Link Roundup Outreach – How to Do It Right and Build Links


Andy Cabasso

January 22nd

Link Roundup Outreach TLDR

What is it?

Link Roundup Outreach is a high-converting form of link building outreach that can easily get you quality backlinks to your content.

With Link Roundup Outreach, you reach out to websites that regularly publish articles or newsletters that share content like yours, asking them feature your content in their next roundup post.

How to do it in Postaga:

Postaga has an automation that can help you build these Link Roundup outreach campaigns. With Postaga, you can:

Analyze your article for relevant keywords

Find websites that regularly publish link roundup articles or newsletters on your topic

Reach out to these websites on Twitter to acknowledge them

Find these websites on LinkedIn to get on their radar

Reach out to them via email to suggest your post for their next roundup

Link Roundup Outreach in Detail

Note: This entire outreach process that follows can be done entirely within Postaga (for free!). Below, we’re going to share exactly what the outreach process entails and our top tips for success, whether or not you are using Postaga.

There are a bunch of different types of linkbuilding campaigns we can run to build links and traffic to our websites.

Let’s take a look at one of them in particular, called Roundup Outreach.

Roundup Outreach entails reaching out to websites that create Link Roundup content, and asking them to include your piece of content in their next Link Roundup post.

About Link Roundups and Roundup Outreach

But, what exactly is a Link Roundup?

Link Roundups are curated pieces of content – either blog posts or newsletters – that share other people’s content (like yours!) on a given topic.

The value of a Link Roundup post to a reader is that it shows them fresh, high-quality content on a given topic.

link roundup post from big apple media

Many readers subscribe to Link Roundups that focus on their industry or area of interest.

Roundup Outreach entails:

  • Finding websites that currently publish roundup content on the same subject as your blog content
  • Finding contact information at those websites
  • Emailing them (and following up) to ask to include your content in their next roundup

As far as outreach methods go, I love the success rate of Roundup Outreach.

When doing outreach, you’ll find that different types of outreach have different rates of success, generally.

Putting yourself in the shoes of a recipient of a cold outreach email, you’ll be thinking, “Who is this and why should I help them out by linking to their content?”

For the recipient, to comply with each cold outreach request requires them taking time out of their day to add the sender’s content to their website. Sure, the content may be relevant and good-quality, but it still is an “ask” of the recipient’s valuable time.

But, particularly for Roundup Outreach – you are providing the recipient a valuable service:

You are saving them time.

Websites publishing link roundups want quality content. And they have to invest time into finding new, quality content. 

If you have quality content and can share it with them, you’re saving them time, helping craft their next Link Roundup post.

So, because of that, I’ve found Roundup Outreach particularly well-received.

How We Do Roundup Outreach

So, let’s do some Roundup Outreach.

First, we need a blog post. 

So, write a great blog post.

Then, once you’ve written your great blog post, we need to find relevant websites that publish Link Roundups.

There are a few ways you can do this research:

You can do it with Postaga (which we’ll talk about shortly).

Or, you can do it with your preferred search engine of choice.

If you’re going the search engine route, you should take advantage of some advanced search parameters. In particular, we’re going to be using “intitle:” and “inurl:”.

These parameters ensure that you only get results where your keyword is in the title or URL of what you are searching for.

One example of a search would be “intitle:”link roundup” web design” – which will return any posts or pages that have “link roundup” in their title, and also have the keyword “web design” in results.

intitle link roundup search

Now, that’s great, but it could be better.

Here, we’re getting any Link Roundup ever published, which means we’re probably getting some Link Roundups that are no longer publishing regularly.

So, let’s click the Tools button in the search and select “Past Month” so that we only get Link Roundups published within the last month.

link roundup linkbuilding outreach advanced search in google

To track all of these, you can note the URLs in a spreadsheet.

One you have the URLs for the websites you’re going to reach out to, we need contacts to reach out to.

So, going to one of the Link Roundup posts, hopefully we’ll get an author bio for whoever created the Link Roundup post.

Ideally we’ll be reaching out to the author of the Link Roundup. If we do, it’ll increase the likelihood we get a positive response.

Let’s then note the contact’s First and Last Name in our tracking spreadsheet.

After that, we need to find their email address (or if we don’t have an author, anyone else at the website).

To do this, we can leverage Hunter.io, a free email address-finding tool. Enter the website URL, and Hunter.io will return email addresses, if they have any for that website. 

You can copy those into your tracking spreadsheet.

And then we’ll repeat this process for every website we want to reach out to.

Next, we need to draft our outreach email.

A few tips on drafting an email that will get a response:

  1. Have a relevant subject line like – “For Your Next Roundup Post?”
  2. Personalize your email so you show the recipient that you know who they are and that your content is relevant to their Link Roundup.
  3. “Sell” your content with a brief summary that shows how it is relevant to the Link Roundup topic.

Here’s an example of an email template that I’ve used with great success:

Subject: For Your Next Roundup Post?

