A competitor may outrank our local business with a smaller website, fewer reviews, and less content. The difference is often visible when we compare the websites linking to both businesses.

A local backlink gap analysis shows which trusted websites link to competing businesses but not to ours. Once we separate useful opportunities from spam, we can build a practical link plan that supports local visibility, referrals, and customer trust.

Key Takeaways

  • We compare several real local competitors, not one business with a random backlink profile.
  • The strongest opportunities usually come from local news, chambers, associations, events, sponsorships, and relevant directories.
  • Citations help confirm business details, while editorial links usually provide stronger context and referral value.
  • We prioritize links by local relevance, trust, realistic access, and customer potential.
  • Paid link schemes, private blog networks, and mass directory submissions can create more risk than value.

What a Local Backlink Gap Actually Shows

A backlink is a link from another website to our website. A local backlink comes from a source connected to our city, service area, industry, or community.

A backlink gap is the difference between our link profile and the profiles of businesses competing for the same local searches. We aren’t trying to copy every link a competitor has. We are looking for patterns.

Suppose three roofing companies in the same city all receive links from a local builders association. Our company doesn’t have that link. That missing relationship is more useful than a random link from an unrelated blog.

The gap can reveal several types of opportunities:

  • A chamber of commerce profile that lists competing members
  • A local newspaper article about a community project
  • A sponsorship page for a youth sports team
  • A business association directory
  • A supplier or manufacturer partner page
  • A local event website
  • A trade publication covering a company announcement
  • A trusted directory that serves our city or industry

The analysis can also reveal weaknesses. A competitor may have hundreds of links, but many could come from low-quality directories, unrelated websites, or pages that no longer exist. A larger number doesn’t automatically mean a better profile.

We should pay attention to relevance and context. A link on a city event page can help people discover a local business. A link on a general website with no connection to our service area may offer little value.

Local backlink research also gives us a clearer view of how competitors built relationships. Some links come from publicity. Others come from memberships, sponsorships, partnerships, community work, or useful resources. That information helps us choose activities that support the business, not SEO alone.

Choose Competitors That Match Our Local Search Results

The quality of our analysis depends on the competitors we choose. A national brand may rank for a broad phrase, but its backlink profile won’t always help a small local business.

We should begin with the searches that matter to our customers. These might include:

  • Emergency plumber in Covington
  • Family dentist in Florence
  • Cincinnati commercial photographer
  • HVAC repair near Fort Thomas
  • Landscaping company in Northern Kentucky

We can search these phrases in Google while using a private browser window or a location setting that reflects our service area. We should record the businesses that appear in the local map results and the organic listings.

A useful competitor set includes three to five businesses that meet most of these conditions:

  1. They offer similar services.
  2. They serve the same geographic area.
  3. They appear in the search results we care about.
  4. Their websites are active and accessible.
  5. They compete for customers, not only for a broad national term.

We shouldn’t choose competitors based only on domain authority or the number of referring domains. A large company may have links earned over many years, along with press coverage that we can’t reasonably reproduce.

Look for competitors with a similar business model. A single-location repair shop should be compared with other local repair shops. A regional contractor can be compared with businesses that serve nearby counties. This keeps the findings practical.

We should also review more than the homepage. Competitors may earn links to service pages, location pages, blog posts, case studies, or community announcements. If most links point to a useful resource instead of the homepage, that tells us something about the type of content people are willing to reference.

A spreadsheet makes the process easier. We can record the competitor, linking website, linking page, target page, anchor text, link type, local connection, and possible next step. The goal isn’t to collect an impressive list. The goal is to identify opportunities we can act on.

A Repeatable Backlink Gap Analysis Workflow

We can complete a useful comparison with tools such as Ahrefs, Semrush, Moz Link Explorer, or Majestic. Each tool uses its own index, so the results won’t match perfectly. That isn’t a problem. We need consistent comparisons within the same tool.

