For SEO professionals, agency teams, and marketers — a comprehensive checklist covering every critical step from campaign planning to post-placement tracking.
Introduction
You know link building drives rankings. You have read the tactics. But when you sit down to launch a campaign, you stare at a blank spreadsheet wondering what to do first and which steps you are forgetting.
Most link building failures come from skipped steps, not wrong tactics. You forget to check anchor distribution before booking 20 placements with the same exact-match anchor. You skip publisher vetting and end up with toxic backlinks requiring disavow files. You launch outreach without target page selection and waste effort on low-value placements.
This checklist eliminates guesswork. Every critical step is documented from pre-campaign strategy through post-placement tracking. Use it before launching new campaigns to catch gaps. Use it monthly to audit ongoing work. Use it to evaluate whether link building services you hire are following best practices.
The checklist is organised into eight phases: Strategic Foundation, Target Identification, Publisher Prospecting, Outreach Execution, Content Creation, Placement Tracking, Performance Analysis, and Ongoing Optimisation. Each phase has mandatory items that cannot be skipped and optional items that improve results. Platforms like Vefogix automate several checklist items, but understanding the complete workflow ensures you know which steps are critical versus nice-to-have.
Phase 1: Strategic Foundation (Pre-Campaign Setup)
Complete these items before prospecting your first publisher or sending your first pitch. Skipping foundation steps creates cascading problems that derail campaigns in month two.
☐ Define campaign objectives and KPIs
Why it matters: Vague goals like “build more links” produce unfocused campaigns. Specific targets enable measurement and optimisation.
How to complete:
- Set numeric placement target (e.g., 15 backlinks monthly)
- Define DA range target (e.g., average DA 45+)
- Set budget ceiling (e.g., maximum $2,500 monthly)
- Choose primary KPI (rankings, organic traffic, or referring domains)
- Set timeline for first results review (usually 90 days)
Output: One-page campaign brief documenting objectives, targets, budget, and timeline.
☐ Audit current backlink profile
Why it matters: You cannot measure progress without knowing your starting point. Audits also reveal toxic links needing disavow.
How to complete:
- Export backlinks from Ahrefs or Google Search Console
- Note current referring domain count
- Calculate current DA distribution (how many DA 20-30, 30-40, etc.)
- Document current anchor text distribution
- Flag toxic links from spam sites for potential disavow
Output: Baseline metrics spreadsheet showing current state of your link profile.
☐ Map site architecture and target pages
Why it matters: Random link building to random pages wastes authority. Strategic targeting concentrates authority where it drives revenue.
How to complete:
- List your top 10 revenue-driving pages (product pages, service pages, high-converting guides)
- Identify 5 pillar content pieces needing authority
- Note current backlink count per target page
- Prioritise pages by revenue impact and current ranking gaps
Output: Target page priority list with current backlink counts and business value scores.
☐ Research competitor link profiles
Why it matters: Competitors reveal proven link sources in your niche. Sites that linked to three competitors will likely link to you.
How to complete:
- Identify your top 3 organic search competitors
- Export their referring domains using Ahrefs
- Filter for DA 30+, traffic 5,000+, published within 12 months
- Note which publishers appear in multiple competitor profiles
- Save this list as your prospecting foundation
Output: Spreadsheet with 100-200 proven publisher targets extracted from competitor analysis.
☐ Define anchor text strategy
Why it matters: Unplanned anchor text leads to over-optimisation penalties or wasted natural distribution opportunities.
How to complete:
- Set distribution targets: 20-30% exact-match, 30-40% branded, 30-40% partial/generic
- List your exact-match target keywords (5-10 variations)
- Document branded anchor variations (company name, domain, branded phrases)
- Create partial-match and generic anchor bank (20+ options)
- Plan which anchors go to which target pages
Output: Anchor text strategy document with distribution targets and keyword-to-page mapping.
