Local link building does not have to be complicated.

You do not always need a big digital PR campaign. You do not always need to sponsor events. You do not always need to create a “definitive guide” that nobody asked for.

Sometimes, the best local links are already sitting in plain sight.

The trick is simple:

Find websites that already list local businesses like yours.

Then ask to be included.

That is it.

This tactic works especially well for local B2C businesses such as:

  • Hotels
  • Restaurants
  • CafĂ©s
  • Bars
  • Taxi companies
  • Private drivers
  • Airport transfer companies
  • Dentists
  • Clinics
  • Hair salons
  • Spas
  • Gyms
  • Tourist attractions
  • Local tour operators
  • Wedding venues
  • Florists
  • Caterers
  • Photographers
  • Coworking spaces
  • Car rental companies
  • Bike rental companies
  • Local shops
  • Entertainment venues

If your business serves people in a specific location, there are probably websites that already recommend nearby businesses to their visitors.

Your job is to find those pages and get added.


The basic idea

Many organisations publish local recommendation pages.

They do this because their visitors need practical information.

A university may list nearby hotels for visiting parents, guest lecturers, alumni, and conference attendees.

A convention centre may list nearby restaurants and accommodation for event visitors.

A hospital may list nearby hotels for family members of patients.

A wedding venue may list local florists, photographers, caterers, taxi companies, hotels, and beauty salons.

A museum may list nearby restaurants and hotels.

A business park may list local lunch spots and transport options.

An event website may list recommended places to stay, eat, park, and travel.

These pages exist because they are useful.

And if your business is a good fit, you have a natural reason to be included.

This is local link building at its cleanest.

You are not trying to force a link where it does not belong.

You are finding pages where your business genuinely belongs.


Why this tactic works

This tactic works because the linking page already has the right intent.

The page already lists local businesses.

The website owner already decided that recommending nearby businesses is useful.

That means your pitch is not:

Please create a new page and link to us.

Your pitch is:

You already have a useful local recommendations page. We may be a good addition.

That is a much easier ask.

It is also much more natural than generic link building.

For example, if a university has a page called “Hotels near campus,” and you run a hotel near that campus, getting listed makes sense.

If a convention centre has a page called “Restaurants nearby,” and you run a restaurant within walking distance, getting listed makes sense.

If an event website recommends transport options, and you run a local taxi or private driver service, getting listed makes sense.

Relevance is built in.


Local links are often underestimated.

People obsess over national publications, high DR blogs, and big media links. Those can be great. But for a local business, a relevant local link can be incredibly valuable.

Why?

Because local SEO is not just about raw authority.

It is about local relevance, trust, proximity, and real-world signals.

A link from a university, hospital, event venue, local authority, tourism board, convention centre, museum, theatre, business park, or large local organisation can be extremely useful.

These websites often have:

  • Strong authority
  • Real local relevance
  • Local visitors
  • Trust
  • Branded search demand
  • Long-standing domains
  • Links from other respected organisations
  • Pages that people actually use

And unlike many generic link building prospects, these links can also send real customers.

A hotel listed on a university accommodation page can get bookings.

A restaurant listed by a convention centre can get diners.

A taxi company listed by an event venue can get calls.

A photographer listed by a wedding venue can get enquiries.

That is the best kind of link building: rankings, relevance, and revenue.


Who this tactic is best for

This works best for businesses where location matters.

Especially local B2C businesses.

Hotels and accommodation

Great targets include:

  • Universities
  • Hospitals
  • Conference venues
  • Event centres
  • Wedding venues
  • Sports venues
  • Tourist attractions
  • Business parks
  • Airports
  • Embassies
  • Training centres
  • Religious centres
  • Large employers
  • Festival websites

Restaurants, cafés and bars

Great targets include:

  • Convention centres
  • Museums
  • Theatres
  • Universities
  • Event websites
  • Hotels
  • Tourist guides
  • Local attractions
  • Business parks
  • Shopping centres
  • Wedding venues
  • Sports venues
  • Coworking spaces

Taxi companies and transport providers

Great targets include:

  • Hotels
  • Event venues
  • Airports
  • Universities
  • Hospitals
  • Tourist attractions
  • Wedding venues
  • Conference organisers
  • Business parks
  • Local travel guides
  • Embassies
  • Government visitor pages

Dentists, clinics and health services

Great targets include:

