How to Do a Backlink Gap Analysis (With Template)
This process helps you: Find quality links quickly Improve your domain’s authority Close gaps against competitors In this guide, you’ll learn how to use our backlink gap analysis template to find relevant, high-quality websites that are worth reaching out...
Article Performance
Data from Ahrefs
The number of websites linking to this post.
This post's estimated monthly organic search traffic.
A backlink gap analysis is the process of finding great links your competitors have that you don’t. It involves evaluating your competitors’ quality of backlinks and deciding if similar links could also improve your site’s SEO. This process helps you: In this guide, you’ll learn how to use our backlink gap analysis template to find relevant, high-quality websites that are worth reaching out to. Make a copy of the backlink gap analysis template. Then search your website in Ahrefs Site Explorer and navigate to Organic Competitors: Look at the Domain Rating (DR) column to identify competitors that have a higher authority than you and are in a similar ballpark to the size of the site you have. Keep this list of competitors handy, as you’ll need it for the next step. Open Ahrefs’ Competitive Analysis tool and set it to “referring domains” Where it says “the target doesn’t rank for”, add your website. Beneath that, add your list of competitors: Then click “show link opportunities” to see a list of websites your competitors rank for, but you don’t. You can easily remove most low-quality links by applying a few filters. Start by looking at domains that link to all competitors you’ve entered. If a site links to all your competitors and not to you, it’s likely worthwhile for you to get a link from it. These will be your high-priority link targets. You could also check domains that link to at least two competitors afterward. These will be your medium-priority link targets. Next, you can look at only “dofollow” domains: If your list of link targets is still rather long, try setting the Domain Rating (DR) filter to a minimum of 50: Or the domain traffic filter to a minimum of 1,000: You can adjust these values up or down depending on the results you get in the report. Even with these filters applied, there will always be links your competitors get that are not relevant to your brand or industry. To remove them, start by assessing the first domain in the list. Open the website to see what it’s about. If it is: … do not add it to your prospecting list. Move on to the next domain and repeat this assessment process. For each website you identify that’s relevant, and you can likely get a link from it, add it to your copy of the link gap template. Focus on filling out the columns for: You’ll find the data in these columns in Ahrefs: You can also fill out general columns like: Your team can fill out the remaining columns during the prospecting and outreach phases. For now, continue going through the list of domains, adding only the relevant ones to your list. Some link building strategies work better by adding a backlink to an existing post instead of creating new content that contains a link. In this case, when you contact editors and website owners, you must provide the exact page on which you want to request a link. To find such pages, switch the Link Intersect report to “referring pages” mode: Then, repeat steps 3 to 5, adding each relevant page to the link gap analysis template. This process is complete once you have examined all the domains and individual pages that link to two or more competitors but not to your website. Once you’ve added all the relevant ones to the spreadsheet, this task is complete. You’ll then need to send the spreadsheet to your client, manager, or whoever is in charge of link prospecting so they can complete the remaining columns in the spreadsheet and prepare it for outreach. Got a special link gap analysis process you’d love to share? We’re building a marketing SOP library—connect with me on LinkedIn and have your processes included!Final thoughts