Google Search Console is also useful, but it shows links to our own verified website. It won’t provide a complete competitor report. We can use it to check our current links, then use a third-party tool for competitor research.

1. Export our current backlinks

We start with our own website. Export the known referring domains and linking pages. Include the target URL, anchor text, link type, and first or last seen date when the tool provides those fields.

We should remove obvious duplicates and group links by domain. Ten links from one website are still one referring domain, although several pages may matter.

Next, mark links that appear to be:

  • Local citations
  • Editorial coverage
  • Partner or supplier links
  • Sponsorship links
  • Industry directories
  • Resource page links
  • Social or profile links
  • Unknown or low-quality links

This first export gives us a baseline. Without it, we may mistake an existing relationship for a new opportunity.

2. Run the same export for each competitor

We use the same filters and columns for every competitor. Consistency matters more than collecting every possible report.

For each competitor, we record the referring domains. We also review the actual pages that link to them. A domain name alone doesn’t tell us why the link exists.

For example, a competitor may have a link from a local newspaper. The linking page might cover a grand opening, a donation, a new hire, or an expert comment. Each reason suggests a different outreach idea.

We should inspect whether the link is still live. Tools can show old links, redirects, broken pages, and links hidden behind a page that no longer exists. A gap is useful only when the source is active and relevant.

3. Find shared competitor links

The strongest early opportunities are domains that link to two or more competitors but not to us. These shared links often point to an established local or industry connection.

A chamber directory is a good example. If several competitors have profiles there, the opportunity may be simple. We may need to join, complete our profile, and add accurate business information.

A local publication is different. We may need a genuine story, useful data, expert commentary, or a community activity before the publication would consider linking to us.

Shared links deserve attention because they show that the source already links to businesses like ours. They don’t prove that we will receive a link, but they give us a stronger starting point than a random prospect list.

4. Review unique competitor links

After shared domains, we review links that only one competitor has. These opportunities require more judgment.

A unique link might come from a personal relationship, a private membership, or an old event. It may not be available to us. Another unique link may come from a local guide, a helpful calculator, or a news story that we can approach with a better resource.

We should ask three questions:

  • Is the source relevant to our service area or customers?
  • Can we create a legitimate reason for the source to mention us?
  • Would the link bring useful referral traffic or trust?

If the answer to all three is no, we move on.

5. Check the target page and link context

The target page matters as much as the referring domain. A competitor may earn links to a detailed project page because it contains photos, results, or original information.

We should study what the linked page offers. Is it a guide, case study, service page, event page, or announcement? Then we can decide whether to improve an existing page or create a new resource.

We shouldn’t copy a competitor’s wording or design. We can use the underlying need as a guide and create something accurate, useful, and specific to our business.

6. Turn findings into an outreach list

The final export should become an action list, not a report that sits in a folder.

For every prospect, we record the source, reason for contact, possible link destination, contact person, and next action. We should also note whether the opportunity depends on membership, sponsorship, newsworthiness, or original content.

This makes our local backlink research repeatable. We can revisit the list each quarter, remove closed opportunities, add new competitors, and track the results.

How to Prioritize Backlink Opportunities

Not every gap deserves the same amount of time or money. We need a simple scoring system that keeps the team focused.

A practical score can use four factors:

  • Local relevance: Does the source connect to our city, county, neighborhood, or service area?
  • Trust and quality: Does the website publish real information and maintain an active audience?
  • Access: Can we earn the link through a reasonable relationship or useful contribution?
  • Business value: Could the link send customers, referrals, or partnership opportunities?

We can score each factor from 1 to 5. Then add the scores for a total out of 20.

OpportunityLocal relevanceTrustAccessBusiness valueTotal
Local chamber profile545317
City event sponsorship page544518
Relevant industry directory335314
Local news feature552517
Unrelated general blog12317

The table shows why access alone shouldn’t control our decisions. A low-effort directory listing may be easy to obtain, but a community event page could produce stronger local visibility and referrals.

We can group opportunities into three priority levels:

  1. High priority: Strong local connection, trusted source, and a clear business reason for the link.
  2. Medium priority: Relevant source with a possible opportunity, but it needs content, outreach, or a membership decision.
  3. Low priority: Weak relevance, unclear ownership, poor quality, or no realistic reason for contact.

We should start with opportunities that improve more than rankings. A chamber profile may create referrals. A sponsorship may put our name in front of local families. A news article may help customers understand our expertise.

The best backlink prospect usually has a good business reason to mention us, not only an SEO reason.

We also need to compare effort with likely value. A local association link that takes one accurate application may be worth pursuing before a difficult national publication pitch. Small wins build a stronger foundation.

Local Link Sources Worth Investigating

Local businesses have more potential link sources than they often realize. The right source depends on our industry, location, and existing relationships.

Chambers of commerce

Chambers often publish member directories, business profiles, event pages, and award announcements. We should complete the profile carefully and use the same business name, address, phone number, and website details everywhere.

A chamber listing is usually a citation and a link. It can support local trust, but we shouldn’t treat it like editorial coverage. The value comes from the legitimate membership and the local connection.

Local news outlets

Local newspapers, radio stations, television websites, and community publications may link to businesses involved in newsworthy activities.

Useful angles include a new location, a significant hiring effort, a community donation, an industry response to local conditions, or expert commentary on a topic affecting residents. A sales pitch disguised as a news story usually fails.

We can prepare a short media page with accurate facts, service information, photographs, and a contact person. We should respond quickly when a reporter requests local expertise.

Sponsorships and community events

Youth sports teams, nonprofit events, festivals, races, fundraisers, and neighborhood programs often list sponsors on their websites.

The relationship must be real. We shouldn’t pay for a link alone. We can support an event that fits our community goals, then confirm how sponsors are listed online before committing funds.

A sponsorship page may produce a citation, a link, brand exposure, and direct community recognition. Those benefits make it more useful than a paid placement with no local audience.

Business associations

Trade groups, downtown partnerships, neighborhood organizations, and professional associations can provide member listings, event coverage, and collaboration opportunities.

We should choose organizations that our customers recognize or that connect us with useful partners. Joining every association for a link creates unnecessary costs and a thin-looking profile.

Relevant local directories

Directories can help when they have editorial standards, a clear local purpose, or a strong industry focus. Examples include a city business directory, a regional tourism site, a licensed contractor directory, or an association member list.

We should check the directory before submitting. Is the information current? Does it show real businesses? Does it have contact information and an active audience? Are category pages useful, or is the site filled with hundreds of empty listings?

Partners, suppliers, and manufacturers

A supplier may list authorized dealers. A manufacturer may feature local installers. A commercial partner may publish a project profile.

These links are often overlooked because they don’t look like traditional marketing opportunities. We should ask partners whether they maintain a customer, dealer, project, or resource page. The request works best when our relationship is already legitimate.

Citations and Editorial Backlinks Are Not the Same

Local citations mention our business name, address, and phone number. They may include a website link, but the main purpose is to confirm business details.

Google Business Profile, Apple Business Connect, Bing Places, chamber listings, map services, and trusted local directories fit this category. Accurate citations help customers find us and reduce confusion about our location and contact information.

Editorial backlinks are different. They appear because a writer, organization, or website owner chose to reference our business, content, expertise, project, or event.

A local news story that discusses our community work is editorial. A chamber membership profile is usually a citation. A nonprofit page listing event sponsors may be both a citation and a community relationship, but it isn’t the same as independent editorial coverage.

We should pursue both types, but we should judge them differently.

Citations require consistent details and careful profile management. Editorial links require a reason to reference us. That reason may be original research, a useful guide, a local project, expert knowledge, or a genuine community contribution.

A citation from a trusted local directory can still be valuable, even when it doesn’t pass traditional ranking value. Customers may use it to verify our business. Search engines may use business information from multiple sources to understand local entities.