  • Universities
  • International student pages
  • Expat websites
  • Local employer resource pages
  • Residential developments
  • Care homes
  • Sports clubs
  • Community pages
  • Local directories
  • Relocation guides

Wedding suppliers

Great targets include:

  • Wedding venues
  • Event venues
  • Hotels
  • Local wedding guides
  • Churches
  • Photographers
  • Florists
  • Caterers
  • Bridal shops
  • Hair and beauty salons
  • Wedding planners

Tourist attractions and tour operators

Great targets include:

  • Hotels
  • Tourism boards
  • Travel guides
  • Universities
  • Event venues
  • Cruise terminals
  • Airports
  • Local government visitor pages
  • Museums
  • Travel bloggers
  • Festival websites

The more naturally your business fits into a “nearby recommendations” page, the better this tactic works.


The search strategy

Start by searching for pages that already mention businesses like yours.

Use search operators around business type and location.

For example:

  • intext:"taxis in Manchester"
  • intext:"restaurants nearby" London
  • intext:"hotels near campus" "Boston"
  • intext:"lodging nearby" university
  • intext:"places to stay nearby" "conference"
  • intext:"recommended hotels" "near campus"
  • intext:"nearby restaurants" "convention center"
  • intext:"local taxi companies" "airport"
  • intext:"recommended suppliers" "wedding venue"
  • intext:"where to stay" "event venue"
  • intext:"places to eat nearby" "museum"
  • intext:"accommodation nearby" "hospital"
  • intext:"visitor information" "restaurants nearby"

Then adapt the query to your city, region, neighbourhood, or business type.

For a taxi company in Manchester:

  • intext:"taxis in Manchester"
  • intext:"taxi companies in Manchester"
  • intext:"airport transfer Manchester"
  • intext:"getting around Manchester" "taxi"
  • intext:"transport options" "Manchester"
  • intext:"recommended taxi" "Manchester"

For a restaurant in London:

  • intext:"restaurants nearby" London
  • intext:"restaurants near us" London
  • intext:"places to eat nearby" London
  • intext:"recommended restaurants" London
  • intext:"where to eat" "near" "London"
  • intext:"nearby restaurants" "event venue" London

For a hotel near a university:

  • intext:"hotels near campus"
  • intext:"lodging near campus"
  • intext:"accommodation near campus"
  • intext:"where to stay" "parents weekend"
  • intext:"visiting campus" "hotels"
  • intext:"recommended hotels" "university"

For a wedding supplier:

  • intext:"recommended suppliers" "wedding venue"
  • intext:"preferred suppliers" "wedding venue"
  • intext:"recommended florists" "wedding venue"
  • intext:"recommended photographers" "wedding venue"
  • intext:"wedding suppliers" "[city]"
  • intext:"local suppliers" "weddings" "[city]"

For a tourist attraction:

  • intext:"things to do nearby" "[city]"
  • intext:"local attractions" "[city]"
  • intext:"places to visit nearby" "[city]"
  • intext:"visitor information" "[city]"
  • intext:"recommended attractions" "[city]"

The exact wording matters.

Different organisations use different language.

Search for synonyms:

  • nearby
  • local
  • recommended
  • preferred
  • trusted
  • where to stay
  • where to eat
  • visiting
  • visitor information
  • accommodation
  • lodging
  • places to stay
  • places to eat
  • transport
  • taxis
  • getting here
  • getting around
  • suppliers
  • partners

The best types of pages to find

Some page types are especially valuable.

University nearby pages

Universities often have pages for visitors, students, parents, guest speakers, alumni, and conference attendees.

They may list:

  • Hotels
  • Guesthouses
  • Restaurants
  • Transport options
  • Taxis
  • Local attractions
  • Parking
  • Student-friendly services

Example page types:

  • Hotels near campus
  • Visiting campus
  • Accommodation nearby
  • Local area guide
  • Parent weekend information
  • Conference visitor information
  • Travel and transport
  • Where to stay
  • Local restaurants

A university accommodation page can be a great link for a hotel, taxi company, restaurant, or local attraction.


Convention centres and event venues

Large venues attract thousands of visitors.

Those visitors need:

  • Hotels
  • Restaurants
  • Taxis
  • Parking
  • Airport transfers
  • Entertainment
  • Local services

Search for pages like:

  • Plan your visit
  • Nearby hotels
  • Restaurants nearby
  • Where to stay
  • Getting here
  • Local area
  • Visitor guide
  • Recommended partners

Every event that takes place at a convention centre may also have its own visitor information page.