☐ Set monthly budget and resource allocation
Why it matters: Underfunded campaigns stall. Overfunded campaigns without execution capacity waste money.
How to complete:
- Allocate budget across tactics (40% marketplace, 30% outreach, 20% content, 10% tools)
- Reserve 20% buffer for unexpected opportunities
- Calculate expected placements per budget tier
- Assign team time commitments (prospecting, writing, tracking)
- Set spending limits per placement category
Output: Budget allocation spreadsheet showing spending by tactic and expected placement volume.
☐ Select and configure essential tools
Why it matters: Missing tools create workflow gaps. Wrong tools waste budget on features you do not need.
How to complete:
- Choose backlink analysis tool (Ahrefs or Semrush)
- Set up Google Search Console if not already active
- Select email finder tool (Hunter.io or Snov.io)
- Choose outreach tool (Pitchbox, Lemlist, or manual via Gmail)
- Create tracking spreadsheet template or select project management tool
- Join verified marketplace (Vefogix) for simplified publisher access
Output: Configured tool stack with active accounts and templates ready for use.
Phase 2: Target Identification and Prioritisation
These items ensure you build links to pages that actually drive business results, not just pages that are easy to promote.
☐ Identify money pages requiring immediate attention
Why it matters: Money pages (pages driving revenue or high-value conversions) deserve link building priority.
How to complete:
- Review Google Analytics for top revenue-driving pages
- Note pages with high traffic but low conversion (authority gap likely)
- Identify pages ranking positions 5-15 (easiest to move with links)
- Flag new product/service pages needing initial authority
- Score each page by revenue potential × ranking improvement probability
Output: Prioritised list of 5-10 money pages ranked by expected ROI from link building.
☐ Map keyword targets to specific pages
Why it matters: Generic link building to generic pages produces generic results. Keyword-page mapping focuses authority.
How to complete:
- For each target page, list 3-5 primary keywords
- Document current ranking position per keyword
- Note monthly search volume per keyword
- Calculate ranking gap (positions needed to reach page 1)
- Prioritise keywords by volume × ranking gap
Output: Keyword-to-page mapping showing which keywords each page should rank for.
☐ Assess current topical authority gaps
Why it matters: Pages on topics where you lack topical authority require more links and better publisher relevance.
How to complete:
- Run Ahrefs Content Explorer searches for your target topics
- Note which competitors rank and their referring domain counts
- Calculate authority gap (their links minus your links)
- Identify topics where you have content but weak authority
- Flag topics requiring topical cluster link building
Output: Topical authority gap analysis showing which topics need concentrated link building.
☐ Determine target DA range per page
Why it matters: Not all pages need DA 60+ links. Matching DA targets to page priority optimises budget.
How to complete:
- Tier 1 pages (highest revenue): Target DA 50+ average
- Tier 2 pages (supporting content): Target DA 40-50 average
- Tier 3 pages (foundational content): Target DA 30-40 acceptable
- Set minimum DA floor of 30 for all campaigns
- Reserve budget tiers accordingly
Output: DA target ranges mapped to page tiers, guiding publisher selection decisions.
Phase 3: Publisher Prospecting and Vetting
Prospecting quality determines campaign ceiling. Great outreach to terrible publishers fails. Mediocre outreach to great publishers succeeds.
☐ Build initial prospect list from competitor analysis
Why it matters: Competitor backlinks are proven targets. Start here before cold prospecting.
How to complete:
- Import competitor referring domains from Phase 1
- Remove duplicates and already-linking publishers
- Add 50-100 prospects to master prospecting spreadsheet
- Note source competitor for each prospect
Output: Initial prospect list of 50-100 publishers verified to link to competitors.
☐ Expand prospect list with marketplace filtering
Why it matters: Marketplaces provide pre-vetted publishers, eliminating manual vetting work.