Hey {{contact_first||there}},

I really enjoy your weekly roundup posts over at {{contact_company||your company}}.

I just published this piece of content that I think would be perfect for your next roundup. {{post_url}}

{{post_summary}}

Let me know what you think! I’d be happy to share your roundup on my social media platforms. Thanks for the consideration!

{{user_first}}

Now, let’s break down why this email works.

First – the subject line is relevant and basically tells the recipient what’s in this email, while also being a bit mysterious and piquing their curiosity by being a bit vague.

Next – flattery. I show my appreciation for their content.

Next – the brief sell. Here’s what I’m asking for and then I show why my content is relevant to them.

Next – showing that I’m happy to share their Link Roundup shows that they have more to get out of this as well.

Lastly – being polite and thanking them for their consideration is just good manners.

great success

But beyond the email, we should also have a follow-up.

Send a follow-up once every 5 days or every week. And that follow-up should just simply say:

“Hey {{contact_first}}, I wanted to see what you thought about my post and including it in your next roundup? Thanks for your time.”

That’s it. Real simple.

And that’s how it’s done.

Next, let’s go over how to run a Roundup Outreach campaign in Postaga.

Roundup Outreach in Postaga

First, we create a new campaign and choose the Roundup Campaign Type.

link roundup campaign type

Then, enter your post URL.

Click Analyze Post.

You can only submit a blog post on your Account Domain. If you try to submit a URL that is not the same as your Account Domain, Postaga will let you know that it cannot proceed.

Your Post

In this section, Postaga shows your analyzed post, with any additional custom post merge fields that you’ve added.

Postaga will pre-fill any information it finds in your post. You can also click on any given text box field and edit the value.

Postaga campaign post meta information

These fields are important for your campaign because we can use them later as merge fields in our outreach emails. 

The data in these fields can be pulled into your emails wherever you have the appropriate merge field. As an example, if your post title is set to “Great Blog Post” and you have a sentence in your email “Check out this post: {{post_title}},” Postaga will swap in “Great Blog Post” where the {{post_title}} merge tag exists in the email, making the final output, “Check out this post: Great Blog Post.”

These post related fields (and their corresponding merge variables) include:

  • Post Title (post_title) = your blog post title
  • Post Site (post_site) = your website name
  • Post Search Keyword (post_keyword) = your target keyword
  • Post Category (post_category) = your blog post’s category
  • Author Name (post_author) = Author of your blog post

Below these, we also have post related fields for any custom merge fields that we may have created. You can create your own post merge fields in Settings.

Then, Postaga will find all the websites you linked to in your post, and a contact for each website, if possible.

Roundup Search

Next, we choose a keyword to search for roundup articles. 

You can try out different keywords relevant to your article topic. Postaga’s magical AI will automatically make some suggestions for you.

Once you make a search, Postaga will return results. On the left side of each result, you can check them to include them in your outreach.

link roundup search in postaga campaign

You can also select all or select none.

Then, from the results, you can select the relevant websites you want to reach out to, get contacts, select your email sequence, and schedule the campaign to run.

Links

Postaga will then give you a list of the links to the websites you selected, along with a target contact for each website. 

Finding the right contact people at websites in Postaga

Here, you have options for Basic Configuration and Advanced Configuration.

First, let’s review Basic Configuration.

Postaga will automatically try and find the best fit contact for each website.

As an example, for a blog post, that will usually mean the author of that post. Otherwise, Postaga will look for its determination of the next best-fit contact.

You can review each website and contact by clicking the "1 link" button, on a specific contact, which will then show you the target contact for that website.

The First Name, Last Name, and Site/Company fields are all editable.

Contact finding in Postaga links section

If you would like to search for a different contact, Postaga can help there too.

If you see a + symbol next to the website, you can click it, and you will get results of other contacts at the website that you can choose from. Then, if you click the Use Contact button, you can select that contact.

finding contacts in Postaga

Next, there’s Advanced Configuration.

In Advanced Configuration, you are presented with every merge field for the website, including custom merge fields. You can fill these boxes if you want, or do that later.

link advanced configuration in postaga campaign creation

Once you are satisfied, click the Get Contacts button.

Now, you will see the contacts.

Postaga campaign outreach contacts

On the left side of the screen, next to each contact, is a checkbox. With the box selected, that individual contact will be added to your email sequence.

Though you will see email addresses for each contact, some information may not be available, such as name, company, position, social media handles, or any custom contact merge fields.

If you would like, you can supplement that information and add that to contacts by filling it in the appropriate text boxes.

Also, you can edit existing contact information text boxes. As an example, if the Company Name returned is Acme Company, Inc., but you want to just refer to the company in merge tags as Acme, you can edit that field as needed.

Next to each email address found is a numerical contact score. This indicated how confident we are that the email address is accurate. If the contact score shows as red, you can click the score to bring up a validator and try to validate the email through Mailgun.

