Pre-Writing Analysis
1. What most Nashville businesses get wrong: The assumption that broken link building doesn’t work for local businesses. Nashville businesses think this tactic is only for large sites or tech companies. But Nashville-specific resource pages, Chamber sites, and local blogs all have broken links. Finding and offering replacements creates link opportunities competitors miss.
2. The underlying mechanism: Broken links hurt user experience. Site owners want to fix them but often don’t know they exist. Alerting them to broken links provides value; suggesting your content as replacement solves their problem. The link is earned through genuine helpfulness, not manipulation.
3. The differentiating Nashville angle: Nashville’s web ecosystem has broken links like any other. Businesses close, sites shut down, pages move. Resource pages listing Nashville businesses accumulate broken links over time. Nashville-focused broken link building targets these local opportunities.
Broken link building is helpful spam: you’re helping site owners fix a problem while suggesting your content as a solution. Done well, it’s a win-win. Done poorly, it’s annoying outreach that gets ignored. The Nashville approach focuses on local opportunities where you can provide genuine replacement value.
Finding Broken Links
Identifying broken link opportunities:
Method 1: Check competitor backlinks
- Pull competitor backlinks in Ahrefs or SEMrush
- Filter for broken inbound links (404 responses)
- Visit pages that had been linking
- If page still exists and is relevant, opportunity exists
The linking page wanted to link to content like your competitor’s. Your content might fill the gap.
Method 2: Check Nashville resource pages
- Find Nashville resource pages in your industry
- Use browser extension to check for broken links
- Identify broken links that your content could replace
Tools:
- Check My Links (Chrome extension)
- Broken Link Checker (browser extension)
- Screaming Frog (for larger analysis)
Method 3: Check relevant sites for broken outbound links
- Identify sites you’d like links from
- Crawl or manually check for broken outbound links
- Find broken links where you have relevant content
- Reach out with replacement suggestion
Method 4: Nashville-specific searches
Search for likely broken link pages:
- “Nashville” + “resources” + [your industry]
- “Nashville” + “useful links”
- “Nashville” + “recommended sites”
Then check those pages for broken links.
Common broken link sources in Nashville:
- Closed Nashville businesses
- Moved Nashville websites
- Outdated Nashville directories
- Old Chamber member pages
- Inactive Nashville blogs
- Changed URL structures
Outreach Process
Broken link outreach approach:
Step 1: Verify the broken link
Before outreach, confirm:
- Link is actually broken (not temporary issue)
- Page still gets traffic (worth the owner fixing)
- Your content is genuinely relevant replacement
Step 2: Find the right contact
- Website contact page
- About page for names
- LinkedIn for specific contacts
- Whois lookup (sometimes)
- Social media profiles
Generic “webmaster@” emails have low response rates.
Specific names have higher response rates.
Step 3: Craft the outreach email
Subject: Broken link on your [page name] page
“Hi [Name],
I was reading your Nashville [topic] resources page and noticed that the link to [broken resource name] appears to be broken.
Just wanted to let you know in case you’d like to update it.
If you’re looking for a replacement, I recently published [Your Resource Title] which covers [brief relevant description]. Might be a useful alternative for your readers.
Either way, thanks for maintaining such a helpful resource!
Best,
[Name]”
Key elements:
- Lead with the problem (broken link)
- Be helpful, not salesy
- Mention your content as option, not demand
- Keep it brief
- Personalize to their specific page
Step 4: Follow up
If no response after 1 week, one follow-up is acceptable.
Keep it short: “Just checking if you saw my note about the broken link on your [page].”
After two attempts, move on. Don’t spam.
Creating Replacement Content
Content that serves as broken link replacement:
Identifying what’s needed:
Check the broken page:
- Use Wayback Machine to see what content existed
- Understand what the linking page wanted to reference
- Identify the gap the broken content left
Create or identify content that:
- Covers same topic
- Provides similar (or better) value
- Fits the context of the linking page
Content improvement approach:
Don’t just replace; improve.
- More comprehensive than original
- More current information
- Better Nashville-specific angle
- Better format or presentation
Nashville replacement content examples:
Broken link: Nashville business directory (defunct site)
Replacement: Your updated Nashville business resource page
Broken link: Nashville home maintenance guide (closed blog)
Replacement: Your comprehensive Nashville home guide
Broken link: Nashville neighborhood info (outdated page)
Replacement: Your updated Nashville neighborhood content
When you don’t have replacement content:
Option 1: Create it
If opportunity is significant, create content specifically to fill the gap.
Investment should match potential link value.
Option 2: Suggest alternative
Even without your own content, alerting to broken link builds goodwill.
“I don’t have a replacement, but [other relevant site] might work.”
Goodwill can lead to future opportunities.
Option 3: Pass on the opportunity
If content creation cost exceeds link value, move on.
Not every broken link is worth pursuing.
Scale and Automation
Scaling broken link building:
Tool-assisted prospecting:
Ahrefs:
- Broken Backlinks report for competitors
- Shows pages linking to broken URLs
- Scale discovery across many competitors
Screaming Frog:
- Crawl resource pages for broken links
- Batch check multiple sites
- Export for organized outreach
Semi-automated outreach:
Email templates (personalized per site):
Use templates for efficiency but personalize:
- Site name
- Page name
- Specific broken link
- Relevant replacement content
Outreach tools:
- Pitchbox
- BuzzStream
- Hunter.io + mail merge
- Mailshake
Maintaining quality at scale:
Don’t sacrifice quality for volume:
- Verify each broken link before outreach
- Personalize each email meaningfully
- Ensure replacement content is genuinely relevant
- Track and avoid re-contacting same sites
Volume expectations:
- 100 broken link opportunities identified
- 50 have genuine replacement potential
- 50 outreach emails sent
- 5-10 responses
- 2-5 links earned
5-10% conversion is typical for quality outreach.
Success Metrics
Measuring broken link building:
Activity metrics:
- Broken links identified
- Outreach emails sent
- Response rate
- Positive responses
Outcome metrics:
- Links earned
- Link quality (DA of linking site)
- Referral traffic from links
- Ranking impact
Efficiency metrics:
- Time per broken link found
- Time per outreach email
- Links earned per hour invested
- Cost per link (if using tools/contractors)
Tracking spreadsheet:
| Site | Broken Link | Replacement | Contact | Outreach Date | Response | Link Earned | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| nashvilleresources.com | oldsite.com/guide | Our Nashville guide | john@… | 1/15 | Yes | Yes | 1/22 |
Benchmarks:
- Response rate: 5-15% typical
- Link conversion: 2-5% of outreach
- Time investment: 2-4 hours per earned link
- ROI: Calculate based on link value vs. time
Improving success rate:
If response rate low:
- Better personalization
- Better replacement content
- Better contact finding
- Subject line testing
If link conversion low:
- More relevant replacement content
- Better content quality
- Relationship building before ask
- Better targeting of opportunities
Broken link building is a numbers game with a quality filter. Volume matters, but quality of opportunities and outreach determines conversion rate.