That means the opportunity is not just the venue website.

It is also every conference, trade show, exhibition, concert, festival, or corporate event hosted there.


Hospitals and medical centres

Hospitals often provide practical information for patients and families.

This can include:

  • Nearby hotels
  • Local accommodation
  • Transport options
  • Parking
  • Food nearby
  • Pharmacies
  • Support services

This is especially useful for hotels, taxi companies, restaurants, pharmacies, care services, and local shops.

Be careful with health-related outreach. Keep it practical and respectful.


Museums, theatres and attractions

Visitor-focused organisations often list local recommendations.

They may include:

  • Places to eat
  • Places to stay
  • Nearby attractions
  • Transport options
  • Parking
  • Accessibility information
  • Family-friendly services

Restaurants and hotels can do very well here.


Business parks and corporate campuses

Large business parks and company campuses often have visitor guides.

They may list:

  • Hotels
  • Lunch spots
  • Transport
  • Parking
  • Gyms
  • CafĂ©s
  • Meeting spaces
  • Local amenities

If your business serves office workers, business travellers, or corporate visitors, these pages can be useful.


Wedding venues

Wedding venues are goldmines for local B2C link building.

They may list:

  • Florists
  • Photographers
  • Videographers
  • Caterers
  • Cake makers
  • Hair stylists
  • Makeup artists
  • Hotels
  • Transport companies
  • DJs
  • Bands
  • Wedding planners

Search for:

  • preferred suppliers
  • recommended suppliers
  • trusted partners
  • local wedding suppliers
  • suppliers we love

Some venues only list paid partners. Others are open to adding strong local recommendations.


Tourism boards and visitor guides

Tourism websites naturally link to local businesses.

They may list:

  • Hotels
  • Restaurants
  • Attractions
  • Tours
  • Transport
  • Activities
  • Shops
  • Events
  • Local experiences

Some tourism boards have formal listing processes. Others accept submissions.

These links can be excellent because they are locally relevant and may send real traffic.


Embassies, government offices and institutional visitor pages

Some large institutions publish visitor information pages.

For example, if you are near a major headquarters, public institution, research centre, or government office, they may list nearby services.

If you are near NASA headquarters, for example, visitor information pages may include practical local guidance for people coming to the area.

These are usually not easy links to get, but when the fit is strong, they can be very valuable.


How to qualify prospects

Do not pitch every page you find.

Qualify the opportunities first.

Ask:

Is the page actually relevant?

Would it make sense for your business to be listed there?

A restaurant within walking distance of a venue is relevant.

A restaurant 40 minutes away probably is not.

Does the page already list external businesses?

If the page already links to hotels, restaurants, taxis, suppliers, or local services, that is a good sign.

If it only lists internal resources, your chances are lower.

Is your business genuinely comparable?

If the page lists boutique hotels and you run a budget hostel, maybe it is still relevant. Maybe not.

If the page lists fine dining restaurants and you run a fast-food takeaway, the fit may be weak.

Is the page maintained?

Look for recent dates, updated events, working links, and current information.

Old pages can still work, but maintained pages are better.

Is there a clear contact route?

Look for:

  • Contact email
  • Website manager
  • Event team
  • Visitor services
  • Partnerships team
  • Marketing department
  • Accommodation office
  • Supplier submission form

Can you offer something useful?

Your pitch is stronger if you can offer a specific reason to include you.

Examples:

  • Walking distance from the venue
  • Discount for visitors
  • Late opening hours
  • Group bookings
  • Accessible facilities
  • Airport transfers
  • Student discount
  • Family-friendly rooms
  • Quiet rooms for hospital visitors
  • Vegan menu
  • Private dining
  • Free parking
  • Multilingual service

The more specific the reason, the better.


Create a useful local landing page first

Before outreach, make sure you have a page worth linking to.

For many local businesses, the homepage is fine.

But a dedicated local visitor page can work better.

For example:

  • Hotel near [University Name]
  • Restaurant near [Convention Centre]
  • Taxi service for [Event Venue]
  • Accommodation near [Hospital]
  • Wedding florist near [Venue]
  • Airport transfers to [Business Park]
  • Places to eat near [Museum]

A dedicated page lets you match the prospect’s context.

