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seoJune 19, 20264 min read

Link Building Metrics: What to Track and What to Ignore

Cut through vanity metrics and focus on what actually matters. A practical guide to measuring link building success.

Jess O'Malley, author at Sightivo
Jess O'Malley
Founder

Not all link building metrics are created equal. Some matter. Others are vanity metrics that lead you astray. Here's how to focus on what actually moves the needle.

Metrics That Actually Matter

These are the metrics worth tracking:

Referring domains (not total backlinks)

A hundred links from one site count as one relationship. Track unique referring domains, not raw link counts.

Organic traffic growth

Links are a means to an end. If traffic isn't growing, something's off—either link quality, content quality, or targeting.

Keyword ranking improvements

Track rankings for target keywords. Links should move these over time. If they don't, reassess your strategy.

Referral traffic from links

Good links drive actual visitors. Zero referral traffic from a "high-value" link suggests it's not as valuable as metrics indicate.

Metrics to Be Skeptical Of

These metrics are useful in context but often misleading:

Domain Authority / Domain Rating

DA and DR are third-party estimates, not Google metrics. Use them for rough prioritization, not precise evaluation.

A DA 40 site in your niche often outperforms a DA 70 site in an unrelated space.

Total backlink counts

More links ≠ better. Ten quality links beat a thousand spam links. Focus on quality, not quantity.

Anchor text ratios

Over-optimizing anchor text looks manipulative. Natural profiles have diverse, often branded or URL-based anchors.

Setting Up Tracking

Here's a practical tracking setup:

Monthly dashboard:

  • New referring domains this month
  • Total referring domains
  • Organic traffic trend (month over month)
  • Top 10 keyword rankings

Per-campaign tracking:

  • Links earned / outreach sent (conversion rate)
  • Average DA/DR of links earned
  • Time invested
  • Cost per link (if using paid tools or contractors)

Interpreting the Data

Raw numbers without context are meaningless. Ask:

For referring domains:

  • Are they relevant to my industry?
  • Are they growing over time?
  • How do I compare to competitors?

For traffic:

  • Is growth correlated with link building efforts?
  • What pages are driving traffic?
  • Is traffic converting?

For rankings:

  • Which keywords improved after link building?
  • Which didn't? Why?
  • Are we targeting the right keywords?

Competitive Benchmarking

Compare yourself to competitors to set realistic goals:

  1. Identify 3-5 competitors ranking for your target keywords
  2. Check their referring domain counts
  3. Analyze their link growth rate
  4. Identify gaps in link sources

If competitors have 200 referring domains and you have 20, you have work to do. Use this to set realistic timelines.

Vanity Metrics Trap

Watch out for these dangerous patterns:

"We got 50 links this month!" From where? Quality matters more than quantity.

"Our DA increased by 5 points!" DA fluctuates based on Moz's index updates. It's not a direct measure of your efforts.

"We outreach 1,000 prospects weekly!" Volume without conversion is wasted effort. A 5% response rate on 100 targeted emails beats 0.1% on 1,000 generic ones.

What to Report

If reporting to stakeholders, focus on:

Business outcomes:

  • Organic traffic growth
  • Keyword ranking improvements
  • Leads/conversions from organic

Leading indicators:

  • New referring domains
  • Quality of links earned (examples)
  • Pipeline of opportunities

Avoid overwhelming with vanity metrics. Keep it focused on what matters.

Realistic Expectations

Set appropriate expectations for link building timelines:

  • Links take 2-4 months to impact rankings
  • Some links show no measurable impact (that's normal)
  • Consistency matters more than spikes
  • Quality compounds over time

Don't panic over monthly fluctuations. Look at quarterly trends.

Tools for Tracking

Essential tools for link building measurement:

  • Ahrefs or SEMrush - Backlink monitoring, competitor analysis
  • Google Search Console - First-party ranking and traffic data
  • Google Analytics - Referral traffic, conversions
  • Spreadsheet - Custom tracking and reporting

You don't need enterprise tools to track effectively.

A New Metric to Watch: AI Answer Visibility

Traditional link metrics still matter, but there's a newer one worth adding to your dashboard: how often your brand shows up and gets cited in AI-generated answers.

As more people ask ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini for recommendations, your citation share in those responses becomes its own form of visibility—separate from rankings and referral traffic. You can track it manually by running the queries your audience would ask and noting whether (and how) your brand appears.

It's early, and the measurement tooling is still maturing, so treat this as a leading indicator rather than a precise number. For more on optimizing for it, see generative engine optimization.

Action Steps

This week:

  1. Set up a simple tracking spreadsheet
  2. Benchmark your current referring domains vs. competitors
  3. Note your current rankings for top 10 target keywords
  4. Set a calendar reminder for monthly review

Consistent tracking beats sophisticated tools used inconsistently.

Topics covered

link building metricsSEO metricsdomain authoritybacklink analysis

Written by

Jess O'Malley, author at Sightivo

Jess O'Malley

Founder

Product leader who's launched 8 B2B SaaS products over the past 6 years. Experienced in taking products from 0 to 1 and scaling them. Built Sightivo out of frustration while doing backlink outreach for another startup—spent hours juggling spreadsheets and tools just to send a few emails. Decided to build something better and share it with others facing the same pain.

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