Author
Bart Magera
Bart Magera is the founder of Mojo Links. Ten years across YMYL verticals (legal, medical, finance, supplements, crypto, gambling). Trained under Koray Tuğberk Gübür's Topical Authority framework. Author of two SEO books and international speaker.
85 published posts

Link Building Services Australia: How I Earn Links for Australian Brands
Australian brands compete in a search market with its own publishers, its own directories, and its own rules about who even qualifies for a domain. I have run link campaigns for Australian clients, including a Sydney online law firm. Here is how link building works here, what it costs, and how to choose someone to run it.

Benefits of Link Building: The Outcomes I Track on Client Campaigns
A client once asked me to justify a link building invoice to their CFO. He did not care about domain rating, he cared about what the spend returned. So I stopped pitching benefits and started reporting outcomes: what link building changes on a campaign, how I measure each effect, and how long each one takes to show.

SEO Silos and Topical Authority: What Works in 2026
The SEO silo debate is stuck between two wrong answers: silos are dead, or silos are everything. The truth is in the middle. The principle still works, the rigid 2005 execution does not, and done right a silo is how you build topical authority. Here is what changed.

Link Sculpting: What Died in 2009 and What Replaced It
Most posts on link sculpting are still arguing about a tactic Google switched off in 2009. The nofollow trick is dead. The discipline behind it, directing your site's authority to the pages that earn, matters more than ever. Here is what changed and what to do now.

Restaurant SEO: How Restaurants Get Found and Fill Tables
Most restaurant customers decide in the map pack, the reviews, and the photos, often without ever visiting the website. Restaurant SEO is the work of winning those moments, and it starts with a menu Google can actually read. Here is how it works.

SaaS SEO: How To Rank The Pages That Actually Convert
Most SaaS SEO pours budget into blog traffic that ranks but never signs up. The win is product-led and bottom-up: rank the comparison, alternatives, and use-case pages first, then build topical authority and the links a high-authority SaaS market demands. Here is how it works.

