If your traffic dropped after one of Google’s 2024–2025 core updates, you’re not alone. The March and June updates in particular left thousands of websites scrambling. Rankings disappeared overnight. Pages that once owned the SERP were buried. In most cases, the culprit wasn’t content quality — it was backlinks.

Not toxic ones, necessarily. Just… stale ones. Irrelevant, low-engagement, context-free links that no longer pass the trust filters Google now expects.

In this new environment, simply removing bad links isn’t enough. Rebuilding your backlink profile — actively earning new, editorial, behaviorally strong links — may be your best and only way to recover.

Why Backlinks Still Matter — But Differently

Let’s be clear: Google still values links. But not like it used to.

In a 2024 documentation leak, SEOs uncovered internal systems like anchorMismatchDemotion and sourceFocusScore — indicators that Google is analyzing links semantically and behaviorally, not just structurally.

And in 2025, Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines and core updates now suggest that links only matter when they reflect editorial intentrelevance, and engagement.

Gary Illyes said it plainly at PubCon Europe:

“You can rank without backlinks, but that’s rare. The right links still matter.”

In other words: not all links are dead. Just the ones you haven’t earned.

Post-Update Fallout: When Disavow Isn’t Enough

For many sites hit in the last two updates, the go-to reaction has been link pruning:

  • Identify low-quality domains
  • Disavow with GSC
  • Wait

But for most, waiting hasn’t worked.

Take the example of a mid-sized eCommerce brand in the beauty space. They disavowed 2,300 links from expired blogs, foreign press releases, and sidebar embeds after being hit by the March core update. Traffic continued to fall for 2 months.

Then they shifted:

  • Published 3 data-backed blog posts
  • Earned 27 new referring domains via outreach
  • Picked up 3 Reddit citations and 1 mention in a YouTube video description

Result:
+38% recovery in 6 weeks.
That’s the difference between pruning and rebuilding.

What Google Now Considers a “Quality” Link

In 2025, here’s what makes a backlink earn its weight:

Signal Description
Editorial placement Manually placed, not auto-generated
Contextual relevance Appears within topic-aligned paragraphs
Anchor clarity Matches the content it points to (semantic intent)
Behavioral data Users click and stay on the destination
Source EEAT Comes from a trustworthy, niche-relevant site

These links don’t just help in rankings — they also feed Generative Link Presence, influencing inclusion in AI Overviews and ChatGPT responses.

Rebuilding: Step-by-Step

Here’s what an effective backlink rebuild process looks like in 2025:

1. Audit
Use Ahrefs or Semrush to isolate links from PBNs, old guest posts, directories, and irrelevant language sites.

2. Disavow with Precision
Don’t nuke all low DR links. Check context before disavowing. Some DR 20 links from Reddit are more powerful than DR 80 from empty link farms.

3. Identify Link-Worthy Assets
Create or update evergreen pages, statistic-driven articles, or tools that naturally attract links. Think in terms of LLM Meta Answers and Prompt-Based SERP Capture.

4. Pitch via Outreach & Community
Use platforms like HARO, Terkel, and niche newsletters. Post answers on Reddit or Quora. Embed links into discussion, not just bios — that’s Backlink Infusion.

5. Monitor Behavior, Not Just Quantity
Track clicks, dwell time, and bounce via GSC and Hotjar. Good links lead to sticky engagement.

Case Study: SaaS Recovery via Rebuild

A SaaS company in the time-tracking niche saw a 55% traffic dip after the Helpful Content Update. They tried updating old posts and disavowing 1,000+ links. No bounce.

Then, they rebuilt:

  • Created a remote work salary tool
  • Promoted it via Twitter, email, and subreddit posts
  • Earned links from 9 industry blogs and 2 HR platforms
  • Added schema, TL;DRs, and internal anchors

Results:

  • ChatGPT browsing mode started citing the brand
  • Featured in AI Overviews within 45 days
  • Organic traffic rebounded +61%

Rebuilding didn’t just restore rankings — it rebuilt trust.

What Not to Do

Still trying these? Stop. They don’t work in 2025:

  • Swapping “spammy” links for guest post farm links
  • Injecting anchors into old pages via paid link brokers
  • Overusing “contextual” links in content you don’t control
  • Blindly targeting DR thresholds

Barry Schwartz wrote in 2024:

“What’s changed isn’t whether links matter — it’s whether Google believes them.”

The LLM Factor: Why Rebuilding Helps AI Visibility Too

Google’s not the only one watching your links.

ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity now rely on contextual links and citations to include sources in generative answers. If your brand isn’t referenced organically — in Reddit, blogrolls, glossaries, or YouTube transcripts — you may vanish from AI outputs.

Rebuilding smartly reinforces:

  • LLM Oriented Backlinking
  • Generative Brand Density
  • Answer Equity across AI surfaces

Final Checklist: Rebuild vs. Disavow

Action Disavow-Only Rebuild Strategy
Removes penalty risk
Earns new trust signals
Supports AI inclusion
Builds EEAT and citations
Improves CTR and dwell time

Final Thought

Rebuilding your backlink profile isn’t just a recovery tactic. In 2025, it’s a strategic reboot — one that aligns with how Google (and AI systems) measure trust.

So, if your site has been hit and your content is solid, the issue might not be what’s on the page… but what’s pointing to it.

And in that case, the smartest thing you can do — is start rebuilding. Not blindly. Not desperately. But deliberately, with relevance, intent, and structure.

Because now more than ever, earned trust is the only kind that counts.

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Olivia is a contributing writer at CEOColumn.com, where she explores leadership strategies, business innovation, and entrepreneurial insights shaping today’s corporate world. With a background in business journalism and a passion for executive storytelling, Olivia delivers sharp, thought-provoking content that inspires CEOs, founders, and aspiring leaders alike. When she’s not writing, Olivia enjoys analyzing emerging business trends and mentoring young professionals in the startup ecosystem.

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