How to complete:
- Filter link building services marketplace by your niche
- Set DA minimum (typically 30 or 40)
- Filter by traffic threshold (5,000+ monthly visitors)
- Filter by pricing within budget
- Bookmark 30-50 marketplace publishers
- Export details to prospecting spreadsheet
Output: Expanded prospect list now containing 80-150 total publishers.
☐ Supplement with manual Google prospecting
Why it matters: Marketplace and competitor analysis miss some publishers. Manual searches catch them.
How to complete:
- Search Google for “[your niche] blog,” “[topic] write for us,” “[industry] guest post”
- Visit top 20 results per search
- Qualify based on content quality, update frequency, and contact availability
- Add qualified publishers to master list
- Target 20-30 additional prospects via manual searches
Output: Comprehensive prospect list now at 100-180 publishers across all sources.
☐ Verify traffic for each prospect
Why it matters: Publishers inflating traffic numbers deliver zero value. Verification prevents wasted spend.
How to complete:
- Use Ahrefs Site Explorer or SimilarWeb to check organic traffic
- Flag publishers claiming 50K+ traffic but showing 500 in tools
- Remove obvious traffic fraud (100K+ claimed, zero keywords ranking)
- Accept 30% variance (tools are estimates, exact matches unrealistic)
- Keep verified prospects, remove suspected fraud
Output: Vetted prospect list with confirmed traffic estimates per publisher.
☐ Review publisher content quality
Why it matters: Links from thin, low-quality content pass minimal authority and hurt brand association.
How to complete:
- Visit each publisher and read 3-5 recent articles
- Check for: proper grammar, substantive content (800+ words), clear structure, real authorship
- Flag publishers with obvious thin content, keyword stuffing, or auto-generated articles
- Remove publishers where every post is promotional guest content
- Keep only publishers maintaining editorial standards
Output: Quality-filtered prospect list excluding low-content sites.
☐ Check publisher spam scores and penalties
Why it matters: Links from penalised sites harm your profile instead of helping.
How to complete:
- Use Ahrefs or Moz to check spam score for each publisher
- Remove publishers with spam score above 5%
- Check for sudden traffic drops in past 12 months (penalty signals)
- Google “site:publisherdomain.com” to confirm indexed pages exist
- Remove publishers with zero indexed pages or clear penalty patterns
Output: Penalty-filtered prospect list excluding risky publishers.
☐ Assess topical relevance and audience alignment
Why it matters: Links from irrelevant sites pass less authority and signal manipulation to algorithms.
How to complete:
- Score each publisher 1-10 for niche relevance
- Remove publishers scoring below 5
- Prioritise publishers scoring 8-10 for highest-value outreach
- Check publisher audience matches your customer profile
- Flag cross-industry publishers for secondary priority
Output: Relevance-scored prospect list prioritising highly relevant publishers.
☐ Categorise prospects by outreach method
Why it matters: Different publishers require different approaches. Categorising focuses execution.
How to complete:
- Category A: Marketplace publishers — Book directly, no outreach required
- Category B: Accept guest posts — Clear submission guidelines, standard pitch
- Category C: Relationship required — No formal programme, requires warm intro
- Category D: Paid only — Accept sponsored posts, pricing inquiry needed
- Assign category to each publisher
Output: Categorised prospect list enabling tactic-specific workflows.
Phase 4: Outreach Execution and Publisher Engagement
Outreach converts prospects to placements. Poor execution here wastes all prospecting work.
☐ Craft pitch templates for each publisher category
Why it matters: Generic pitches get ignored. Category-specific templates increase response rates.
How to complete:
- Template A: Marketplace booking message (brief, confirms details)
- Template B: Guest post pitch (150 words, includes 3 topic ideas)
- Template C: Relationship intro (value-first, no immediate ask)
- Template D: Paid placement inquiry (budget range, desired specs)
- Save templates for reuse with personalisation placeholders
Output: Four pitch templates ready for customisation per target.
☐ Personalise outreach for top-priority publishers
Why it matters: Top publishers get 100+ pitches weekly. Personalisation cuts through noise.
How to complete:
- For top 20 prospects, research recent articles, social posts, or company news
- Reference specific content in pitch opening
- Tailor article ideas to their recent topic coverage
- Use recipient’s name (not “Dear Editor”)
- Mention mutual connections if they exist
Output: 20 highly personalised pitches for highest-value targets.
☐ Send initial outreach batch (20-30 pitches)
Why it matters: Batch sending enables response rate testing before scaling.
How to complete:
- Send 20-30 pitches from Category B (guest post prospects)
- Use personalisation template
- Track send date, recipient, and topic pitched
- Wait 5 business days before follow-up
- Analyse responses to refine templates
Output: 20-30 initial pitches sent, tracked in outreach spreadsheet.
☐ Book marketplace placements for immediate wins
Why it matters: Marketplace placements deliver fast results while outreach responses trickle in.
How to complete:
- Select 5-10 publishers from Category A (marketplace)
- Book placements using varied anchor texts
- Target different pages across bookings
- Schedule content submissions over 2-3 weeks
- Track booking confirmations
Output: 5-10 marketplace placements confirmed, content deadlines scheduled.
☐ Follow up on non-responsive pitches
Why it matters: Most acceptances come from follow-ups, not initial pitches.
How to complete:
- After 5 business days, send brief follow-up to non-responders
- Reference original pitch date and topic
- Ask if timing better later or if topic misses their needs
- Send maximum two follow-ups per prospect
- Track follow-up dates to avoid over-following
Output: Follow-up emails sent to initial batch non-responders.
☐ Respond to acceptances within 24 hours
Why it matters: Fast response signals professionalism and secures placements before they change mind.
How to complete:
- Confirm article topic, word count, deadline, and link policy
- Ask about dofollow vs nofollow policy
- Request content guidelines or examples
- Clarify anchor text flexibility
- Add accepted placement to content calendar
Output: All acceptances confirmed with clear submission requirements.
☐ Handle rejections gracefully
Why it matters: Today’s rejection might be next quarter’s acceptance if you maintain relationships.
How to complete:
- Thank them for considering
- Ask if they would be open to pitches in the future
- Request feedback on why pitch did not fit
- Note feedback for template improvements
- Flag for potential re-pitch in 6 months
Output: Rejection responses sent, feedback documented, prospects flagged for future contact.
Phase 5: Content Creation and Submission
Content quality determines whether placements get approved, pass authority, and drive brand value.
☐ Create content briefs for each placement
Why it matters: Briefs ensure content meets publisher requirements and your strategic goals.
How to complete:
- Document: target keyword, target URL, anchor text, word count requirement
- Note publisher’s content style (data-driven vs opinion, formal vs casual)
- List 3-5 key points to cover
- Include competitor article examples
- Specify link placement guidelines (intro, body, conclusion)
Output: Content brief document per placement guiding writers.
☐ Write or commission high-quality content
Why it matters: Thin content gets rejected. Quality content gets approved, promoted, and cited.
How to complete:
- Target 1,200-1,500 words minimum unless publisher specifies otherwise
- Include subheadings every 200-300 words
- Write in active voice, short sentences, clear paragraphs
- Provide genuine value — teach something useful
- Include 1-2 contextual links using planned anchor texts
- If outsourcing, use writers charging $0.10-0.15 per word minimum
Output: Completed articles ready for editorial review and submission.
☐ Edit for quality and brand consistency
Why it matters: Sloppy content damages brand reputation even when it earns backlinks.
How to complete:
- Run spell-check and grammar review
- Verify all facts and statistics cited
- Ensure tone matches publisher’s style
- Check links point to correct URLs
- Remove excessive self-promotion
- Read aloud to catch awkward phrasing
Output: Edited articles meeting publication quality standards.
☐ Format per publisher specifications
Why it matters: Publishers reject content not matching their format requirements.
How to complete:
- Follow heading structure (H2/H3 usage as specified)
- Apply requested formatting (bold, italics, lists)
- Include images if required (with proper attribution)
- Add author bio in requested format
- Submit in requested format (Google Docs, WordPress, email)
Output: Formatted articles ready for submission per publisher specifications.
☐ Submit content and track submission dates
Why it matters: Tracking prevents lost placements and enables follow-up on delays.
How to complete:
- Submit via publisher’s preferred method
- Save submission confirmation email
- Log submission date in tracking spreadsheet
- Set calendar reminder for publication check (2 weeks out)
- Note expected publication timeline
Output: All content submitted, dates tracked, reminders set.
☐ Handle revision requests promptly
Why it matters: Slow revision response delays publication and risks losing placement.
How to complete:
- Respond to editorial feedback within 24 hours
- Make requested changes exactly as specified
- Submit revisions with change summary
- Thank editor for feedback
- Update tracking with revision status
Output: Revisions completed and resubmitted within 48 hours of request.
Phase 6: Placement Tracking and Verification
Tracking ensures placements go live correctly and stay live long-term.
☐ Monitor for publication notifications
Why it matters: Some publishers notify, others do not. Active monitoring catches both.
How to complete:
- Check email daily for publication confirmations
- Set Google Alerts for your brand + publisher domain
- Manually check publisher sites weekly for pending placements
- Use Ahrefs New Backlinks report (updates weekly)
- Log publication dates as they occur
Output: Publication dates logged for all live placements.
☐ Verify links are live and functional
Why it matters: Publishers make mistakes — wrong URL, broken link, missing link entirely.
How to complete:
- Visit published article and locate your link
- Click link to verify it points to correct target page
- Check link opens in same tab or new tab (preference varies)
- Verify anchor text matches what was approved
- Screenshot link for records
Output: All live links verified functional with screenshots saved.
☐ Confirm dofollow vs nofollow status
Why it matters: Nofollow links pass zero authority. Catching mismatches early enables correction.
How to complete:
- Right-click link and “Inspect Element”
- Check for rel=”nofollow” attribute in HTML
- If nofollow but agreement was dofollow, contact publisher
- Accept nofollow if publisher policy requires it
- Note actual status in tracking (planned vs actual)
Output: Link attribute status verified and documented per placement.
☐ Check indexing status in Google
Why it matters: Unindexed links pass zero authority. Indexing confirmation ensures value delivery.
How to complete:
- Wait 2 weeks after publication
- Search “site:publisherdomain.com/article-url” in Google
- If not indexed, submit URL manually via Google Search Console
- Check again after 1 week
- If still not indexed after 30 days, contact publisher
Output: Indexing status tracked, non-indexed URLs flagged for action.
☐ Update anchor text distribution tracking
Why it matters: Maintaining natural distribution prevents over-optimisation penalties.
How to complete:
- Log actual anchor text used (may differ from planned)
- Categorise: exact-match, branded, partial-match, generic
- Calculate current distribution percentages
- Compare to target distribution (20-30% exact, 30-40% branded, etc.)
- Adjust future placements if distribution skews
Output: Updated anchor distribution report showing current vs target percentages.
☐ Add live URLs to central tracking system
Why it matters: Centralised tracking enables performance analysis and link loss monitoring.
How to complete:
- Update master tracking spreadsheet with: live URL, publication date, publisher DA, anchor text, target page
- Tag by tactic (marketplace, guest post, etc.)
- Note placement cost if applicable
- Add to Google Search Console for monitoring
- Export monthly for reports
Output: Centralised tracking system current with all live placements.
☐ Monitor links for removal or changes
Why it matters: Links disappear. Monthly monitoring catches losses before they compound.
How to complete:
- Check all live links monthly (manually or via monitoring tool)
- Use Ahrefs Lost Backlinks report
- Note any 404 errors, removed content, or nofollowed links
- Contact publishers immediately if high-value links disappear
- Replace lost links within 30 days
Output: Monthly link health report showing any lost or changed placements.
