Spearleaf · Position Zero Playbook v10 · 2026-06-16 Start here Changelog
Strategy

Off-Page, Multi-Channel Links & Referring Domains

Referring-domain count as the cheapest lever, tier linking rebranded, link your social profiles, diversify off organic.

On this page

This page synthesizes where multiple experts at the 2026 conference independently converged: off-page is no longer a backlink-count game, it is brand presence across every channel Google and AI answers read. Use it as your off-page operating thesis. Diversify the domains pointing at you, diversify where humans find you, and stop betting the business on organic alone.

At the 2026 SEO Spring Training, off-page stopped being "build backlinks" and became "be present, as a brand, across every channel Google reads." Three sessions converged on the same reframe from different angles: Ted Kubaitis treated referring domains as a multi-channel signal Google accidentally hands you through Search Console; the Day 2 wrap-up panel (Clint Butler, Ted Ives, Brian William) treated referring-domain quantity as the cheapest, fastest lever for most sites and wrapped it in a tier-linking system; and Brian Kato (with Dan Kurtz on the ad-channel side) treated link building as brand saturation across the whole surface area of the web and AI answers. Whether you call it a link profile, a channel mix, or "share of voice," the 2026 thesis was the same: diversify the domains pointing at you, diversify where humans find you, and stop betting the business on organic alone.

The through-line

The ideas multiple speakers independently landed on:

  1. Referring-domain count beats backlink quality for most sites, and it is the cheapest lever. Ted Ives (Day 2 wrap-up) argued PageRank is logarithmic, so a quality-only profile is a small-site scheme that does not scale; referring-domain count is the smallest, cheapest, safest, fastest metric to move and it wins a keyword about 80% of the time when on-page is sound. Ted Kubaitis (Day 3) made the same bet from e-commerce: roughly 25 referring domains per product is what he found you need to beat an Amazon product page (because most Amazon product pages carry zero external backlinks). Brian Kato (Day 2) restated it as "surface area expansion," where 50 mentions are a signal and 500 are dominance, volume over the strength of any one page.

  2. Off-page is now multi-channel, and the link profile is the connective tissue. Ted Kubaitis framed social, video, news, PR, and local as channels Google reads through your link profile, and said other speakers at the event raised the same point. Brian Kato's "distribution over destination" pillar says the same thing: the site converts, everywhere else (Reddit, social, YouTube, video, events, PR) is where discovery happens, and you measure calls and revenue, not one strong page. Both treat the job as being present everywhere rather than ranking a single URL.

  3. Tier linking is alive and was independently rebranded by two speakers. Clint Butler (Day 2 wrap-up) walked a literal five-tier diagram with a relevance gradient. Brian Kato independently arrived at "link fortification": get published on a high-profile third-party site, then build links to that placement and to your own social profiles. Brian's own punchline ("we're fortifying, guys") is tier linking by another name, and both stress building links to assets you do not own outright.

  4. Build links to your own brand and social profiles, not just your money pages. Ted Kubaitis listed DIY social/video links (YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Vimeo) as a cluster most sites are missing. Brian Kato made the same observation, that few people put their own Twitter/YouTube into Majestic or Ahrefs and build links to those profiles, and called it a missed brand-reinforcement opportunity. Both treat owned social profiles as link targets, not just publishing channels.

  5. Diversify off organic or get wiped out. Ted Kubaitis closed on a revenue mix (roughly 50% email, 25% social, plus PPC, organic around 15% at its height) and warned that if organic is about 60% of revenue, all your eggs are in one basket. Brian Kato (rank tracking is obsolete, brand share of voice and revenue are the real metrics) and Dan Kurtz (paid In-Page Push as a converting channel that gets phones ringing fast) are the same argument from the demand-generation side: do not depend on free organic traffic that Google can throttle.

  6. Referring domains betray a location, so the link profile is also a local play. Ted Kubaitis showed that a real backlink profile reveals its city (his example footprint was unmistakably Seattle), and that you can push it down to the neighborhood level with one-pager neighborhood domains. Brian Kato's geo-grid build (23 Boston neighborhoods, 80 keywords) and co-occurrence engineering (binding the brand to a city and an event) are the same instinct, that off-page signals carry geography.

Tactics & playbook

Concrete, do-this items pulled from the talks:

Tensions & disagreements

Where the speakers honestly contradicted one another:

Sources (conference sessions)

Conference session references, not pages on this site:

Connect it to your system

This theme overlaps the existing Spearleaf off-page system directly. Map the talks onto these pages: