A decade after Brian Dean coined
it, the skyscraper technique remains a staple of link building. But its
execution has changed considerably.
When Brian Dean of Backlinko
introduced the skyscraper technique in 2013, the results were striking enough
to reshape how the SEO industry thought about content-led link acquisition. A
single campaign drove a 110% increase in organic traffic within fourteen days,
securing seventeen high-quality backlinks from one hundred and sixty outreach
emails — an 11% conversion rate that was, and remains, several times higher
than typical cold outreach.
More than a decade later, the
underlying logic of the technique still holds: find content that has proven its
ability to attract links, build something demonstrably better, and present that
improved resource to the people already linking to the original. What has
changed is the execution. Webmasters are more sophisticated, outreach inboxes
are more crowded, and “better” now means something more specific than
simply “longer.” This article examines how a modern skyscraper
link building service adapts the technique for an environment where
the easy wins of 2013 no longer apply.
What the Skyscraper Technique Actually Is
At its core, the skyscraper
technique is a three-stage process. First, identify a piece of content within
your niche that has already attracted a meaningful number of backlinks — proof
that the topic has demonstrated citation demand, not just search demand.
Second, create a substantially superior version of that content, one that
offers more value, more current data, better design, or a more thorough
treatment of the subject. Third, reach out to the sites linking to the original
piece and make the case that your improved version is a better resource worth
linking to instead.
The metaphor is deliberate. Just
as a skyscraper is built to stand taller than everything around it, skyscraper
content is built to be visibly, demonstrably superior to the existing benchmark
— not marginally different, but substantially better in ways that are
immediately obvious to anyone comparing the two. This distinction matters
enormously for how the technique performs in 2026, where “marginally
longer” no longer clears the bar that “substantially better”
requires.
Why the Original Approach Was So Effective
The original skyscraper case
study worked because it solved three problems simultaneously. It identified
topics with proven link-earning potential — removing the guesswork of whether a
topic could attract backlinks at all. It gave outreach a concrete, comparative
pitch — “here is a more comprehensive resource on a topic you have already
linked to,” which is a far easier sell than “please consider linking
to my new content.” And it targeted prospects who had already demonstrated
a willingness to link to that exact type of content, dramatically improving
response rates compared to cold outreach to unqualified prospects.
These three structural
advantages remain valid today. What has eroded is the assumption that
“better” is easy to achieve and easy to communicate — and that
webmasters will update a working link simply because a marginally improved
alternative exists.
Does the Skyscraper Technique Still Work in 2026?
This is the question every brand
considering the technique should ask — and the honest answer is nuanced.
Industry surveys have shown a marked decline in practitioner confidence in the
technique compared to a decade ago, with one widely cited State of Link
Building report finding that only a small minority of SEO professionals
consider it highly effective in its original form. At the same time,
well-executed modern adaptations of the technique continue to deliver
meaningful results — including high-profile case studies as recent as this
year.
The resolution to this apparent
contradiction lies in execution standards. The skyscraper technique as a
concept — find proven topics, build something genuinely superior, pitch it to
qualified prospects — remains sound. What has stopped working is the lazy
version: taking an existing top-ranking article, adding a few hundred words and
some additional headings, and mass-emailing the same outreach template to
everyone who linked to the original. That version was always a shortcut, and
shortcuts are precisely what have become least effective as the SEO landscape
has matured.
A recent industry analysis of
skyscraper effectiveness across different sectors found that the most
successful contemporary campaigns invest forty to sixty hours in research and
outreach preparation, compared to fifteen to twenty hours for basic implementations
— and that this increased investment correlates directly with improved outcomes
across every measured metric. The technique has not stopped working. It has
simply stopped being a shortcut.
The Modern Skyscraper Process: What Has Changed
Topic Selection Now Requires Citation Demand, Not Just Search Demand
The first and most consequential
refinement to the skyscraper technique is recognising that search demand and
citation demand are not the same thing — and that a topic can have plenty of
one while having very little of the other. A topic might generate substantial
search traffic while attracting almost no backlinks, because the content that
ranks for it (product pages, transactional landing pages, simple how-to guides)
simply is not the kind of content that other sites tend to cite.
Modern skyscraper campaigns
begin by filtering for topics where the top-ranking content has a meaningful
number of referring domains — using tools such as Ahrefs Content Explorer or
Moz Link Explorer to identify pages within a niche that combine search visibility
with a demonstrated pattern of earning external citations. According
to Ahrefs’ guidance on content-led link building, the strongest
skyscraper opportunities are topics where existing top content has both strong
rankings and a healthy number of referring domains — evidence that the subject
matter itself is genuinely link-worthy, independent of any single piece of
content.
“Better” Now Means Structurally Different, Not Just Longer
The single most important shift
in skyscraper execution is the redefinition of what “better” means.
In 2013, simply producing a longer, more comprehensive article than the
existing benchmark was often sufficient to constitute meaningful improvement.
In 2026, length alone signals very little — and content that is merely longer,
without being structurally or substantively different, rarely earns the
attention that link-worthy improvement requires.
The categories of genuine
improvement that continue to earn links in 2026 include original data that did
not exist in the source material, interactive elements such as calculators or
filterable databases that static articles cannot replicate, substantially more
current information in fast-moving topic areas, and design or visualisation
quality that makes complex information meaningfully easier to understand. The
unifying theme across all of these is that they create a reason for a webmaster
to prefer the new resource that goes beyond “it covers slightly more
ground.”