To the right of each contact are icons for Twitter, Linkedin, the original link, and a few other key pages at that contact’s website.

If a Twitter handle is provided , clicking the Twitter icon will load up a default tweet, presuming you are already logged into Twitter. Otherwise, it will perform a Google search for the Twitter handle of the contact.

If a LinkedIn url is found clicking the LinkedIn icon will load the contact’s LinkedIn profile. Connecting with a contact on LinkedIn before emailing can be a great way to increase response rates. If a LinkedIn url is not provided, clicking the icon will perform a Google search for the contact’s LinkedIn profile.

Clicking the link icon will take you to the original link.

You can also toggle between Basic Configuration and Advanced Configuration to make edits to all available merge fields.

Once you are satisfied with the outreach contacts, you can move onto editing the email sequence.

Email Sequence

Next, you will choose an email sequence for your contacts. 

Postaga campaign email sequence

Email sequences available to you will include any sequences that you created and assigned to this particular campaign type, sequences assigned to “any” campaign, as well as template sequences created by Postaga.

Once you select a sequence from the drop-down menu, you will see the sequence laid out on the screen.  

If you are not happy with the sequence, you can always modify the sequence by going to Sequences in another window by clicking the edit button to the right of the selected sequence. Then, you can edit the sequence, save it, and then reload the sequence section in you campaign by clicking the Load Sequence Changes box below the sequence.

Related Help Doc: Sequences

Email Preview

Next, you will see an email preview section with the email templates of the sequence you selected.

Postaga campaign email preview

On the left side of the page are the list of emails as well as contacts who will receive each email. If you click on a specific contact as well as a specific email, you will see that email as it will send to that specific contact in the preview pane on the right side of the page.

If there are merge fields used in your email template, they will fill with the supplied information in the preview pane.

However, you may also see merge tags in red. If you see red merge tags, it means that Postaga does not have data for these merge fields. You can always go back and provide that information to see how the revised email will look with the new information.

postaga campaign email preview red merge field

Alternatively, you can edit the email by clicking the edit icon to the right of the email, then clicking the Load Email Changes button to see how the revised email will look. Any changes here will affect the template, and therefore, every message using that email template.

It should be noted that red merge tags do not show up in outreach emails. If there are any red merge tags when you send out your campaign, they will disappear from the outreach email and your contact will not see anything where the merge tags would have been.

You can overwrite individual emails in this section as well. To do so, just hover over the email, and you will see the screen darken and an edit icon appear. This will let you edit an individual email in the sequence, related to the contact that is highlighted in the left side of the screen.

Once you click the edit button, a modal window will pop up, allowing you to edit that unique email.

email overwrite in postaga campaign

One cool feature to note here is that you can insert unique snippets to your personalized email. For example, let's say you want to mention something specific on your contact's website that you appreciated. Postaga's AI pulls mention-worthy snippets from your contact's post or URL, so you can paste it in your message. 

email snippets in postaga

Once you are happy with the edits you have made, click the Save Email Overwrite to save the individual email, or Close to undo any changes.

To send a test email, click the Test Email button below the email in the preview pane. Then, enter the email address for the test and click send.

Rules and Scheduling

Next, you will set the rules and schedule for your email.

Postaga campaign scheduling and rules

The Schedule button has a checkbox option. If you select it, you will be able to schedule your sequence to run at a given day and time. If not selected, the sequence will run as soon as you click the Launch button at the end of this campaign screen.

If you select a schedule, click the text box under Start Date to select a start date and time.

Below the schedule button is a Testing Mode button. If selected, the email sequence will send all the emails to your test email address, but not your actual target recipients. This is generally used for situations where you want to confirm what emails people will receive, though you can also do this in the Email Preview section.

There is also a Send on Weekends option that you can select. If it is not selected, your email sequences will only send on Monday through Friday; any emails that would have been scheduled to send on a weekend day will send on the first following weekday (e.g. if scheduled for a Saturday or Sunday but “Send on Weekends” is not selected, it will send on Monday).

There is also a rule for Stop on Reply. If selected, the sequence will stop for a specific recipient if they reply to any of your emails. For example, if I have an email sequence with 5 emails, and a recipient responds to my 2nd email in the sequence, the sequence will stop for them and they will not receive emails 3, 4, or 5.

Track Opens lets you know if your email opens are being tracked. If you have configured your Postaga account fully, this should say “Opens are automatically tracked.”

Schedule and Launch

With your campaign created, it’s time to launch your campaign.

Postaga campaing launch

Roundup Outreach Case Study

We previously ran a test of different linkbuilding strategies, including Roundup Outreach.

With our Roundup Outreach, we created a piece of content and then promoted it to 6 contacts. Of those 6 contacts, 4 responded. 

2 of the 4 said we weren’t the right fit (but 1 did have another project that we were a good fit for). 

The other 2 ended up adding our content to their Link Roundup!

So, for those of you playing at home, that’s a 33% overall success rate!

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