⌚ 9 min read · 2,104 words
You land a placement in the Express. You check the next morning, and the same article — word for word — is live on the Mirror, Daily Star, Wales Online, and four other sites. Your link report just went from 1 to 8.
“Syndicated links aren’t worthless. But they’re worth dramatically less than independently earned editorial links from publications that chose to cover your story.”
— Salva Jovells, Presslei
Feels great. But does it actually do anything for SEO?
I’ve spent months digging through 5,272 PR placements across dozens of campaigns. Syndicated links show up constantly in the data. They inflate reports, confuse clients, and start arguments in Slack channels. So I decided to figure out what’s actually going on.
What Are Syndicated Links?
Syndication happens when one outlet publishes a story and partner or regional sites automatically republish it — same headline, same body, same links. No journalist at the second site touched it. No editor approved it individually. It’s a content-sharing agreement between properties, usually within the same media group.
The most visible example in the UK is Reach PLC. They own the Express, Mirror, Daily Star, Manchester Evening News, Liverpool Echo, Wales Online, Birmingham Live, and dozens of regional titles. A story placed on one Reach title frequently appears across five to fifteen others within hours.
Other networks do this too. Newsquest syndicates across local papers. In the US, Gannett properties share content across hundreds of local domains. It’s standard practice in modern publishing — and it’s been happening long before digital PR existed.
The Debate: Do Syndicated Links Count?
Ask five SEOs and you’ll get six opinions. The arguments break down like this.
The “yes, they help” camp says:
- Google sees multiple referring domains pointing to your site
- Each syndicated domain has its own authority and trust signals
- More links from more domains generally correlates with higher rankings
The “no, they’re worthless” camp says:
- Google can identify syndicated content and likely consolidates the signal
- The links are identical (same anchor, same context), which looks unnatural at scale
- Google’s patent filings suggest they can detect and discount duplicate content links
What I actually think, based on the data: the truth is boringly moderate. Syndicated links aren’t worthless, but they’re not worth what most agencies report them as.
What 5,272 Placements Showed Us
When I started analysing our placement data, syndication patterns jumped out immediately. Here’s what the numbers look like.
The “One Placement, Many Links” Phenomenon
Across the dataset, roughly 30–35% of placements showed clear syndication patterns — the same story, same URL structure in the link, appearing across multiple domains within 24 to 48 hours. In some cases, a single successful pitch resulted in 10 or more live links.
Reach PLC titles were the biggest syndicators by far. A story placed with Express.co.uk (our second most-linked domain with 312 placements) frequently appeared across:
- Mirror.co.uk
- Daily Star
- Wales Online
- Manchester Evening News
- Birmingham Live
- Liverpool Echo
- Bristol Post
- Nottinghamshire Live
- Leeds Live
That’s one editorial decision creating links across ten domains. It looks incredible in a report. But it was one placement.
Are Syndicated Links Nofollow or Dofollow?
This varies by network and there’s no universal rule. In the data:
- Reach PLC titles mostly carry dofollow links in syndicated content, though this has shifted over time and varies by title
- Newsquest properties tend to be more inconsistent — some dofollow, some nofollow on the same story
- US networks (Gannett, Tribune) lean heavily nofollow on syndicated content
- Wire services (PA Media, AP) — when a story moves on the wire, the links often get stripped entirely
Key takeaway: Don’t assume. Check each syndicated instance individually. I’ve seen the same story carry a dofollow link on one regional title and a nofollow on another within the same network.
Domain Authority Distribution
Here’s an interesting pattern. The original placement tends to land on the higher-authority domain (the Express, the Mirror). The syndicated copies go to lower-authority regional titles. So the link that probably carries the most weight is the one you actually earned. The syndicated copies are on domains with less authority.
This matters when you’re doing honest KPI reporting. Counting 12 links when you earned 1 original placement misrepresents your work — and it sets expectations you can’t consistently meet.
How to Identify Syndicated vs. Original Placements
After tracking thousands of placements, here are the clearest signals:
- Timing. The original publishes first. Syndicated copies appear hours later, sometimes the next day. If five links show up within a 2-hour window, they’re syndicated.
- Identical content. Same headline, same body text, same embedded links. No editorial changes. If a journalist at the second site rewrote the intro or added local context, that’s a genuine pickup — not syndication.
- Same media group. Check ownership. Reach, Newsquest, Gannett, JPI Media — if the domains share a parent company, syndication is likely.
- URL patterns. Some networks use similar URL structures or CMS slugs across titles. The path might be identical even though the domain differs.