Phase 7: Performance Analysis and Reporting
Analysis converts raw placement data into actionable insights for optimisation.
☐ Track keyword ranking changes weekly
Why it matters: Rankings show whether links drive actual SEO improvement.
How to complete:
- Use Ahrefs Rank Tracker or Google Search Console
- Monitor target keywords for all linked pages
- Note ranking changes (up or down)
- Correlate changes with recent placements
- Flag keywords with no movement despite 5+ links
Output: Weekly ranking report showing movement per keyword and linked page.
☐ Monitor organic traffic trends monthly
Why it matters: Rankings mean nothing if traffic does not increase.
How to complete:
- Review Google Analytics organic search traffic
- Segment by landing page (see which linked pages gained traffic)
- Compare month-over-month growth
- Correlate traffic spikes with link acquisition dates
- Calculate traffic value (sessions × avg conversion rate × avg order value)
Output: Monthly traffic report showing organic growth and revenue impact.
☐ Analyse conversion rates from linked pages
Why it matters: Traffic without conversions wastes link building investment.
How to complete:
- Track conversion rate per linked landing page
- Compare to site average
- Note if linked pages have below-average conversion
- Flag pages needing on-page optimisation
- Calculate actual revenue attributed to link building
Output: Conversion analysis showing which linked pages drive revenue.
☐ Calculate cost per acquired backlink
Why it matters: Cost efficiency determines whether to scale, maintain, or cut campaigns.
How to complete:
- Sum total spend (placements + tools + content + time)
- Count total live backlinks acquired
- Divide total spend by backlink count
- Compare to industry benchmarks ($150-300 per link typical)
- Break down by tactic to identify most cost-efficient methods
Output: Cost-per-link analysis by tactic showing efficiency.
☐ Assess publisher performance
Why it matters: Not all publishers deliver equal value. Identifying top performers focuses budget.
How to complete:
- For each publisher, track: ranking impact, traffic referred, link durability
- Calculate value score per publisher
- Create “preferred publisher” list of top 20% performers
- Flag underperformers (low DA despite claims, zero traffic referral, quick link removal)
- Prioritise repeat placements with top performers
Output: Publisher performance scorecard ranking all sources.
☐ Review anchor text distribution health
Why it matters: Maintaining natural distribution prevents penalties.
How to complete:
- Export all current backlinks
- Categorise anchors and calculate percentages
- Compare to target: 20-30% exact, 30-40% branded, 30-40% partial/generic
- Flag if exact-match exceeds 40% (penalty risk)
- Adjust future anchor strategy to rebalance
Output: Anchor health report with rebalancing recommendations.
☐ Generate monthly campaign report
Why it matters: Stakeholders need proof of progress and ROI.
How to complete:
- Summarise placements: count, average DA, total cost
- Show ranking changes for priority keywords
- Report traffic and revenue impact
- Highlight wins (top-performing placements, major ranking jumps)
- Note challenges and plan for next month
- Include 3-month trend line showing progress
Output: Monthly report suitable for stakeholder presentation.
Phase 8: Ongoing Optimisation and Scaling
Optimisation compounds results by systematically improving what works and cutting what does not.
☐ Identify top-performing tactics and double down
Why it matters: Resources are finite. Concentration on winners maximises ROI.
How to complete:
- Analyse which tactics drove the most ranking improvement
- Calculate ROI per tactic (cost vs traffic/revenue generated)
- Increase budget allocation to top two tactics
- Reduce or eliminate bottom performers
- Document why top tactics work for replication
Output: Resource reallocation plan prioritising top-performing tactics.
☐ Refine target page selection based on results
Why it matters: Some pages respond better to links than others. Concentration optimises effort.
How to complete:
- Note which pages showed ranking improvement
- Identify pages with no movement despite 5+ links
- Shift link building away from non-responders
- Concentrate on pages proven responsive
- Investigate why non-responders did not move (on-page issues?)
