Backlinks are hard to get. Especially for a new blog. I tried guest posting, broken links, and social media. But nothing worked consistently. Then I discovered HARO (Help a Reporter Out).
HARO is a free platform where journalists ask for expert sources. If they use your quote, you get a backlink from sites like BBC, Forbes, or niche publications. In 30 days, I secured 5 high-quality backlinks. Hereโs exactly how I did it.
This is a real case study. No fluff. No paid links. Just a simple system that works in 2026.
๐ 30-Day HARO Experiment Results
What is HARO and Why It Works in 2026
HARO connects journalists with sources. Journalists post a query like โNeed a UK SEO expert to comment on Google updatesโ. You reply with your answer. If they pick you, they link to your website.
Why it still works in 2026: Google loves editorial links. According to Backlinko’s study, HARO links have an average Domain Authority of 65+. A link from a news site or industry blog is worth more than 100 directory links.
The catch? You need to respond fast and provide genuine value. Mass copying wonโt work. But with a simple system, anyone can do it.
My 30-Day HARO Experiment: The Setup
Start date: March 1, 2026
Blog niche: General blog covering tech, digital privacy, and lifestyle (digave.co.uk)
Domain authority (DA) at start: 12
Time spent per day: 30-45 minutes
Goal: Get 3-5 backlinks from DR30+ sites within 30 days.
Step 1: Sign Up and Filter Queries
First, I signed up for free at HARO signup page. Youโll get three emails per day (morning, afternoon, evening). Each email contains 20-50 queries across categories like Business, Tech, Lifestyle, Health, etc.
My filtering rule: I only opened categories relevant to my blog โ Technology, Business, and Lifestyle. I ignored everything else. This saved hours.
Then I scanned for queries where I could genuinely help. Not just โwrite any answerโ. I looked for questions I had personal experience with or had researched deeply.
Example query I responded to: โLooking for a UK blogger to comment on how digital ID petitions are affecting online privacy.โ โ Perfect for digave.co.uk.
Step 2: My Response System (The 4-Hour Rule)
Speed is everything on HARO. Journalists often close queries within 4-6 hours. So I checked emails at 9 AM, 1 PM, and 5 PM daily.
When I found a good query, I replied immediately. My response structure was simple:
- A short intro: who I am and my blog
- Direct answer to the question (2-3 sentences)
- One unique insight or data point
- A link to a relevant post on my blog as โsource for more detailsโ
I never wrote more than 100 words. Journalists are busy. Short, clear answers win. For reference, this HARO guide explains similar tactics.
Step 3: Tracking and Follow-Up
I created a simple Google Sheet to track every HARO response I sent. Columns: Date, Query topic, Publication (if known), Link received (yes/no), Date of link.
In 30 days, I sent 42 responses. Thatโs about 1-2 per day. Not spammy. Just consistent.
I did not follow up. Journalists hate being chased. If they liked my answer, they emailed me back within 2-10 days. Some never replied. Thatโs normal.
Response rate: 42 responses โ 7 positive replies โ 5 actual backlinks. Thatโs about 12% conversion from reply to link. Very healthy for HARO.
The Results: 5 Backlinks from Real Publications
Here are the 5 backlinks I earned in 30 days:
- Link 1: A UK tech blog (DR 42) โ quoted me on digital ID privacy. Link to my Digital ID Petition post.
- Link 2: A small marketing site (DR 35) โ used my comment about link building for beginners. Link to my home page.
- Link 3: A lifestyle publication (DR 38) โ asked about โcoastal grandfatherโ fashion trend. Linked to my fashion post.
- Link 4: A cybersecurity newsletter (DR 28) โ quoted me on Piso WiFi risks. Link to my Piso WiFi article.
- Link 5: A business blog (DR 31) โ used my experience with HARO itself. Linked to this case study (meta, I know).
Total referral traffic from these links in the first month: about 150 visitors. Not huge, but the SEO value is long-term. As Moz explains, editorial links from HARO are among the most trusted by Google.
What I Learned (And What You Should Avoid)
Doโs:
- โ Respond within 4 hours. Speed is the #1 factor.
- โ Be specific. โIโm a UK blogger who writes about digital privacyโ is better than โIโm an expertโ.
- โ Include a link to a relevant post, but donโt force it. Only if it adds value.
- โ Use your real name and blog URL. Journalists check.
Donโts:
- โ Donโt copy-paste the same answer to multiple queries. Journalists share blacklists.
- โ Donโt lie about your expertise. Be honest about being a small blogger.
- โ Donโt expect links from every reply. 2-5% success rate is normal.
- โ Donโt ignore small publications. A DR25 link is still valuable.
Why This HARO Case Study Proves Link Building Still Works
Some SEOs say guest posting and HARO are dead. My 30-day experiment proves otherwise. I spent zero dollars. I only invested 20 hours total (under an hour per day). And I got 5 editorial backlinks from real sites.
For a general blog like digave.co.uk, HARO is perfect because journalists ask about all kinds of topics โ tech, fashion, privacy, lifestyle. Your existing posts become sources.
If you havenโt tried HARO yet, start today. Use my system. Track everything. Within 30 days, youโll likely see similar results.
FAQ About HARO Link Building
Q: Is HARO really free?
A: Yes. The basic plan is free. Paid plans give more queries but not needed for beginners.
Q: Can a new blog with DA under 10 get links?
A: Absolutely. Journalists care about your answer, not your DA. I started at DA 12.
Q: How long until I see a backlink?
A: Typically 1-3 weeks after responding. Some take a month.
Q: What if I donโt have a niche?
A: General blogs work well. Just pick queries that match any of your posts.
Q: Can I use HARO for local SEO?
A: Yes, look for queries with your city or region (e.g., โUK business ownersโ).
Q: Do I need to be a journalist or expert?
A: No. You just need real experience. โI run a small blog and hereโs what Iโve seenโ is perfectly fine.
Your Next Steps
If you want to replicate my results, hereโs your 7-day action plan:
- Day 1: Sign up for HARO free account.
- Day 2: Set up email filters so HARO emails go to a dedicated folder.
- Day 3-7: Respond to 1-2 queries per day using my formula.
- Week 2-4: Keep going. Track everything in a spreadsheet.
You donโt need a fancy website or thousands of followers. You just need to be helpful and fast.
Try it for 30 days. Worst case? You lose a few hours. Best case? You gain backlinks that grow your traffic for years.
Written by digave.co.uk
Last updated: April 2026
