31 SEO Experts Reveal 3 Favorite Link Building Tools
By Ashutosh Jha →
Sunday, August 28, 2016
Are you thinking to use link building tools for your blogs and websites but confused which you should choose?
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I asked a one-liner question to each expert-
If you could use only 3 SEO tools for your link building campaigns which 3 tools would you choose
I only wanted to know the tools that helped them to reach the top so that a newbie like me and many can take help of those tools. I received a good number of responses. And so here are the responses of 31 Industry experts. I was really surprised to see the response of industry giants replying to a mail of newbie. I thank each one of you for your precocious time. Based on the vote, I categorized the top 5 most used link building tools and here those are-
Favourite Link Building Tools, based upon the votes-
1. Ahrefs – 13 Votes
2. Google Products (Includes Webmaster, Search and Keyword Planner)- 12 Votes
3. BuzzStream- 10 Votes
4. Majestic Seo- 8 Votes
Apart from these top 5 link building tools, good responses have been received for the below also-
So read on the experts’ 3 favorite link building tools-
Note: Responses listed in the order they were received in
Neil Patel - Neil Patel
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BuzzSumo: I would use Buzzsumo to help me determine what content to create that generates the most social traffic. As some of those visitors will end up linking back to your site.
Adobe Illustrator: And I would use Adobe Illustrator to create infographics. Infographics generate more backlinks than blog posts, or at least that is what we have seen at KISSmetrics.
Erik Emanuelli - Erik Emanuelli
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NetPeak Checker: Fantastic software to check different SEO details. Great to get an analysis of the leading SEO parameters of specific pages or websites, plus competition analysis and comparison.
SerpBook Rank Tracker: A powerful rank tracker. Good to check different data for your website campaign, as for example keyword rankings.
Mike Wallagher - Start Blogging Online
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Gmail with YesWare: the Second tool in my list is Gmail with a combination of YesWare. This helps me to track my outgoing/received emails for link prospects. This can easily be replaced with a buzzstream, but I'm a bit old-school SEO, so I prefer to Gmail.
Broken Link Finder: And the third tool would be brokenlinkbuilding.com. This is software that scrapes together a list (for a keyword) of pages that are either down or go to 404 error page. This helps me to find tons of broken link building prospects.
Kulwant Nagi - BloggingCage
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Sue Anne Dunlevie- Successful Blogging
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Majestic SEO: It helps me see the backlinks and rankings of both my site and my competitors.
Alexa: I also use Alexa to keep track of my audience demographics and geography as well as my rankings.
Atish Ranjan - Atish Ranjan
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These tools help me understand which all sites are linking to me and also how they are linked and this helps me figure out which links are good and which ones are bad. By this, I can disavow the bad links to stay safe. I can also get to know how many dofollow links my site is having and how many nofollow. It helps me decide how much more quality backlinks either dofollow or nofollow are required to rank well.
I just shared the 3 tools above, but I use much more such as WebMeUp, Open Site Explorer.
If it comes to automation of link building which can be done for event blogging, then I would Suggest GSA Search Engine Ranking.
Miguel Salcido - Organic SEO Consultant
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Excel or Google docs: I would use Excel or Google Docs to manage and record new links.
Gmail: And I would use Gmail for my outreach.
It’s pretty simple. :-) But this is still the most efficient way to build links.
Anil Agarwal - Blogger Passion
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Moz: I personally use Moz tools as the tools used in Moz are not only made my SEO professionals, but they are easy to use even for SEO beginners. They also give access to Open Site Explorer where you can actually figure out your competitor keywords and the number of backlinks so that you can outperform your competitors in search results.
Google Keyword Planner: No matter how many keyword research tools are available, according to me, nothing beats Keyword Planner by Google. You can quickly figure out the best keyword ideas for your blog posts, and you can also estimate the number of average monthly searches for your desired keywords. It's also free! Here are some of the best alternatives to Google AdWords for PPC.
