Majestic

  • Site Explorer
    • Majestic
    • Summary
    • Ref Domains
    • Backlinks
    • * New
    • * Lost
    • Context
    • Anchor Text
    • Pages
    • Topics
    • Link Graph
    • Related Sites
    • Advanced Tools
    • Author ExplorerBeta
    • Summary
    • Similar Profiles
    • Profile Backlinks
    • Attributions
  • Compare
    • Summary
    • Backlink History
    • Flow Metric History
    • Topics
    • Clique Hunter
  • Link Tools
    • My Majestic
    • Recent Activity
    • Reports
    • Campaigns
    • Verified Domains
    • OpenApps
    • API Keys
    • Keywords
    • Keyword Generator
    • Keyword Checker
    • Search Explorer
    • Link Tools
    • Bulk Backlinks
    • Neighbourhood Checker
    • Submit URLs
    • Experimental
    • Index Merger
    • Link Profile Fight
    • Mutual Links
    • Solo Links
    • PDF Report
    • Typo Domain
  • Free SEO Tools
    • Get started
    • Backlink Checker
    • Majestic Million
    • Browser Plugins
    • Google Sheets
    • Post Popularity
    • Social Explorer
  • Support
    • Blog External Link
    • Support
    • Get started
    • Tools
    • Subscriptions & Billing
    • FAQs
    • Glossary
    • Style Guide
    • How To Videos
    • API Reference Guide External Link
    • Contact Us
    • About Backlinks and SEO
    • SEO in 2025
    • The Majestic SEO Podcast
    • All Podcasts
    • What is Trust Flow?
    • Link Building Guides
  • Sign Up for FREE
  • Plans & Pricing
  • Login
  • Language flag icon
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Italiano
    • 日本語
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • 中文
  • Get started
  • Login
  • Plans & Pricing
  • Sign Up for FREE
    • Summary
    • Ref Domains
    • Map
    • Backlinks
    • New
    • Lost
    • Context
    • Anchor Text
    • Pages
    • Topics
    • Link Graph
    • Related Sites
    • Advanced Tools
    • Summary
      Pro
    • Backlink History
      Pro
    • Flow Metric History
      Pro
    • Topics
      Pro
    • Clique Hunter
      Pro
  • Bulk Backlinks
    • Keyword Generator
    • Keyword Checker
    • Search Explorer
      Pro
  • Neighbourhood Checker
    Pro
    • Index Merger
      Pro
    • Link Profile Fight
      Pro
    • Mutual Links
      Pro
    • Solo Links
      Pro
    • PDF Report
      Pro
    • Typo Domain
      Pro
  • Submit URLs
    • Summary
      Pro
    • Similar Profiles
      Pro
    • Profile Backlinks
      Pro
    • Attributions
      Pro
  • Custom Reports
    Pro
    • Get started
    • Backlink Checker
    • Majestic Million
    • Browser Plugins
    • Google Sheets
    • Post Popularity
    • Social Explorer
    • Get started
    • Tools
    • Subscriptions & Billing
    • FAQs
    • Glossary
    • How To Videos
    • API Reference Guide External Link
    • Contact Us
    • Site Updates
    • The Company
    • Style Guide
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • GDPR
    • Contact Us
    • SEO in 2025
    • The Majestic SEO Podcast
    • All Podcasts
    • What is Trust Flow?
    • Link Building Guides
  • Blog External Link
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Italiano
    • 日本語
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • 中文

Align SEO with digital PR to create SEO PR

Alan Silvestri

This year, SEOs have been trying on a lot of different hats to see what suits them best, and Alan Silvestri from Powered by Search feels that the SEO PR hat might be the one that fits.

@AlanGGorilla  
Alan Silvestri 2025 podcast cover with logo
More SEO in 2025 YouTube Podcast Playlist Link Spotify Podcast Playlist Link Audible Podcast Playlist Link Apple Podcast Playlist Link

Align SEO with digital PR to create SEO PR

Alan says: “Companies should be aligning their digital PR and SEO efforts into what I call SEO PR.”

What is SEO PR?

“SEO PR is nothing crazy. A lot of our clients have a PR team that comes to us and asks, ‘How can we make the most from the work that we do?’ There’s a disconnect between what a lot of classic digital PR teams do and what the SEO team does. Most of the time, the two departments don’t even speak to each other.

This creates problems. For example, some of the very good backlinks that the digital PR department creates don’t have the efficacy that they could have if they just followed some best practices.”

Where are digital PR teams not following best practices?

“The most common problem is when the digital PR teams create new content pieces that they get published on big, new publications, but there isn’t a link pointing to the client’s company. There might be a brand mention, but it’s not linked. That’s wasting some huge potential.

In other cases, they might have a link to the brand or the homepage when there could have been a link to a deeper page on the website. Again, it’s wasted potential.”