The Stats Page Adaptation
One of the most successful
contemporary adaptations of the skyscraper technique targets
“statistics” pages specifically — round-up articles compiling data
points and figures on a given topic. These pages are particularly well-suited
to the skyscraper approach because they attract backlinks readily (writers
reference them when they need a citable statistic), they go stale quickly
(statistics from two or three years ago lose relevance), and they are
relatively achievable to improve meaningfully, since the bar for
“better” is simply “more current and more comprehensive.”
Ahrefs itself has documented
using this adaptation successfully — identifying high-demand statistics topics,
producing a more current and thorough version, and achieving a number-one
ranking alongside a substantial uplift in referring domains. For brands in
fast-moving sectors where annual or even quarterly statistics round-ups are
common search queries, this adaptation represents one of the most reliable
applications of skyscraper logic available today.
Outreach: Where Most Modern Skyscraper Campaigns Succeed or Fail
If content quality is the
foundation of a skyscraper campaign, outreach is where that foundation either
converts into backlinks or sits unused. The original Backlinko case study
achieved an 11% response rate from cold outreach — a figure that remains three
to five times higher than typical cold link building outreach, but one that is
harder to replicate today simply because webmasters receive considerably more
pitches referencing “better” content than they did in 2013.
The outreach approaches that
continue to perform well share several characteristics. They are personalised
to the specific page being targeted, referencing exactly what the linking page
covers and why the new resource is relevant to that specific context — not a
templated email sent identically to every prospect. They lead with the value to
the recipient, framing the improved resource as something that will make their
existing content more useful to their own readers, rather than framing the
request primarily around the sender’s benefit. And they are realistic about
response rates: a well-executed modern campaign targeting fifty to one hundred
qualified prospects, with a response rate in the range of five to ten percent,
can still deliver a meaningful number of high-quality, topically relevant
backlinks.
One development worth
acknowledging honestly is that some webmasters in competitive niches now expect
compensation for updating an existing link — a shift from the more informal,
goodwill-based link economy of a decade ago. According to Search Engine Journal’s analysis of current
link building economics, the majority of link builders now operate
with defined budgets for digital PR and outreach activity, reflecting an
industry-wide acknowledgement that high-quality placements increasingly require
some form of investment beyond content creation alone. A modern skyscraper
strategy should be built with realistic expectations about this dynamic, rather
than assuming the purely organic response rates of the technique’s earliest
days.
Where Skyscraper Content Fits Within a Broader Link Building Strategy
Perhaps the most important
strategic insight about the skyscraper technique in 2026 is that it works best
not as a comprehensive link building strategy in its own right, but as one
high-investment tactic within a more diversified programme. The forty to sixty
hours of research and outreach effort that effective modern skyscraper
campaigns require is simply not sustainable as the sole mechanism for ongoing
authority building — but applied selectively to the highest-value topics in a
niche, it produces concentrated bursts of high-quality, topically relevant
backlinks that few other tactics can match.
The brands that get the most
value from skyscraper campaigns treat them as periodic, high-investment
projects targeting genuinely strategic topics — the keywords and subject areas
where ranking improvements would have the most significant commercial impact —
while maintaining a baseline of consistent monthly link acquisition through
other channels such as digital PR, guest contributions, and editorial
placements. This combination delivers both the concentrated authority spikes
that skyscraper campaigns can produce and the steady velocity that search
engines reward as a signal of natural, ongoing growth.
Identifying which topics warrant
the skyscraper investment requires the same competitor backlink analysis that
underpins the topic selection stage of the technique itself — understanding not
just which content in your niche attracts links, but which of those topics, if
you owned the definitive resource, would meaningfully move commercial outcomes
for your business.
Measuring Success: Beyond Link Count
Contemporary skyscraper
campaigns require a more sophisticated view of success than simply counting
acquired links. While the number of referring domains earned remains an
important metric, modern evaluation also weighs the authority and topical
relevance of those referring domains, the resulting movement in target keyword
rankings, and the longer-term organic traffic growth attributable to the
improved content asset.
Brand awareness and industry
recognition have also become valuable secondary outcomes of well-executed
skyscraper campaigns. A definitive resource on a topic within your niche — one
that earns links from respected publications — does more than improve search
rankings. It positions your brand as a credible authority on that subject, an
outcome that compounds in value well beyond the immediate SEO impact and feeds
into the broader E-E-A-T signals that increasingly determine visibility across
both traditional search and AI-driven answer engines.
The Verdict: A Tactic Worth Mastering, Not a Shortcut
The skyscraper technique has not
failed — it has simply matured alongside the rest of the SEO industry. The
shortcuts that made it feel almost effortless in 2013 are gone, but the
underlying logic — that proven topics, genuinely superior content, and well-targeted
outreach to qualified prospects outperform generic content and untargeted
pitching — remains as sound today as it was then.
For brands willing to invest the
research, content quality, and outreach effort that modern execution demands,
skyscraper campaigns continue to deliver some of the highest-quality, most
topically relevant backlinks available — placements that a low-effort link
building programme simply cannot replicate. Applied selectively, to the topics
that matter most, and combined with a consistent baseline of ongoing link
acquisition, the skyscraper technique remains exactly what it was always meant
to be: a way of earning the links that the best content in any niche has always
attracted.
