The Skyscraper Technique: Does It Still Work?
Sightivo
The Skyscraper Technique: Does It Still Work?
An honest assessment of Brian Dean's famous link building technique. When it works, when it doesn't, and how to adapt it for 2026.
The Skyscraper Technique—find popular content, create something better, reach out to linkers—revolutionized link building when Brian Dean introduced it. But a decade later, does it still work?
The Original Formula
The Skyscraper Technique has three steps:
- Find link-worthy content - Look for content with lots of backlinks
- Create something better - Make it longer, more current, better designed
- Reach out to linkers - Contact everyone who linked to the original
Simple in theory. Harder in practice.
Why It Used to Work
The technique succeeded because:
- There was less competition for "best" content
- Outreach was less saturated
- "Better" was easier to define (longer, more comprehensive)
- People were more likely to respond to cold emails
Why It's Harder Now
The landscape has changed:
Content saturation Every topic has multiple "ultimate guides" already. Creating something genuinely better is harder when 10 comprehensive resources exist.
Outreach fatigue Webmasters receive dozens of these pitches weekly. "Hey, I made something better" doesn't stand out anymore.
"Better" is subjective Longer isn't better. More images isn't better. Different audiences want different things.
The best content already exists For many topics, there's content you genuinely can't beat with your resources.
When Skyscraper Still Works
The technique isn't dead. It works when:
You have unique data or insights Not just a longer article, but information no one else has. Original research, proprietary data, unique case studies.
The existing content is genuinely outdated If the best-ranking content is 5 years old and wrong, there's opportunity.
You're willing to go 10x, not 1.1x Marginally better won't get links. You need to be dramatically better or different.
Your outreach is exceptional Generic "I made something better" emails fail. Personalized, valuable outreach still converts.
Modern Adaptations
To make Skyscraper work today, adapt the approach:
Focus on angles, not length What unique perspective can you offer? What's missing from existing content?
Target underserved audiences Maybe the general guide exists, but the guide for [specific audience] doesn't.
Add multimedia Interactive tools, original graphics, video explanations—things that are hard to copy.
Build relationships first Connect with potential linkers before you create the content. Understand what they'd actually want to link to.
The Outreach Problem
The biggest failure point is outreach. "I made something better" doesn't work because:
- It's presumptuous
- It requires them to care about your content
- Everyone says this
Better approaches:
- Lead with specific value for their audience
- Reference what's missing from their current link
- Build familiarity before asking
Alternatives to Consider
If pure Skyscraper isn't working, try:
Original research Create data others want to cite. Survey your customers, analyze your product usage, compile industry statistics.
Tools and calculators Build something useful that people naturally link to when recommending resources.
Expert roundups Get insights from recognized experts. They'll share, and you have built-in outreach targets.
Contrarian content Challenge conventional wisdom with evidence. Controversy (done tastefully) attracts links.
A Realistic Assessment
The Skyscraper Technique in its original form is less effective than it was. But the core principles remain valid:
- Study what earns links
- Create exceptional content
- Promote it actively
The execution needs to be better than "make it longer and email everyone."
Should You Try It?
Consider Skyscraper if:
- You have genuine expertise to add
- You can invest in truly exceptional content
- You're willing to do highly personalized outreach
- You've identified underserved topics
Skip it if:
- You just want to make a longer version
- You plan to send template emails
- The existing content is already excellent
- You're looking for quick wins
My Recommendation
Don't abandon the concept, but evolve your approach:
- Research what's missing, not just what exists
- Create genuine value, not just more words
- Build relationships, not just links
- Focus on unique insights over comprehensive coverage
The technique works when you actually create something better—and "better" in 2026 means different, not just bigger.
Topics covered
Written by

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.
Ready to build backlinks faster?
Join the waitlist for Sightivo and automate your link building workflow.
Join the Waitlist