Should SEO and digital PR be working together on all link acquisitions?

“You should prioritise your media and outreach lists into different segments.

There should be sites that you just do classic PR for, but there should be some that are specifically qualified for SEO purposes.

When they are publishing content that’s relevant to specific pages that you want to rank more highly, that’s where you should be prioritising more of an SEO thought process.”

Should teams like link building and digital PR be sitting and working together all the time?

“As a minimum, they should be aligning every month on the specific efforts and campaigns that are going out. Beyond that, there are some basic guidelines that digital PR people should learn and follow themselves.

It doesn’t need to be super technical and deep; it’s pretty simple. I typically suggest that, instead of just prioritising websites from a domain rating or domain authority standpoint, they should look at 4 simple but key metrics – and I divide them into domain-level metrics and page-level metrics.

On a domain level, it’s domain authority and the traffic to the domain that you want to get a link from. The page-level metrics are the URL rating, which is the authority of the specific page, and the traffic that the specific page has. These are super simple metrics that are essentially the same, but on a domain and page-level basis.

If digital PR teams prioritise their media list using these 4 metrics, that would already make their efforts much more impactful.

PR people tend to shy away from some of these more technical things, thinking that they are vanity metrics. They want to focus on brand awareness, and they have a more holistic view of things.

That said, it all depends on what the company’s goals are. If the company goal is to get more revenue, more signups, or more free trials, and the SEO team has specific pages that can do that very well, then it’s in the interest of the whole company for the two teams to work together and get those pages to rank higher.”

How do you persuade digital PR teams to create link-worthy content that serves both PR and SEO goals?

“You’re not really asking them to change the type of content, it’s usually more of a relevance discussion. I like to suggest that they prioritise topical and thematic relevance.

To get their content published in news articles or lifestyle magazines, a lot of digital PR teams use very broad topical relevance. If it’s a sales software company, their digital PR team might come up with an infographic showing the most famous salespeople in history. It’s visual and dynamic. Then they would get that published in a lifestyle magazine.

That doesn’t work very well for telling Google what the company or product is about – and passing on link equity to the pages that have the potential to bring in sign-up trials. Doing something super broad can get a lot of links but, if the links are not as effective as they could be, there’s really no point.

I suggest having a slightly more targeted approach. Prioritise websites that are relevant from a domain level, but also have content that is more specific to your product.”

Do you also need to educate digital PR teams on the placement of links?

“Yes, placement is very important. I use 4 link placement scores.

Number 1 is a nice placement score, which is just a mention. There’s a mention, but there’s no link. This is good for brand awareness, but it won’t send people to your site because there’s no link.

Number 2 is a good score, and that’s a nofollow backlink. You’ve got the mention, and you get the link, but the link is not passing SEO value. This could send people to your site, but it doesn’t do much for the SEO.

Number 3 is a great score, and this is a mention that is a link, and the link is dofollow. This can provide SEO benefit.

Number 4 is the perfect link: a mention with a dofollow that links to a deep page (a specific article or landing page), that has relevant anchor text to that page.

The digital PR team can divide their media/outreach list into these 4 different scores. Then, based on what they think works best or how aggressive they need to be, they can go after these types of links in different ways.”

What can the SEO team learn from the digital PR team?

“The main thing is everything that has to do with outreach; how to write emails, how to do custom pitches to get people interested, etc.

The problem with link builders specifically is that they always try to scale things up too fast, and they get stuck using the same old template that everybody’s using. That ruins the game for everybody. PR people are very good at writing emails. They reach out, make genuine connections, and create partnerships. They can definitely help SEO teams with how to write emails, copywriting, and how to create genuine partnerships that can eventually lead to a link.

In terms of what they are doing better in their emails, firstly, it’s the structure. Link builders tend to follow specific templates. They have a template for broken links, a template for skyscraper technique, etc. By now, most people who run websites are used to seeing these frameworks, and the way the email looks is very telling.

As soon as I open an email and see the first line says something like, ‘Hey, I’ve read your post about X, but I have this article that is about Y…’, I already know that it’s an email from a link builder. Having a different format and wording things differently, not using the same things over and over, that’s the first improvement.

Then, they’re also very proactive and customised. You could add a P.S. at the end of the email to say, ‘Hey, I noticed that there’s a link that doesn’t work on your page or a sentence with an error in it.’ Take the time to really look at the content. Obviously, you can’t scale this so it’s more difficult and it takes more time, but the results are definitely worth it.”

What types of content are digital PR teams creating?

“Most will focus on news articles. If something happens at the company, they get those articles published in industry-related news sites. Companies that have the budget will have an actual digital PR team that can do creative content, and this can be infographics, interactive data studies, etc. It’s content that has the potential to be linked naturally, but they also get it published on various websites.

