HomeBlogCase StudiesComparative Case Study: Multilingual Sports Betting/Affiliates Sites in Tier 2 Markets

Comparative Case Study: Multilingual Sports Betting/Affiliates Sites in Tier 2 Markets

comperative case study for backlinks strategy on 2 sports affiliate websites

This dual case study compares link building strategies for two multilingual sports betting sites – one brand new, the other established – targeting Tier 2 markets.

  • New Site (0 to 1K Pages): Slow, homepage-focused links (2-3/month) + gradual multilingual trust-building led to stable growth in 8+ months.

  • Established Site (1.4K to 4.1K Pages): Slightly more aggressive homepage link building (8-10/month) + pillar page boosts drove immediate traffic spikes (3.6K peak).

Key insights? New sites need patience; established sites thrive on speed. Both demand geo-precise links, smart anchor ratios, and pillar page leverage.

Overview

Two multilingual programmatic sites targeting Tier 2 markets with identical structures but different starting points:

New Site
Established Site
Age
Brand new domain (0 organic pages)
Existing rankings (1,451 organic pages)
Strategy
Homepage-heavy, gradual buildup
Slightly aggressive internal page link building
Homepage Links
1-2
8-10
Guest Posts/Month
2-3
4-5
Results Timeline
3-6 months for traction
Immediate improvements (see graph spikes)

Case Study 1: The New Site

The Challenge

  • Zero existing authority in high-competitive niche
  • Needed to establish multilingual trust signals
  • Risk of sandbox effect in Tier 2 markets

Our Phase-Based Strategy

Months 1-3:

  • Focused on guest posts (70% of links)
  • Built 2-3 homepage links/month with:
    – 50% brand anchors
    – 15% naked URLs (“example.com“)
    – 35% keyword variations

Months 4+:

  • Shifted to 50% homepage links
  • Added pillar page links (juice distribution)
  • Strict language/country pairing (e.g., .pt links → .pt content)

The Results

Ahrefs Graph Showing Gradual Climb from 0 to 1.0K Organic Pages Over 12 months

Gradual climb from 0 to 1.0K organic pages over 12 months:

  • 1.0K+ organic pages indexed
  • Stable traffic levels after 8 months of phased link building
  • Stable rankings across all language versions

Case Study 2: The Established Site

The Advantage

  • Already had 1,451 organic pages ranking
  • Existing international backlink profile

Our Approach

  1. Homepage Priority (60% of links):
    – 1-2 homepage links/week (vs. 1-2/month for site from Case Study 1)
    – Brand anchors for trust consolidation
  2. Pillar Page Optimization:
    – 
    Links to pages with extensive internal links
    – 
    Result: 4.1K organic pages
  3. Multilingual Leverage:
    Used existing links to boost commercial pages

The Results

Ahrefs Graph Showing Organic Pages Growth

Sharp spikes correlating with homepage link campaigns

  • 4.1K organic pages (vs. 1.0K for Case Study 1)
  • 3.6K peak traffic vs. gradual growth for Case Study 1
  • Faster ROI: First improvements in <30 days

Key Comparative Insights

What Worked for Both

✅ Pillar Page Links: both sites benefited from strategic internal linking
✅ Language Matching: strict geo-linking prevented ranking dilution
✅ Maintained Natural Profile with:

  • 50% brand anchors
  • 15% naked URLs (“example.com“)
  • 35% keyword variations

✅ Gradual Velocity Increase: both sites scaled link building slowly (site from Case Study 1) or in focused bursts (site from Case Study 2)

Critical Differences

New Site
Established Site
Homepage Links
Slow drip (2/month)
Flood (8-10/month)
Commercial Terms
Avoided Year 1
Prioritized immediately
Link Velocity
3-5/month
10-15/month

Lessons Learned

  1. New Sites Need Patience:
    – Site from Case Study 1 took 6x longer to show results
  2. Established Sites Crave Homepage Links:
    – Site from Case Study 2’s 60% homepage links drove 80% of growth
  3. Pillar Pages Are Force Multipliers:
    1 pillar page link = 3x impact of normal internal links

Final Takeaway

These twins reveal how link building must adapt to site maturity. New sites thrive on gradual homepage authority, while established sites demand a more aggressive internal linking – both guided by pillar pages and geo-linking precision.