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This makes sense, because Sistrix has been perfecting its organic visibility metric for more than ten years, and in fact it is the star of its SEO data arsenal. While Ahrefs started as a tool to analyze backlinks and the topic of analyzing organic traffic has always been in second place. Although I must say that over time they are improving a lot in this aspect. My experience is that when Sistrix has the keywords in its database, it estimates traffic better than Ahrefs. In any case, if you have a good knowledge of the niche or have enough real traffic data for your own project, before deciding whether or not to trust Sistrix or Ahrefs data you can compare some of their estimates with real figures in your niche.
. said for Ahrefs in this section also applies to Semrush. Their keyword database Chinese American Phone Number List is undoubtedly larger than Sistrix's but my experience so far is that Sistrix estimates the overall organic traffic of a domain better than Semrus. And for a page with traffic coming from keywords that are in the Sistrix database, it also seems to fit more than Semrush. But nevertheless, in this section Semrush is not behind its competitors, unlike what happened in backlink analysis. How to really estimate the strength of a link? I apologize if with all this data on metrics I have ended up making you dizzy, rather than clarifying things for you.
Knowing all this data at our disposal, and the pros and cons of each metric, how can we establish an easy and reliable process to guide our link building strategy? I summarize it in 3 steps: 1. Never rely on the metrics that pass you through your own sites, purchasing platforms or exchange of links. Go to the sources, get your own data and which are the most updated possible 2. Whenever you can, combine a “strength” or authority metric of a link, such as PA, UR or CF / TF, with another organic traffic metric, whether Sistrix, Ahrefs or Semrush 3.
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