We shouldn’t expect every link to use a keyword-rich anchor text. A business name, website address, or phrase such as “local HVAC contractor” can all be natural. Asking every website to use the same exact keyword looks unnatural and can create a poor reader experience.

Outreach That Gives People a Reason to Link

Good outreach is short, clear, and based on a real connection. We should explain why we’re contacting the person and point to the page or activity that makes the link relevant.

A chamber request might ask for a website update. A local publication pitch might offer a qualified source for a story. A nonprofit request might confirm sponsor details. A resource page request might explain how our guide fills a missing need.

We shouldn’t send the same message to every prospect. A few customized sentences are more useful than a long template.

A simple outreach process looks like this:

  1. Verify the source and contact information.
  2. Read the page where a link could fit.
  3. Identify our genuine connection to the organization.
  4. Suggest one relevant page or resource.
  5. Keep the request polite and easy to answer.
  6. Follow up once after several business days.
  7. Record the response and next step.

We should also make the linked page worth visiting. A thin service page gives a publisher little reason to reference us. A clear local guide, project summary, original checklist, or useful explanation gives them something practical to share.

Outreach isn’t a numbers contest. Ten relevant conversations are better than hundreds of copied emails sent to unrelated websites.

Link Tactics We Should Avoid

Competitor research can expose bad tactics as easily as good ones. We shouldn’t repeat a competitor’s risky links simply because they appear in a report.

Paid link schemes are a common problem. Paying a website solely to place a ranking link, especially when the page has no real audience or editorial purpose, creates risk. The same applies to private blog networks, automated guest posts, spun articles, and bulk directory packages.

We should also avoid:

  • Links from unrelated websites with no local or industry connection
  • Comment links and forum profiles created only for SEO
  • Pages packed with hundreds of low-quality business links
  • Exact-match anchor text repeated across many websites
  • Promises of a specific ranking increase after link placement
  • Reviews or testimonials written only to obtain a link
  • Scholarship or charity pages built mainly to attract links
  • Paying for links that aren’t clearly disclosed when disclosure is required

A competitor’s backlink profile is evidence, not a set of instructions. We review each link for quality, context, and business value before deciding whether it belongs in our plan.

If a paid sponsorship includes a link, the relationship should be based on the sponsorship itself. We should follow the publisher’s disclosure rules and search engine guidance. The goal is a real partnership, not a hidden purchase.

Measure Progress Without Chasing Big Numbers

We should measure link building with more than referring-domain totals. A new link matters most when it supports visibility, traffic, trust, or a useful business relationship.

Track the following each month:

  • New referring domains
  • Lost or broken links
  • Links from local organizations
  • Referral visits from linking pages
  • Calls, form submissions, or visits tied to referral traffic
  • Rankings for important local searches
  • Changes in map visibility
  • New partnerships or media relationships

Google Analytics can show referral traffic when tracking is set up correctly. Google Search Console can help us review search performance and the pages receiving impressions and clicks.

A link may take time to produce measurable ranking movement. That doesn’t make it useless. A community page can send a customer before any ranking change appears. A supplier listing can help a buyer confirm that we are an authorized provider.

We should review our gap analysis every three to six months. Competitors earn new links, businesses close, event pages expire, and local news changes quickly. A quarterly review keeps the list useful without turning link research into a daily task.

The strongest signal is often a pattern. If several competitors receive links from the same respected local organizations, we may have a relationship gap. If only one competitor has links from national websites, the opportunity may require a different content or publicity plan.

Conclusion

A local backlink gap analysis helps us stop guessing about link building. We compare relevant competitors, inspect why their links exist, separate citations from editorial coverage, and prioritize opportunities that fit our business.

The best prospects usually connect to real work we already do, such as serving local customers, joining business groups, supporting community events, sharing expertise, or building useful resources. When our link plan follows those relationships, better visibility becomes a result of good business activity rather than a shortcut.

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