Output: Updated target page priority list based on observed responsiveness.
☐ Optimise outreach templates based on response data
Why it matters: Small template improvements compound across 100+ pitches.
How to complete:
- Calculate acceptance rate per template variation
- Note which subject lines generated highest open rates
- Test different pitch structures (problem-first vs value-first)
- Refine based on what converted best
- Create new A/B test for next batch
Output: Improved pitch templates with documented performance data.
☐ Build preferred publisher relationships for repeat placements
Why it matters: Repeat placements from known-good publishers reduce risk and increase efficiency.
How to complete:
- Identify publishers who delivered strong results
- Reach out quarterly with new content offers
- Negotiate bulk pricing for multiple placements
- Become preferred contributor through consistent quality
- Build pipeline of 10-15 relationship publishers
Output: Relationship pipeline delivering 30-40% of monthly volume via trusted sources.
☐ Automate repetitive workflows
Why it matters: Automation frees time for high-value activities like relationship building.
How to complete:
- Automate: competitor backlink monitoring, link health checks, ranking tracking
- Use Zapier or similar for notification workflows
- Template everything repeatable
- Build email sequences for follow-ups
- Create one-click reports pulling live data
Output: Automated workflows reducing manual work by 30-50%.
☐ Test new link building tactics quarterly
Why it matters: Algorithms evolve. New tactics emerge. Testing prevents stagnation.
How to complete:
- Select one new tactic per quarter
- Allocate 10-20% of budget to testing
- Run controlled test (new tactic vs baseline)
- Measure results after 90 days
- Scale winners, cut losers
Output: Quarterly innovation pipeline ensuring continuous improvement.
☐ Conduct quarterly competitive analysis
Why it matters: Competitors do not stand still. Quarterly checks prevent surprise ranking losses.
How to complete:
- Re-export competitor backlink profiles
- Note new high-value links they acquired
- Identify any displacement (they removed you from roundups, resources)
- Launch competitive response campaigns targeting their new sources
- Update your own defensive strategies
Output: Competitive intelligence report with response action items.
☐ Audit and disavow toxic backlinks
Why it matters: Accumulated spam links drag rankings down despite quality building efforts.
How to complete:
- Run Ahrefs backlink audit quarterly
- Flag links with spam score above 5%
- Review flagged links manually (some false positives)
- Export toxic links to disavow file
- Submit disavow via Google Search Console
- Document disavow action and date
Output: Clean backlink profile with toxic links disavowed.
Checklist Usage: Monthly, Quarterly, and Campaign-Launch Workflows
Different scenarios require different checklist subsets.
New campaign launch (use full checklist)
Complete all Phase 1 (Strategic Foundation) and Phase 2 (Target Identification) items before any execution. Skip nothing. These phases prevent costly strategic errors.
Monthly execution (abbreviated checklist)
- Phase 3: Prospect 20-30 new publishers monthly
- Phase 4: Send 30-50 outreach emails, book 5-10 marketplace placements
- Phase 5: Submit 10-15 articles
- Phase 6: Verify 10-15 new live links
- Phase 7: Run monthly performance analysis
- Phase 8: Implement 1-2 optimisation actions
Quarterly review (strategic checklist)
- Phase 1: Review and update campaign objectives
- Phase 2: Refresh target page priorities
- Phase 7: Comprehensive performance analysis
- Phase 8: Competitive analysis, tactic testing, major optimisations
Agency audit (quality control checklist)
Use entire checklist to audit whether professional link building services are following best practices. Any Phase 1-3 items skipped signal quality issues.
Common Checklist Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Five mistakes turn checklists into busywork instead of quality control.
Mistake 1: Checking boxes without doing the work
The problem: Marking items complete without actually verifying details or following through.
How to avoid: Require outputs for each item. “Verify traffic” requires logged traffic numbers, not just a checkmark.
Mistake 2: Skipping Phase 1 foundation items
The problem: Jumping straight to outreach without strategy, targets, or anchor planning.
