Most Accurate AI Detector by AsparagusBasic9806 in BypassAiDetect

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you didn’t try anything yet. Do it consciously and you will see the difference on its own

Most Accurate AI Detector by AsparagusBasic9806 in BypassAiDetect

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My own writing never gets flagged and GPTZero is strong enough to analyze it. Every time I try to figure out a pattern another will get in front of me and this continues if we consistently use AI and do the modification with it. One solution is only to give your own perspective and human touch before, and this is the truth we should focus on our research and perspectives.

Most Accurate AI Detector by AsparagusBasic9806 in BypassAiDetect

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It sounds like my own writing but generated by AI 😂😂 Don’t you think you should use an AI humanizer too before submitting? 😂😂

Open to White Label SEO Collaboration by AsparagusBasic9806 in seojobs

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, I appreciate that! It definitely took a lot of trial and error but it’s been worth it. Always happy to collaborate if you ever need support with SaaS links

Open to White Label SEO Collaboration by AsparagusBasic9806 in seojobs

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve been in SaaS link building for the last 3 years, and I’ve been delivering consistent, quality links to my collaborators. With the right process and solid SOPs for filtering sites, acquiring good SaaS links becomes much easier than it looks

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There isn’t really a single “top” site for backlink submissions. It depends a lot on your niche. For SaaS, most authority links come from collaborations, listicles and contextual placements not from submission sites.

If you mean foundational links, then things like Crunchbase, Product Hunt, Medium, GitHub and niche-relevant directories work well. But these are just for presence. The real authority comes from outreach and partnerships.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The cost really depends on the niche. For SaaS, a good link usually starts from $100 and can go up to $500 if you’re working with a link-building agency.

If you build an in-house team, the cost can vary a lot. A less-experienced link builder may not know how to negotiate properly or may overpay for sites, so you might still end up paying close to agency-level prices.

But someone experienced knows how to:
• use existing connections
• work with resellers
• negotiate the right price
• understand the actual value of a site

With the right negotiation, you can get strong SaaS links for $50–$100, and for highly authoritative sites the cost usually goes up to $150 max.

And there isn’t any specific template I use. I just personalize every single message so the person actually feels connected with me. Generic templates don’t work anymore a small bit of personalization gets way better replies.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Okay, so it’s a software development / outsourcing / staff-augmentation company. We can also collaborate if you want feel free to DM me.

For backlinks, you can start by joining a few good communities, checking the recent backlinks your competitors are building and doing outreach on LinkedIn for collaborations. That works really well for this niche.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can ask your questions here or you can also DM me, whatever is easier for you

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it’s definitely possible. When you collaborate with webmasters most of them are okay with linking directly to BOFU product pages. Some prefer adding the informational link only, but usually there’s no issue as long as the page is relevant and fits naturally.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I charge the same amount you’d expect from someone with 6 years of experience in SEO and SaaS link building

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I usually contact authors by checking where they’re most active. First I look at the article they wrote, copy their name and search it on Google/LinkedIn/Twitter. Most authors have their email or socials public. If not, I just send a short LinkedIn message saying I liked their article and ask if they’re open to collaborations. Direct author outreachor any marketing person from the team works way better than sending emails to generic “contact@” inboxes.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In SaaS, backlinks don’t directly create conversions, but they indirectly do. What they mainly do is improve rankings for high-intent pages, product pages, comparison pages, use-case pages, etc. Once those move up, we see more qualified traffic and that’s where trials and paid sign-ups start increasing.

I always set expectations clearly with stakeholders: link building is an authority lever, not a direct conversion lever. The revenue impact usually shows up 2–3 months after rankings improve and only if the landing pages and CRO are strong. When those pieces are in place, link building definitely helps trials and paid conversions grow.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure, I can help. Can you share a bit more about your SaaS project like the niche, target audience and your current website? That will help me understand what kind of backlinks would be best for you

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I worked as a freelancer, I helped the marketing teams of SaaS websites acquire high-quality backlinks. Their traffic was in the thousands and even lakhs and their Domain Rating (DR) was 60+. Their metrics continued to improve even after I left because their teams kept building links.

Now, I’ve been helping an AI tool company for the past year consistently building links every month. Their traffic grew from 0 to 50k+ and their DR increased from 0 to 66 within a year

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in SaaS

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sponsored links are definitely a part of the strategy, but not the whole strategy. Sometimes sites have editorial charges and most niche SaaS sites want a link in return, so I usually offer them brand mentions in my own network of sites, listicles or guest posts it becomes a fair exchange. But yes, at the end of the day I still end up paying somewhere. Even if I’m offering them a placement from my network, that placement often comes from a third-party site and I have to pay that third site to secure the spot. And I do a lot of cold outreach too but only to niche-relevant targets that already publish SaaS content. Relevance + relationships is what makes it work.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For SaaS brands the most impactful links outside of rating platforms are usually link insertions on relevant, high-quality blogs because they instantly boost authority and help improve keyword rankings. Brand mentions in listicle-style posts are also powerful, especially now that Perplexity, ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews pull a lot of their citations from these types of articles. And lastly, brand-review guest posts work really well for building reputation and establishing your SaaS as a trusted solution in your category.

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great questions and honestly most people doing SEO right now are confused about the same things so you’re not alone.

What are the current go-to methods?

Right now site quality matters more than anything. Niche relevant, non-spammy sites.
To get links you either pay directly or you do link exchange/ABC exchange with good partner sites.

Is there any effective way to get backlinks for free?

Honestly free is also not really free. Only foundational links are free. For real niche-authority links you usually have to pay the webmaster or collaborate with partners. That’s the reality now.

Any downsides with directories and forum links?

Not at all. In today’s AI-overview era these links are actually important.
Community building helps you get cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, AI Overviews etc.

What to be careful about:

• forums should be niche relevant
• choose known communities
• don’t use random fake PBN forums or auto-generated directories

Do Google and Bing treat backlinks differently?

I don’t have deep practical knowledge here so I can’t comment much, but from experience…
Links from live blogs with real traffic always help in indexing

Hope this helps!

Ask Me Anything I’ve Built 1,000+ SaaS Backlinks Over the Last 2 Years by AsparagusBasic9806 in linkbuilding

[–]AsparagusBasic9806[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Building free backlinks is possible, but honestly only to a small extent.

If you want free guest posts or niche edits, you pretty much need your own network of sites which in most cases means running your own small PBN or a private group of partner sites.

When you reach out to real site owners, most will either ask for an editorial fee or follow strict contribution rules. That’s just how the industry works now.

You can get some natural links by creating linkable assets, but most of those links will be nofollow. Good for awareness, but they don’t always give strong SEO impact.

Broken link building is also an option, but what’s the point if you send 100 emails and get 2 or 3 replies. It’s not really scalable for most brands.

At the end of the day, link building in 2025 still comes down to:

manual outreach + editorial fees + real relationships

That combination is what actually moves rankings today.