Some other companies that are more proactive will also do link insertions. They will find pages that have been recently published and pitch the addition of an extra paragraph or a sentence. We’ve done this for our clients, and it’s been working very well.

We just got a link from a WordStream a couple of weeks ago and we reached out because they have an article on PPC for B2B SaaS companies. Our founder, Dev, had just published a webinar on LinkedIn where he was talking about our unique point of view on some things to do with the topic.

So, we reached out to WordStream and asked if they wanted to include an extra paragraph, talking about the same topic, but including this unique perspective that only our company has. They agreed because they thought it was unique and would help their content rank higher. Within the pitch, we mentioned that, if we helped them refresh their content, it might help their page rank higher because Google typically prioritises fresh content.”

How is the time scale of digital PR project different from that of a link building project?

“It can take months, so it’s definitely a longer process. With the link that I just mentioned, we’ve been going back and forth with them for weeks to get the content done, then approved, and then inserted on the site. The bigger the site you’re dealing with, the more time it’s going to take because there are multiple people involved, they are super busy all the time, and they are publishing a tonne of content already.

Something else that link builders could learn from digital PR people is being patient and trying to prioritise quality over quantity. It takes time to do things well.

Obviously, you do need scale and I’m not saying that traditional link building doesn’t work anymore. It still does. It still has its place, and we still do it. However – especially in the age of AI with all of this content being produced that looks and sounds the same – people should be moving into more of a quality approach instead of quantity.”

If an SEO is struggling for time, what should they stop doing right now so they can spend more time doing what you suggest in 2025?

“Stop producing content (if you have already produced a lot) and focus more on making sure that this content sees the light of day by getting it to rank. That could be through link building or making sure that the content stays fresh.

Do regular content updates. Every quarter, look for pages that get a lot of impressions but not a lot of clicks, and go after those pages. Improve them, add extra content, and optimize the SEO again.

That could be a better use of time, especially in the age of AI where a tonne of content is being produced every single day and people have found a way of scaling that up really quickly. Content that sounds human and is very good quality and insightful is definitely going to have more of an impact over the long term.”

Alan Silvestri is a Digital PR Consultant at Powered by Search, and you can find him over at PoweredbySearch.com.

@AlanGGorilla  

Also with Alan Silvestri

Alan Silvestri 2024 podcast cover with logo
SEO in 2024
Find ethical backlinks and better content by leveraging happy customers

Examining the connection between your links and your users from another angle, Alan Silvestri from Growth Gorilla says that organic, ethically-sourced links come direct from your customers.

Alan Silvestri 2023 podcast cover with logo
2023 Additional Insight
Be Proactive about Promoting your Content and Acquiring Backlinks
Alan Silvestri advocates for being proactive in promoting and acquiring backlinks for your content instead of waiting for them to come naturally, and warns against the 'content graveyard,' which is where published content does not generate much value for your business.

Choose Your Own Learning Style

Webinar iconVideo

If you like to get up-close with your favourite SEO experts, these one-to-one interviews might just be for you.

Watch all of our episodes, FREE, on our dedicated SEO in 2025 playlist.

youtube Playlist Icon

Podcast iconPodcast

Maybe you are more of a listener than a watcher, or prefer to learn while you commute.

SEO in 2025 is available now via all the usual podcast platforms

Spotify Apple Podcasts Audible

Book iconBook

This is our favourite. Sometimes it's better to sit and relax with a nice book.

The best of our range of interviews is available right now as a physical copy and eBook.

Amazon US Amazon UK

Don't miss out

Opt-in to receive email updates.

It's the fastest way to find out more about SEO in 2025.


Could we improve this page for you? Please tell us

Fresh Index

Unique URLs crawled 338,790,096,081
Unique URLs found 896,938,559,572
Date range 02 Mar 2025 to 30 Jun 2025
Last updated 12 hours 7 minutes ago

Historic Index

Unique URLs crawled 4,502,566,935,407
Unique URLs found 21,743,308,221,308
Date range 06 Jun 2006 to 26 Mar 2024
Last updated 03 May 2024

SOCIAL

  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Bluesky
  • Twitter / X
  • Blog External Link

COMPANY

  • Flow Metric Scores
  • About
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • GDPR
  • Contact Us

TOOLS

  • Plans & Pricing
  • Site Explorer
  • Compare Domains
  • Bulk Backlinks
  • Search Explorer
  • Developer API External Link

MAJESTIC FOR

  • Link Context
  • Backlink Checker
  • SEO Professionals
  • Media Analysts
  • Influencer Discovery
  • Enterprise External Link

PODCASTS & PUBLICATIONS

  • The Majestic SEO Podcast
  • SEO in 2025
  • SEO in 2024
  • SEO in 2023
  • SEO in 2022
  • All Podcasts
top ^