SEO By Yoast: This is a must have a plugin for every WordPress user. This plugin helps you optimize your blog posts properly for search engines. It will also help you find the right keyword density to increase your search results for any keyword. It's a free plugin btw!
Sebastian Cowie- SC Digital
Sebastian Cowie- SC Digital
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Scrapebox –for data collection, scraping, rank tracking
Ahrefs- for backlink data and competitor research
Buzzstream- for prospecting links
Jessica Knapp - Blogging Basics 101
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1) Type in my main keyword in Google.com
2) Scrape together top 10 results and add them to ahrefs backlink search.
3) See where they have got those links from.
4) Email to those webmasters saying that I've put together something similar and it would be nice if they could mention it on their page.
Buzzstream- This is mainly to keep my email outreach targeted and organized. In that way, I can follow-up if someone hasn't answered to my initial email. I can also keep those contacts for future projects so I can email them later again and build a relationship of some sort.
Broken Link Building: This is for finding broken link building opportunities. It'll cost you some money, but you can easily type in your main keyword - for example, "blogging" and broken link building tool will give you some results for pages that are related to blogging but are no longer available (404 error, page down, etc.). Once I've found something, I'll get in touch with people who have linked to the site previously and tell them that the site is down and they could replace it with my OWN site.
Bill Sebald - Greenlane Search Marketing LLC
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Buzzstream- for prospecting links
and all the link data providers (in aggregate).
Then it’s good old Excel and Google.com usually for the rest.
Vladimir Gendelman - Company Folders
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Adobe Creative Suite- Essential tool for creating awesome infographics.
SEMRush- Great tool for keyword research that will also help you think of ideas for content.
Majestic- Helpful for analyzing and auditing backlinks.
Jason Acidre - Xight Interactive
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Ahrefs- for backlink data and competitor research
George Stevens - NEB Stone
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MOZ – similar to MajesticSEO however with some differences - useful to compare metrics and also offers the ability to compare your site with other competitor sites in detail.
Google Webmaster Tools – the inbound links section can give some really good detail into who links to you and from what pages (it’s free as well).
Simon Penson - Zazzle Media
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Nirmala Santhakumar - My Magic Fundas
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LongTailPro - I love this tool. I've integrated with my Moz free account to analyze the competitors and their links effortlessly. Not only to look the links, we can see their PD, DA, PR, Moz rank, juice passing external links, etc. with this awesome tool.
Google Webmaster Tools - Regular use of this valuable tool helps me to understand better about my links and keywords to focus.
Open Site Explorer - I use this vibrant tool to get insights about the links that points to a particular page.
Chris Gilchrist- Hit Reach
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URL Profiler – For backlink audit
Ahrefs- To keep track of my link profile and make sure things look organic and healthy.
Buzzstream- for contact management, task management, and finding contact information
Kostas Chiotis - Iris Signals
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SEOquake: SEOquake is another neat (and completely free) extension for Chrome and Firefox, which I use to view any site’s statistics while browsing. You can modify the different metrics to be displayed, such as Google and Bing indexed pages, external and internal links, keyword density, social media stats, and Alexa rank, etc. It saves me a ton of time for checking each of these individually.
Open Link Profiler: Perhaps the one I find the easiest and most straightforward to use is Open Link Profiler. For a free tool, it’s amazing how much you can get out of it. I use it mostly to scout specific backlinks leading to a site as it has some very handy filters and a number of options for tracking backlinks in real time (it’s updated daily) and the results go back for the past six months. I’ve used quite a few backlink profile checkers, but this one seems to work best for me.
Jane Sheeba- Best Hosting & Design
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Market Samurai and
Larry Frank- FlowingTechBlog
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Majestic SEO: It's one of those tools I used in the early days of blogging; I was introduced to this tool by a friend. Majestic SEO is a software package, which is focused on providing information for link building, reputation management, competitive link analysis and website traffic analysis. In all this, competitive link analysis and for A standard link audit has been what I use this tool for. Believe me to the tool is a very nice one regarding backlink exploration and building a reputable link building strategy.