You have no budget, no brand recognition, and no existing content.
You also have a product that might be very good and a team that is too busy shipping features to think about SEO.
This is the standard startup position. And it is exactly the wrong moment to ignore link building.
SEO compounds. That is the entire argument.
A startup that builds 20 quality links in year one is not just 20 links ahead of the startup that waits. They are years ahead.
Links earned today contribute to authority that multiplies future rankings. Content indexed today will accumulate links over its lifetime. The domain trust you build now is the moat your competitors cannot quickly replicate later.
The startups that wait until they have "more time" or "more budget" to think about SEO hand that compounding window to competitors. The startups that start early, even with limited resources, arrive at Series A or product-market fit with an SEO foundation their competition has to spend years catching up to.
You do not need a large budget to start. You need a clear strategy and consistent execution.
A Product Hunt launch earns you a followed link from one of the most-linked startup platforms in the world. Beyond that, tech media often covers notable Product Hunt launches. One launch can earn 5–15 links organically.
Other high-value startup directories:
These are not a complete link building strategy. They are the foundation that every new startup should claim immediately.
The founder is the story. Especially early-stage.
Pitch the founder's story to startup media (TechCrunch, Entrepreneur, Fast Company), industry publications relevant to your vertical, and local business media. "Founder builds X to solve Y problem" is a timeless editorial angle.
Frame it around the problem being solved, not the product features. Journalists write about stories. They do not write about feature sets.
One legitimate press placement earns a high-authority link and builds the brand signals that Google uses to verify you are a real entity.
This is the most overlooked easy win for funded startups.
Your VC firm, angel investor, or accelerator almost certainly has a portfolio page. That page lists companies they have invested in — with links. If you have been funded and your link is not on your investor's portfolio page, email them today.
For accelerator programs (Y Combinator, Techstars, 500 Startups, sector-specific programs), the company directory is often a high-authority, high-trust page. A link from YC's company directory is worth more than most guest posts.
Niche bloggers and YouTubers in your category review tools. Reach out and offer free access in exchange for an honest review.
This earns links from relevant, niche sites with real audiences. Even if the DR is modest (DR 20–40), a relevant link from an established niche site is more valuable for topical authority than a high-DR link from an irrelevant site.
Build a list of 20–30 reviewers in your category. Email them with a simple, honest pitch: "We built X, you review tools like this, we'd love your feedback and would be happy to give you full access."
Help a Reporter Out and similar services (Qwoted, Featured.com) are free to use and generate real media placements.
Founders are well-positioned here. You are the expert on your problem space. When a journalist writing about [your industry] needs a founder's perspective, you should be the one they quote.
Set up alerts for your category. Respond quickly — within 1–2 hours when possible. Be specific, data-driven, and direct. Journalists do not use vague, PR-speak quotes.
Our HARO link building guide covers the tactic in full.
"Built with [startup name]" is an underused link acquisition strategy.
Your customers are often businesses or creators with websites. If one of them has achieved a meaningful result using your product, that is a case study. Offer to write it up for them, put it on your site, and ask if they would share it or link to it from their own site.
A testimonial featured on a customer's "tools we use" or "trusted partners" page earns a relevant, contextual link. The larger the customer's site, the more valuable.
This is the long game — it takes 6–12 months to build a speaking profile — but it pays dividends.
Every conference appearance earns a speaker page link. Industry conferences in your vertical often have DR 40–60+ sites. Speaking at 3 conferences per year adds 3 solid, relevant links annually, plus brand exposure to exactly the audience you want.
Start small: local meetups, virtual events, industry webinars. Build your speaker bio. Apply to larger events once you have social proof.
This is as important as the list above.
Every dollar you spend on low-quality links is a dollar you cannot spend on tactics that work. And low-quality links can actively harm you.
You need both. But the order matters.
Content without links does not rank. Links to thin or irrelevant content do not convert to rankings either. They work together.
The practical sequence for a new startup:
If you are a SaaS startup specifically, there are additional tactics worth knowing. See our SaaS link building guide for a deeper look at the nuances of building authority in software.
Every month you wait is a month behind.
The startup that started building links 12 months ago does not have a 12-month advantage in a linear sense. They have a compounding advantage. Their early links have accumulated link equity. Their content has aged into rankings. Their brand signals have strengthened.
You cannot buy your way to that position instantly. But you can start closing the gap today.
We work with early-stage and growth-stage startups building authority from scratch. If you want a strategy that fits your budget and actually compounds over time, we can help.
Get in touch and tell us where you are.