For example, if you run a hotel near a university, create a page like:

Hotel Near [University Name] for Parents, Alumni and Campus Visitors

Include:

  • Distance to campus
  • Walking/driving time
  • Parking information
  • Public transport options
  • Room types
  • Breakfast details
  • Check-in/check-out times
  • Student parent visit information
  • Graduation weekend information
  • Booking link
  • Contact details

That page is much more relevant to a university visitor page than a generic hotel homepage.


Examples of useful page angles

For hotels

  • Hotel near [University]
  • Accommodation near [Hospital]
  • Hotel near [Convention Centre]
  • Where to stay near [Wedding Venue]
  • Hotel for [Event Name] visitors
  • Family-friendly hotel near [Attraction]
  • Business hotel near [Business Park]

For restaurants

  • Restaurant near [Convention Centre]
  • Places to eat near [Theatre]
  • Lunch near [Business Park]
  • Dinner near [Museum]
  • Group dining near [Event Venue]
  • Restaurant for graduation weekend near [University]
  • Vegan restaurant near [Venue]

For taxi companies

  • Taxi service to [Venue]
  • Airport transfers to [University]
  • Taxi for [Hospital] visitors
  • Private transport for [Wedding Venue]
  • Event taxi service in [City]
  • Transport from [Station] to [Venue]

For wedding suppliers

  • Wedding florist near [Venue]
  • Photographer for weddings at [Venue]
  • Wedding transport near [Venue]
  • Hair and makeup for [Venue] weddings
  • Wedding cake supplier in [Area]

For local attractions

  • Things to do near [Hotel Area]
  • Family activity near [University]
  • Local attraction near [Convention Centre]
  • Group tours for [Event Name] visitors

These pages can also rank in Google, so the benefit is not just link building.


Outreach angle

The outreach should be practical and location-based.

Do not write like an SEO.

Do not say:

We are trying to build links.

Do not say:

Your readers may find our website valuable.

Say something more specific:

I noticed you list hotels near campus. We are a hotel 8 minutes from campus and often host visiting parents and guest lecturers. Would it be useful to include us?

Or:

I noticed your event visitor page lists restaurants nearby. We are a 3-minute walk from the venue and offer group bookings for event attendees.

Or:

I saw you recommend taxi options for visitors. We provide airport transfers to your venue and can offer a fixed rate for your visitors.

That is much stronger.


Outreach template for hotels

Subject: Nearby accommodation for [University/Venue] visitors

Hi [Name],

I noticed your page about accommodation near [University/Venue]:

[Page URL]

I wanted to suggest [Hotel Name] as a possible addition.

We are located [distance/time] from [University/Venue] and regularly host [visiting parents / guest lecturers / conference attendees / event visitors].

Useful details:

  • [Distance from location]
  • [Parking / breakfast / family rooms / group bookings]
  • [Any visitor discount, if available]
  • [Booking/contact page]

Here is the page with more information:

[Your URL]

Would it be useful to include us as an option for visitors?

Best,

[Name]
[Business]


Outreach template for restaurants

Subject: Restaurant near [Venue]

Hi [Name],

I found your visitor page for [Venue/Event]:

[Page URL]

I noticed you list nearby places to eat, so I wanted to suggest [Restaurant Name] as a possible addition.

We are [distance/time] from [Venue] and are a good fit for [event visitors / families / business groups / students / theatre guests].

A few useful details:

  • [Cuisine type]
  • [Walking distance]
  • [Opening hours]
  • [Group booking option]
  • [Dietary options, if relevant]

More information is here:

[Your URL]

Would this be useful for your visitors?

Best,

[Name]
[Restaurant]


Outreach template for taxi companies

Subject: Transport option for [Venue/University] visitors

Hi [Name],

I came across your visitor information page here:

[Page URL]

I noticed it includes transport information for people visiting [Venue/University].

We run [Taxi Company Name], a local taxi/private transfer service covering [area]. We regularly help visitors travel between [airport/station/city centre] and [Venue/University].

Useful details:

  • [Fixed rate or typical route, if available]
  • [Airport/station coverage]
  • [Pre-booking available]
  • [Group vehicles, if relevant]
  • [Operating hours]

More information is here:

[Your URL]

Would it be useful to include us as a local transport option?

