How to Find Your Competitors’ Backlinks (And Get Them for Yourself)
That’s because understanding how they got links can help inform your link building strategy. In this post, you’ll learn how to find, replicate, and learn from your competitors’ backlinks. You need an SEO tool like Ahrefs to do...
If you’re looking to build more backlinks to your website, checking how your competitors built and earned their backlinks is a good starting point. That’s because understanding how they got links can help inform your link building strategy. In this post, you’ll learn how to find, replicate, and learn from your competitors’ backlinks. You need an SEO tool like Ahrefs to do this, which is consistently voted top dog in SEO industry polls. Head over to our free backlink checker and plug in your competitor’s domain or URL. You’ll see the total number of backlinks and referring domains (linking websites) and the top 100 backlinks (referring page, anchor, and target URL). Sign up for Ahrefs, plug your competitor’s domain or URL into Site Explorer, then go to the Backlinks report. You’ll see all their backlinks. In this case, over 80,000 of them. If you want to hone in on specific backlinks, such as those from English pages on websites with traffic, use the filters. Not sure who your competitors are? Enter your website or webpage’s URL into Site Explorer and go to the Organic competitors report. You’ll see a list of websites or webpages that rank for the keywords as your target. It’s impossible to replicate all of your competitors’ backlinks, but there are ways to get some of them (or similar ones) for yourself: Let’s take a closer look at how to do these three things. Most of your competitors’ backlinks will be extremely hard to replicate like for like, but it’s usually possible to replicate some of them. Let’s look at a few ways to do this. Directory links are far from the most powerful links, but they’re easy to replicate. Many SEOs believe they help with “map pack” rankings for local businesses too. Here’s the easiest way to find them: This will show you the websites linking to one or more of your competitors’ homepages, but not to yours. It’s then just a case of eyeballing the list for sites that look like niche and local directories. If you’re not sure whether a site is a directory, click the caret in one of the competing page columns to see the referring page, anchor, and backlink. You can usually tell from this. If you’re still unsure, click on the page to check manually. Replicating these links is usually as simple as signing up for an account and adding your business. Sidenote. Be aware that some directories charge a fee. Don’t be tempted to pay these for SEO purposes, as they won’t be worth it. Only pay if the directory is likely to send you customers. If competitors are mentioned in listicles of the best tools/restaurants/whatever your business does, there’s a chance you may be able to get mentioned in that same listicle (and a mention usually comes with a link). These kinds of listicles are usually easy to spot in a competitor’s Backlinks report. However, the best opportunities come from listicles mentioning multiple competitors because the topic of the page is more likely to be relevant to your business. Here’s an easy way to find these: Sidenote. Using this method, there’s no guarantee that the mentions are linked, but they usually are. It’s then just a case of sifting through the results and pitching the authors of listicles where it makes sense to add your business. Here’s what that pitch might look like for Aweber: Hey [Name], Just came across your list of the best email marketing tools and noticed Aweber wasn’t included. Is that because you didn’t like our platform or haven’t tried it? If it’s the latter, I’d love to hook you up with a free account so you can give it a shot. What do you think? Note that the email doesn’t explicitly ask the author to add anything to their list. It just asks if they’re familiar with the sender’s tool. This is intentional. It’s easier to ask for inclusion after you win folks over. Interview and podcast links are more common in some industries than others, so you may not find any among your competitors. But as they only take a minute to search for, it’s well worth a quick check. Here’s an easy way to find them: You then just need to pitch the same interviews and podcasts. Guest posting is the third most popular link building tactic, according to Aira’s 2022 State of Link Building report, so it’s probably a tactic that at least some of your competitors are using. However, while you can find them in a competitor’s Backlinks report, they can be hard to spot. For example, one of the links below is from a guest post and the other isn’t. But there’s no way to tell this from the link profile itself. With that in mind, here’s an easier way to find a competitor’s guest posts: Most of the results should be guest posts by that person. Replicating them is as simple as reaching out and pitching the same websites. If your competitors have lots of backlinks from directories, podcasts, interviews, or guest posts, these link building tactics are clearly working for them. So don’t limit yourself to replicating only the exact links they got. Pursue other links from these tactics too. Here are some tutorials to help: Sidenote. *Most citations come from directories, so building citation opportunities is pretty much the same thing as finding opportunities to get links from directories. However, there are two more commonly used tactics worth checking for. Bloggers and journalists often use services like Help A Reporter Out (HARO) and MuckRack to source quotes for upcoming stories—and they usually link to their sources. For example, here’s someone from “Martha Stewart Living” asking for a quote about how plumbing leaks occur in the home. Max Rose from Four Seasons Plumbing was one of the people