I launched Subilu.com a few months ago. Clean site, tight copy, a product that solves a real legal compliance problem for California businesses. I figured decent content plus a functional product would at least get me indexed and trickling in traffic.
Google had other plans.
My site was invisible. Not "buried on page 3" invisible — genuinely not showing up for anything invisible. So I went down the SEO rabbit hole, and eventually I hit the wall every new site owner eventually hits: Domain Rating.
This post is what I wish I'd read before I launched.
What Is Domain Rating, Actually?
Domain Rating (DR) is a metric invented by Ahrefs. It scores your site's "backlink authority" on a logarithmic scale from 0 to 100 — and the logarithmic part is important. Going from DR 0 → 10 takes weeks. Going from DR 60 → 70 takes years.
It's not a Google metric directly. Google has its own internal PageRank. But DR correlates strongly enough with actual ranking ability that the SEO community treats it as a reliable proxy.
The blunt version: DR is Google's trust signal, approximated. A site with DR 50 and mediocre content will consistently outrank a DR 3 site with genuinely better content for competitive keywords. The established site earned that trust through years of backlinks. You haven't. That's the wall.
The "Gatekeeper" mental model
Think of DR as a bouncer outside a club. Your content is your outfit. But if you're not on the list (above a certain DR threshold for a given keyword's competition level), the bouncer doesn't care how good your outfit is. You're not getting in.
For competitive keywords — think "workplace violence prevention software" or "SB 553 compliance" — that list starts around DR 40-50+. New sites don't play in that arena yet.
The escape route: find the door with no bouncer. Long-tail, low-competition keywords where you can rank even at DR 0-10. Then build from there.
A 5-Step Plan to Actually Improve Domain Rating
This isn't theory. It's the exact sequence I'm running for Subilu right now.
Step 1: Get Your Technical House in Order
Before building backlinks, make sure Google can actually crawl and index you cleanly. Broken backlinks pointing to 404s are wasted DR equity.
Checklist:
- Submit your sitemap to Google Search Console (free, non-negotiable)
- Verify there are no crawl errors or noindex tags on pages you want ranked
- Make sure your site loads under 2s on mobile — use PageSpeed Insights
- Check that every page you care about is actually indexed:
site:yourdomain.comin Google
For Subilu, this meant cleaning up a couple of orphaned routes from early development and making sure the compliance checklist landing page was properly linked in the sitemap.
Step 2: Find 100 Low-Competition Keywords You Can Actually Win
Stop targeting head terms. You will lose. Instead, go long-tail and transactional.
My research process:
- Type your main topic into Google and screenshot every autocomplete suggestion
- Open 5-10 of the top results and steal their "People Also Ask" questions
- Run those phrases through Ahrefs' free keyword checker or Ubersuggest to confirm low KD (Keyword Difficulty < 20)
Real Subilu examples:
Instead of targeting SB 553 compliance (KD: high, we'd get crushed), I'm targeting:
-
SB 553 annual training log template→ informational, zero competition -
Cal/OSHA workplace violence prevention plan healthcare→ niche, specific -
workplace violence incident log California→ transactional, low volume but high intent
Low volume isn't a problem when you're at DR 0. Fifty visitors a month who are actively looking for what you sell beats ten thousand visitors who aren't.
Step 3: Create One Genuinely Linkable Asset
Blog posts don't get links. Tools, templates, data, and calculators do.
Your linkable asset is the one piece of content you'd bookmark yourself if you found it. Something so useful that HR consultants share it in Slack channels, or a compliance blogger links to it as a resource.
For Subilu, I built a free SB 553 compliance checklist PDF — the exact document a small business owner needs to walk through their Cal/OSHA obligations. It's not a lead-gen trap. It's genuinely useful. That's the point.
Other linkable asset formats that work well:
- Interactive calculators (e.g., "What's your SB 553 fine risk?")
- Data visualizations from public datasets (Cal/OSHA inspection records, for instance)
- Templates in popular formats (Google Docs, Notion, PDF)
- Definitive guides that are 10x more complete than what currently ranks
Step 4: Build Links Like a Human, Not a Bot
This is where most founders go wrong. They either buy spammy links (Google penalizes this) or do nothing and wait for organic links that never come.
The middle path: deliberately earn a small number of high-quality, relevant links.
Three tactics I'm actively using for Subilu:
1. Platform content with natural backlinks
Posts like this one. I write genuinely useful dev/startup content on dev.to, link back to a resource on Subilu (not just the homepage — a specific useful page). The link has to make sense in context, or it looks spammy.
2. Relevant directory submissions
HR software directories, California small business resource lists, startup databases (Product Hunt, BetaList, etc.). These are DR 30-60 domains giving you a free link. Not game-changing alone, but they add up and establish credibility with Google fast.
3. Targeted guest posts
Find 5 small blogs in the HR/compliance/California business space. Offer them a genuinely useful, non-promotional post. The pitch: "I'll write 800 words on [topic your audience cares about], no promotion, just a byline link." Most small blogs are starved for quality content.
Step 5: Measure Progress, Not the Number
DR is a lagging indicator. Checking it weekly will make you feel like nothing is working. Instead, track these leading indicators:
| Metric | Where to Check | What It Tells You |
|---|---|---|
| Indexed pages | Google Search Console → Coverage | Google is discovering your content |
| Impressions | GSC → Performance | You're appearing in SERPs (even if not clicking) |
| Referring domains | Ahrefs free / Moz | Your link-building is actually landing |
| Clicks | GSC → Performance | You're winning relevant traffic |
DR increase is the result of these things going right. Focus on the inputs.
The Subilu.com Case Study (Honest Numbers)
Current state as of writing this:
- DR: 0 (just got the first few backlinks via directory submissions)
- Indexed pages: 8
- Impressions (last 28 days): ~40
- Clicks: 2
That's a humbling dashboard. But the impressions are on the right keywords, which means the content is at least being surfaced. The goal for month 3 is to have a linkable asset (the checklist) earning its first organic backlinks — even if just 2-3 from small HR blogs.
I'm documenting this publicly because I think the "from zero" journey is more useful to most founders than the "here's how I scaled to DR 60" retrospectives. If you're in the same spot — fresh domain, no authority, staring at a flat GSC dashboard — know that the strategy above is what I'm betting on.
The Honest Conclusion
Domain Rating is a marathon framed as a sprint by every SEO blog with something to sell you.
The actual path is boring: fix your technical foundation, target keywords you can win, build one genuinely useful resource, earn links through legitimate content and outreach, and then wait 6-12 months while watching the leading indicators creep upward.
There's no shortcut that doesn't risk a Google penalty. The sites that look like they cheated the system usually burned a starter domain to do it, then redirected the equity to a clean domain — a technique that's getting harder to pull off.
If you're building something real, build the authority the slow way. It compounds.
Have you navigated the DR 0 → 10 climb? What was your first backlink that actually moved the needle? Drop it in the comments — I'm collecting real tactics, not theory.
If you're curious about the product I'm building, Subilu is a compliance SaaS helping California businesses meet their SB 553 workplace violence prevention obligations. The free checklist I mentioned is live on the site if you want to see what a "linkable asset" looks like in practice.
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