Best,

[Name]
[Company]


Outreach template for wedding suppliers

Subject: Local supplier for [Venue] weddings

Hi [Name],

I saw your recommended suppliers page for weddings at [Venue]:

[Page URL]

I wanted to introduce [Business Name]. We provide [service] for weddings in [area] and have experience working with couples getting married at venues like [Venue or similar venue].

You can see examples of our work here:

[Your URL]

If you are open to adding local suppliers to your recommendations, we would love to be considered.

Best,

[Name]
[Business]


Follow-up template

Subject: Re: Local recommendation for [Venue/Area]

Hi [Name],

Just a quick follow-up in case this got buried.

I noticed your page lists local recommendations for [visitors / students / event attendees / wedding couples], and I thought [Business Name] might be a useful addition because we are [specific reason].

Here is the page again:

[Your URL]

No worries if it is not a fit, but happy to provide any details you need.

Best,

[Name]

One follow-up is enough.

Do not annoy people.


Make your pitch stronger with an offer

You do not always need to offer a discount.

But a specific benefit can improve your chances.

Examples:

  • 10% discount for university visitors
  • Fixed airport transfer rate for event attendees
  • Group menu for conference visitors
  • Priority booking for graduation weekend
  • Free dessert for theatre ticket holders
  • Discounted rooms for hospital visitors
  • Wedding venue partner package
  • Student discount
  • Early breakfast for conference guests
  • Late check-in for event visitors
  • Accessible transport option
  • Free cancellation for visiting parents

Make sure the offer is real and easy to explain.

Do not create something complicated.

The offer should help the linking organisation feel that listing you benefits their visitors.


Should you pay to be listed?

Sometimes these pages are editorial. Sometimes they are commercial partner lists.

If a page clearly charges for listings or sponsorships, you need to decide whether it is worth it as advertising.

But this article is about free link building.

So prioritise pages where inclusion is based on usefulness, proximity, quality, or relevance.

Avoid paying just for links.

If you pay, treat it as advertising or partnership exposure, not SEO.


Common mistakes

Mistake 1: Pitching irrelevant businesses

If your business is not actually nearby or useful, do not pitch.

Local relevance matters.

Mistake 2: Sending generic outreach

“Please add our website to your page” is weak.

Mention why your business is relevant to their visitors.

Mistake 3: Only looking for directories

Directories are fine, but the best links often come from institutions, venues, events, universities, hospitals, and local organisations.

Mistake 4: Not creating a relevant landing page

A dedicated page can dramatically improve your chances.

Make the page match the linking context.

Mistake 5: Ignoring real customer value

This tactic is not only about links.

A university hotel page can send bookings. A venue restaurant page can send diners. A hospital accommodation page can send guests.

Think revenue, not just SEO.

Mistake 6: Over-optimising anchor text

Do not ask for keyword-heavy anchor text.

Let them link naturally.

A branded link from a strong local page is enough.

Mistake 7: Not tracking links and relationships

These local organisations can become long-term referral partners.

Track who you contacted and who responded.


How to build a repeatable prospecting system

If you do this for multiple locations or clients, build a database.

Track:

  • City
  • Business type
  • Prospect type
  • Prospect website
  • Relevant page URL
  • Contact person
  • Contact email
  • Notes
  • Pitch angle
  • Status
  • Link acquired
  • Live URL

You can also create prospect categories:

  • Universities
  • Hospitals
  • Convention centres
  • Event venues
  • Wedding venues
  • Museums
  • Theatres
  • Tourist boards
  • Business parks
  • Large employers
  • Local government visitor pages
  • Sports venues
  • Festival websites

Then reuse the process by city and business type.

For example, for every restaurant client, you can search:

  • Nearby convention centres
  • Theatres
  • Hotels
  • Museums
  • Event venues
  • Universities
  • Business parks
  • Tourist guides

For every hotel client, you can search:

  • Universities
  • Hospitals
  • Event venues
  • Wedding venues
  • Business parks
  • Sports venues
  • Festival pages
  • Visitor guides

The tactic becomes faster every time.


Advanced version: event-based local link building

Events create temporary but powerful link opportunities.

Every conference, trade show, wedding fair, festival, sports event, and exhibition attracts visitors.

Those visitors need local businesses.