to respond to this, and he received a quote and backlink from the article in return. Here’s how to check if your competitors are building backlinks this way: If you spot a few quotes from the same person, like “Max Rose” in this case, filter for that name in the anchor and surrounding text to hone in on these kinds of links. If you see a fair number of links from quotes, there’s a good chance your competitor is actively responding to journalist requests—and that it’s working. So it’s probably worth responding to requests via HARO and similar platforms yourself too. Linkable points are things like facts, statistics, and unique ideas that resonate with the linkerati and attract backlinks. Even if your competitors aren’t consciously using this tactic to earn links, it could still be one of the ways they’re earning them—so it’s worth checking. Here’s how to do that: For example, the Anchors report for a page ranking for “seo copywriting” mentions the “APP” method/formula a few times: This is a term coined by the post’s author, and it has earned him some decent links. Because of this, when we wrote our own guide to SEO copywriting, we decided to coin a similar term in an effort to earn some passive backlinks. If we check the Anchors report for our page, we can see it’s earned us a couple of links so far: This is not astonishing by any stretch of the imagination, but they’re two links we wouldn’t have unless we included proven, linkable points. We had more success with this method when creating our list of SEO statistics (we documented that process in this link building case study), which has earned links from over 1,700 referring domains in under two years. Your competitors may have links that no longer make sense for them to have. If you can provide linkers with a better alternative, you can often take these links for yourself. Here are a few tactics that revolve around this idea: Broken link building is where you find a dead page with backlinks, create your own resource on the topic, then ask linkers to link to that instead. For example, this page about SEO tips can’t be found: If we plug that URL into Ahrefs’ Site Explorer, we see it has backlinks from 177 referring domains: If we were to create our own list of SEO tips, we could reach out to these 177 websites and suggest replacing that dead link with a link to our list. But how do you find your competitors’ broken pages with backlinks in the first place? If you have a specific competitor in mind, do this: You’ll see a list of dead pages on their website, sorted by the number of referring domains pointing to them. If you don’t have a specific competitor in mind, do this: You’ll see a list of broken pages related to the topic with at least the minimum set number of referring domains. Regardless of which method you use, the process from there is the same: 301 redirect link building is where you look for your competitors’ irrelevant redirects, then pitch a replacement to linkers. For example, this page about the Google Penguin Update on Search Engine Land has backlinks from 1.2K referring domains: But, for some reason, it redirects to a page about “Google SEO”: This is a problem because people clicking through from those 1.2K websites will end up on a completely unrelated page. For that reason, there’s an opportunity here to pitch a link swap to linkers (same as with broken link building). But how do you find your competitors’ irrelevant 301 redirects in the first place? It’s then just a case of double-checking what the page used to be in the Wayback Machine, auditing the quality of the page’s links, creating a relevant replacement, and suggesting it to linkers. Some of your competitors’ “lootable” links won’t fall neatly into the box of a known link building tactic. The process of finding them is quite nuanced and takes some experience, but you’ll often find unique pitches this way. For example, say we wanted to build links to our list of Google ranking factors. If we check the top-ranking results for this keyword in Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer, we see that many of them have hundreds of (potentially “lootable”) backlinks from hundreds of domains: When I plugged one of those competing URLs into Site Explorer and checked the Backlinks report, alarm bells started to ring when I saw the anchor and surrounding text for this link: It claims that bounce rate, dwell time, and repeat visits are ranking factors. Given that this link must be based on advice from the linked (competing) page, I decided to take a look myself. What I found was a page giving lots of dangerously bad advice: I’m not sure how much linkers would care, but I think there’s an opportunity here to reach out to all worthwhile prospects, explain that they’re linking to an inaccurate post, and suggest linking to our list of ranking factors instead. Even if only a fraction of them care, we win a few links while combating misinformation. It’s a win-win. Finding your competitors’ backlinks is easy. Getting the same ones to your site is less easy. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t possible. Start by replicating the easy ones, then find and copy the link building tactics that work for them, and finally take any links they no longer deserve for yourself. Got questions? Ping me on Twitter.Free method (top 100 backlinks)
Paid method (all backlinks)
Finding your competitors’ replicable links
Find competitors’ directory links
Find listicles where competitors are mentioned, but not you
Find competitors’ links from interviews and podcasts
Find competitors’ guest posts
Finding and copying link building tactics that work for competitors
Check for links from journalist requests
Check for passively earned links from linkable points
Finding links you can loot from competitors
Broken link building
301 redirect link building
Run a competitor link analysis
Final thoughts