How to avoid: Lock Phase 1 and Phase 2 as prerequisites. No execution without completed foundation.
Mistake 3: Never revisiting or updating the checklist
The problem: Following outdated workflows because checklist never evolves with learnings.
How to avoid: Schedule quarterly checklist reviews. Add items from recent failures. Remove items that proved unnecessary.
Mistake 4: Using the checklist once then forgetting it
The problem: Perfect campaign launch followed by chaotic month-two execution.
How to avoid: Make monthly abbreviated checklist part of campaign rhythm. Assign checklist review to specific team member.
Mistake 5: Creating checklist paralysis
The problem: Spending so much time checking boxes that execution stalls.
How to avoid: Distinguish must-have items (marked ☐) from nice-to-have. Must-haves are non-negotiable. Nice-to-haves are conditional.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to complete every checklist item?
Phase 1 (Strategic Foundation) and Phase 2 (Target Identification) are mandatory — skipping these causes cascading failures. Later phases allow flexibility based on your tactics and resources.
How long does it take to complete the full checklist?
First-time full completion: 20-30 hours spread over 2-3 weeks. Subsequent monthly execution: 10-15 hours. Quarterly reviews: 5-7 hours.
Can I automate checklist tracking?
Yes. Use project management tools like Asana, ClickUp, or Airtable with recurring tasks. Vefogix automates several Phase 3 and Phase 6 items by providing pre-vetted publishers and placement tracking.
How often should I review the checklist?
Monthly for execution items (Phases 4-7). Quarterly for strategic items (Phases 1-2 and Phase 8 optimisation).
What if link building services I hire skip checklist items?
Missing Phase 1-3 items signal quality issues. Missing Phase 6-7 items signal poor tracking. Request they complete all items or switch providers.
Should beginners use the full checklist?
Beginners should focus on Phase 1, Phase 2, and simplified versions of Phases 4-6. Skip advanced items in Phase 8 until you have built 50+ backlinks.
How do I know which items are most important?
Phase 1 (foundation) prevents strategic errors. Phase 6 (tracking) prevents lost value. Phase 7 (analysis) enables improvement. If time is limited, prioritise these three.
Does Vefogix eliminate any checklist items?
Vefogix simplifies Phase 3 (publisher prospecting and vetting) by providing pre-verified publishers. It also automates parts of Phase 6 (placement tracking). Other phases remain necessary.
Conclusion
This checklist covers every critical step from campaign planning through ongoing optimisation. Skipping foundation items creates strategic gaps that waste months of execution effort. Skipping tracking items means you cannot measure results or identify what works.
The difference between campaigns that scale and campaigns that stall is systematic checklist discipline. Amateur teams skip vetting and build toxic backlinks. Professionals complete Phase 3 thoroughly and build penalty-proof profiles. Amateur teams ignore tracking and cannot explain why rankings did not move. Professionals complete Phase 6 and Phase 7 religiously and optimise based on data.
Use this checklist three ways: audit new campaigns before launch, guide monthly execution, and evaluate whether link building services you hire follow best practices. Teams that turn this into operational discipline consistently outperform teams relying on intuition.
Print this checklist. Use it before your next campaign. Mark items complete only when outputs exist, not when you think you did the work. Review quarterly and update based on learnings. Systematic execution compounds into sustainable competitive advantages that shortcuts never build.
If you want a platform that automates several checklist items — publisher vetting, traffic verification, placement tracking — Vefogix handles Phase 3 and Phase 6 infrastructure. Focus your checklist discipline on strategy, content, and analysis while the platform manages publisher quality and tracking logistics. Buy link building services that respect the checklist instead of cutting corners.
Ready to Execute Link Building With Systematic Discipline?
Access pre-vetted publishers eliminating Phase 3 prospecting work. Automated tracking handling Phase 6 verification. Focus your checklist discipline on strategy and optimisation.
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