I tracked my time last month. 47 hours on link outreach—hunting down sites, writing personalized emails, sending follow-ups that get ignored.
The result? Four links.
Link building is one of those necessary evils everyone agrees matters but nobody wants to do. What shifted everything was stumbling onto a link building marketplace that turned my whole strategy around. Instead of this song and dance with webmasters, you’re browsing domains that already want to work with you.
Feels too easy. I was skeptical too.
My Old Weekend Routine (That I Don’t Miss)
2023 me would block off Saturday mornings for this. Fire up Ahrefs, download massive prospect lists, and start sending cold emails that probably sounded desperate.
My success rate hovered around 8% on good weeks. Even when sites said yes, they’d ask $300 for a single link on some DR 15 domain that barely got traffic.
But I couldn’t pretend links didn’t matter. My Amazon FBA review site sat on page 3 for keywords I cared about, my affiliate blog wasn’t touching anything competitive, and every SEO person kept repeating this same advice about needing more backlinks.
What I’ve Actually Found Works?
Marketplaces solve this one specific headache—they kill the guessing game. Everything’s visible before you hand over money. You see domain authority numbers, real traffic stats, actual prices without negotiating for three days.
You want platforms that go beyond just showing DR scores. I’m looking at actual visitor numbers, whether the site’s topic makes sense for my niche, if they accept what I’m working on.
I once worked with a broker who kept talking about “premium placements” and sent me straight-up PBN links that earned me a manual penalty from Google. That recovery process was miserable.
The decent platforms actually write the content too. No more guest posts at 11:47pm. You send them your URL and anchor text preferences, they handle everything else.
The Reality Check About Buying Links
Google’s official stance is don’t buy links. But honestly every serious site is acquiring links through some method because purely organic link building at scale is fantasy unless you’re already a household name brand.
What actually matters is making it look natural. You need editorial placements on legitimate sites that get human visitors, not sketchy footer links or sidebar widgets, but actual in-content links with surrounding context that makes sense.
I learned the hard way about checking replacement guarantees. Bought 12 links from some vendor in early 2024 and by June, 5 had vanished completely. Sites died, content disappeared. No refund, no replacements.
Now I exclusively use services guaranteeing replacements for minimum 12 months, though some offer 36-month guarantees which feels reassuring.
Mix up your anchor text deliberately. Hammering that exact-match keyword 50 times looks ridiculous and Google notices these patterns. Throw in branded anchors, naked URLs, generic phrases like “check this out.”
Start small. Grab 3 to 5 links initially and watch what happens over 6 weeks. Monitor your rankings and organic traffic patterns.
Scale up once you’re seeing positive movement. I’ve watched people throw $5,000 at links in a single month and completely destroy their site because the velocity looked totally unnatural.
The whole process should feel gradual, like you’re legitimately earning attention over time instead of trying to game your way to position one.


