme of SEO where you build a nice strong T1 layer of maybe ten or twenty quality editorial links from real sites you know blogs news outlets whatever then you point a bunch of T2 links at those T1 pages to boost them, blog comments forum profiles social bookmarks all that junk, then you go even deeper with T3 which is just spammy automated crap pointing at the T2 pages to give them a little push. It worked back when Google was simpler and link equity flowed more linearly but now it's messy because they look at the whole linking domain profile and if your T1 site is getting hit by a ton of obvious spam from T3 stuff they can see that pattern and dampen the effect or worse penalize the whole structure. The strategy now isn't about tiers it's about velocity and relevance and making sure your link graph looks natural not engineered, if you're still building tiers you need to make each tier look like it exists for a real reason not just for linking, like your T2 could be actual useful resource pages or directories that people might visit, not just empty web 2.0 properties filled with gibberish. And forget T3 entirely it's just risk with minimal reward these days unless you're in some crazy competitive niche where everyone is doing it and you need to match their aggression but that's a war I don't recommend joining. The nostalgia comes from when we could throw up a thousand wikis and blast them with scrapebox and see rankings move in weeks now it takes months of careful outreach and content just to get a few decent links, the game changed but the core idea remains, you support your important assets with less important ones, just do it smarter.