- Byline. Syndicated stories usually carry the original journalist’s byline. If you see the same byline on a regional title where that journalist doesn’t work, it’s syndicated.
- No unique social promotion. The original outlet will usually tweet or share the story. Syndicated copies rarely get their own social push.
The Syndication Tracker
If you’re running digital PR campaigns and want honest reporting, use a simple tracker to separate original placements from syndicated ones. Here’s the template:
Track three numbers separately:
- Original placements earned — the real measure of your PR work
- Total live links (including syndicated) — useful for the full picture
- Dofollow vs. nofollow split — because not all syndicated links carry the same weight
This is how we report at Presslei. Clients get both numbers. They see the 3 placements we actually earned and the 14 total links that resulted. Transparency builds trust, and trust keeps clients longer than inflated numbers ever will.
Should You Target Syndication-Heavy Outlets?
There’s a strategic question here. If you know Reach PLC syndicates aggressively, should you prioritise pitching Express or Mirror to maximise total link count?
My take: yes, but not because of the syndicated links themselves.
Reach titles are worth pitching because they have large audiences, strong domain authority, and journalists who are actively looking for reactive PR stories. The syndication is a bonus. It’s not the strategy.
If you optimise purely for syndication volume, you’ll end up chasing outlets based on their content-sharing agreements rather than their editorial relevance to your story. That’s backwards. A single, relevant placement on an industry-specific site that your target audience actually reads will outperform ten syndicated links on regional news sites that nobody in your niche visits.
This is the same principle behind understanding the difference between digital PR and link building. Links are an outcome, not the objective. The objective is reaching the right audience with a story worth telling.
What About Google’s Perspective?
Google has never made an explicit public statement about how they handle syndicated links. But we can infer from their behaviour:
- Canonical signals. Google identifies duplicate content and consolidates ranking signals toward the canonical URL. It’s reasonable to assume they do something similar with links from syndicated content.
- Link spam updates. Recent algorithm updates have targeted manipulative link patterns. Syndicated links aren’t manipulative — they’re a natural byproduct of how publishing works — but Google has the technology to identify and weight them accordingly.
- Diminishing returns. Even if each syndicated link passes some value, the tenth link from the same story on the same network almost certainly passes less value than the first.
None of this means syndicated links are worthless. It means they’re probably not worth as much as ten independent editorial decisions to link to your content.
DO
- Evaluate each syndicated link individually for domain authority
- Keep syndicated links from legitimate news aggregators
- Monitor syndicated coverage for brand mention accuracy
- Track which syndicated sources send actual referral traffic
- Include syndicated placements in your overall link profile analysis
DON’T
- Blanket-disavow all syndicated links without evaluation
- Count syndicated links as equivalent to original editorial placements
- Pay for syndicated distribution as a PR strategy
- Report syndicated reach numbers as unique audience figures
- Ignore syndicated links entirely in your backlink audit
Frequently Asked Questions
Do syndicated links pass PageRank?
Likely less than original editorial links. Google’s systems can identify duplicate/syndicated content and typically attribute canonical authority to the original source. Syndicated copies may pass some value, but it’s diminished.
Should I disavow syndicated links?
No. Syndicated links from legitimate news networks are natural and expected. Google understands syndication. Disavowing them would be unnecessary and potentially counterproductive.
The Bottom Line
Syndicated links are a bonus, not a strategy.
Here’s the honest summary from 5,272 placements:
- They exist and they’re common. About a third of placements in our data involved some level of syndication.
- They probably pass some SEO value, but less than an equivalent number of independently earned links.
- They vary in follow status. Don’t assume — verify each one.
- They inflate reports if you’re not tracking originals separately.
- They’re not something you “do.” You earn the original placement. Syndication happens or it doesn’t.
Focus your energy on earning placements that matter — stories with real data, genuine news angles, and relevance to publications your audience reads. If those placements happen to syndicate across a media network, great. Count them honestly, report them transparently, and move on to the next pitch.
If you want to see how we approach campaign costs and real-world results, those breakdowns are worth a read. The best PR work doesn’t need inflated link counts to look impressive.
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Salva Jovells is the founder of Presslei, a reactive PR agency based in Zurich. The data referenced in this post comes from an analysis of 5,272 PR placements — the full breakdown is available in our placements analysis.
About the Author
Salva Jovells
Founder of Presslei. 12+ years in ecommerce SEO across international markets. After a decade of link buying for Hockerty and Sumissura, I reverse-engineered 5,272 earned media placements and founded a reactive PR agency that builds authority through data-driven stories journalists actually want to publish. Based in Zurich.
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