Search for event pages that include:

  • Where to stay
  • Where to eat
  • Travel information
  • Local transport
  • Visitor guide
  • Recommended hotels
  • Partner restaurants
  • Things to do nearby

Examples:

  • [event name] "where to stay"
  • [event name] "recommended hotels"
  • [event name] "nearby restaurants"
  • [event name] "travel information"
  • [event name] "visitor guide"
  • [event name] "local transport"

This works especially well for:

  • Hotels
  • Restaurants
  • Taxi companies
  • Tour operators
  • Bars
  • Entertainment venues
  • Local attractions

Event links may not last forever, but they can drive real traffic and bookings while they are live.

And some event pages stay online for years.


Advanced version: build local entity relationships

This tactic also helps with local entity SEO.

Google does not only look at your website in isolation.

It tries to understand your business as a local entity.

Links and mentions from nearby institutions can help reinforce:

  • where you are located
  • what you do
  • who you serve
  • which local organisations you are connected to
  • whether you are a real business in the area

A restaurant mentioned by multiple venues, hotels, museums, and tourist guides sends a clear local signal.

A hotel linked by universities, hospitals, event venues, and conference pages sends a clear local signal.

A taxi company listed by airports, hotels, event venues, and business parks sends a clear local signal.

This is why local links can matter even when they are not from massive national websites.

They help connect your business to the local ecosystem.


Business fit

  • [ ] Business serves local customers
  • [ ] Business has a clear service area
  • [ ] Business fits recommendation pages
  • [ ] Business has a strong local landing page
  • [ ] Business has clear contact details
  • [ ] Business can explain why it is useful to visitors

Prospecting

  • [ ] Search for pages listing similar businesses
  • [ ] Search by business type and city
  • [ ] Search nearby universities
  • [ ] Search nearby hospitals
  • [ ] Search nearby convention centres
  • [ ] Search nearby event venues
  • [ ] Search nearby wedding venues
  • [ ] Search nearby museums and theatres
  • [ ] Search tourism and visitor guide websites
  • [ ] Search event-specific visitor pages

Qualification

  • [ ] Page already lists external businesses
  • [ ] Business is genuinely relevant
  • [ ] Business is geographically close enough
  • [ ] Page is maintained
  • [ ] Contact route is available
  • [ ] Listing appears editorial or useful, not purely paid
  • [ ] Pitch angle is clear

Outreach

  • [ ] Email mentions the exact page
  • [ ] Email explains why the business fits
  • [ ] Useful details included
  • [ ] Relevant URL included
  • [ ] Offer or visitor benefit included if available
  • [ ] One follow-up sent
  • [ ] Result tracked

Example campaign flow

Imagine you run SEO for a restaurant in Manchester.

You search:

  • intext:"restaurants nearby" Manchester
  • intext:"places to eat nearby" Manchester
  • intext:"nearby restaurants" "conference" Manchester
  • intext:"where to eat" "Manchester" "venue"
  • intext:"restaurants near" "Manchester" "theatre"
  • intext:"visitor information" "Manchester" "restaurants"

You find:

  • A convention centre visitor page
  • Several event websites
  • A university visitor guide
  • A theatre “where to eat” page
  • A hotel local recommendations page
  • A museum visitor information page
  • A business park amenities page

You qualify the pages.

You create a page on the restaurant website:

Restaurant Near [Venue Name] in Manchester

It includes:

  • Walking distance
  • Opening hours
  • Menu
  • Group booking information
  • Dietary options
  • Directions
  • Contact details

Then you email each relevant site.

Some ignore you.

Some say no.

Some add you.

Those links are locally relevant, useful, and may send real diners.

That is a good campaign.


Final thoughts

High-authority local links are often hiding in plain sight.

Universities list nearby hotels.

Convention centres list nearby restaurants.

Hospitals list accommodation for families.

Wedding venues list suppliers.

Museums list places to eat.

Event websites list transport options.

Tourism boards list local attractions.

Large institutions publish visitor information pages.

If your business belongs on those pages, you have a natural link building angle.

The trick is not to beg for links.

The trick is to find pages where your business is genuinely useful.

Then make the case clearly.

Local link building works best when it mirrors the real world.

If your business serves the visitors, students, patients, guests, tourists, couples, delegates, or customers of a nearby organisation, there may be a link opportunity.

Find the pages.

Create the right local landing page.

Send a human email.

Offer a real reason to include you.

And enjoy the kind of local links your competitors probably never bothered to look for.