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Re)Create the content to which links were placed

Posted: Wed Feb 12, 2025 8:52 am
by sharminakter
Side note: It can be useful to use the AS (Authority Score) column to assess quality. While there are 353 links here, only 9 of them have an AS of 10 or higher. The rest are of poor quality, and may not be worth trying to replicate. In some cases, it may be beneficial to try to acquire backlinks from a website with a low AS. But in general, it is not a very good practice, unless it is an important link for your business: you be the judge!

That said, nine opportunities from a single page is always a good place to start, especially when they are highly relevant, like this one:


It's easy to see how cases like this can multiply and end up forming many opportunities. In the end, you should end up with a list of quality broken links that point to dead pages.

To create relevant content, you first need to understand what the usa telegram data dead page was about. By figuring this out, you'll have a clear idea of ​​what someone chose to link to and why. The best way to do this is to use archive.org's Wayback Machine .

Enter the URL of the dead page there, and you can see what the content looked like before:

dead-page.png

You may sometimes find that images and CSS don't load all the way through, but you'll still get a good idea of ​​what the content looked like, and how much detail it went into or out of.

Generally speaking, you can figure out exactly what someone was pointing at and have a good chance of guessing why. And it's necessary to know, because now you need to do one of two things.