Most people start a PBN backwards. They find a decent expired domain, buy it, spin up a WordPress install, and then ask themselves what the network is actually supposed to do.
That's how you end up with a messy, inconsistent network that underperforms. Not because the domains are bad, but because there was no plan behind them.
Before you buy a single domain, build a single site, or write a single post, you need to answer five questions. Everything else follows from them.
1. What Is the PBN Actually For?
That question may sound obvious, but it isn't.
There are meaningfully different use cases for a PBN, and each one changes how you should build it:
Ranking one money site. Your entire network exists to push a single site up in the SERPs. This is the most common use case, and it calls for a focused network. Topically tight, linking with intention, probably smaller in size but higher in domain quality.
Ranking multiple money sites or clients. You're building a link asset that serves several targets. Now you need more scale: a larger network with broader topical coverage and stricter operational separation. This helps ensure that links going to different clients don't create obvious patterns of shared ownership.
Selling links from the network. The PBN itself is the product. You're monetizing placements. This changes your content strategy entirely: you need sites that look legitimate to potential buyers.
Building and selling PBN sites. You're creating properties to flip. Domain quality and the credibility of the built-out site matter more than any linking strategy.
Define this before anything else. The answer shapes every decision that follows.
2. What does success look like in measurable terms?
"Rank higher" is not a goal; it's a direction. Success isn't "getting better rankings." Success is achieving a specific outcome you defined before you started building the network.
For example:
- Moving a target page from position 18 to the top 10.
- Breaking into the top 5 for a high-value keyword.
- Increasing organic traffic to a key commercial page by 30%.
The important part is that the goal is measurable. Before you invest in building a network, you should know:
- Which pages are you trying to rank?
- Which keywords matter most?
- Where those pages rank today.
- What ranking or traffic improvement would constitute a win?
- How long are you willing to wait before evaluating results?
Without clear targets, it's impossible to judge whether the network is delivering a return on the time and money invested. You'll see movement in rankings, but you won't know whether you've succeeded, failed, or simply haven't done enough yet.
Define success first. Then build the network around achieving it.
3. How Many Sites Do You Actually Need?
A bigger network is not automatically better. More sites mean higher costs and more maintenance. They also increase the chances of something slipping through the cracks.
The right network size depends on:
Competitive gap. Pull the backlink profiles of the top 3-5 ranking pages for your target keywords. How many referring domains do they have? What's the average quality of those links? The gap between where you are and where they are gives you a rough sense of the link volume you need to close.
Budget. More domains don't automatically mean better results. If your budget is limited, focus on building fewer, better sites. A smaller network with strong domains and good content will usually outperform a larger network built on compromises.
Topical coverage. If your money site covers many distinct niches, your PBN may need to reflect that. A link from a topically irrelevant domain is weaker than one from a closely related site. Map your target pages to the topics your PBN sites would need to cover.
A reasonable starting point for most operators: 10-15 sites, built properly, with real content and quality domains. Get that working before you expand.
4. What Is Your Topical Architecture?
This is the planning step most people skip entirely, and it's where a lot of PBN value gets left on the table.
Your PBN shouldn't be a random collection of domains. The sites in your network should cover topics that are closely related to the pages you're trying to rank. That gives you more opportunities to place relevant links in content where they make sense.
Ask yourself:
- What are the core topics my money site covers?
- What adjacent topics or subtopics feed into those core topics?
- Which of my PBN sites should be authoritative on which topics?
A simple example: if your site is about personal finance, stick to related topics. Investing, budgeting, credit, and financial planning are all natural fits. Each site has a defined topic lane. When it links to your money site, that link carries topical context - which matters.
Sketch this out before you start sourcing domains. It tells you exactly what kind of domain you're looking for, and it gives your content team a clear brief.
5. What Are Your Operational Boundaries?
Every PBN involves ongoing decisions about how to manage it without leaving a footprint. Before you build, decide where your lines are:
How much will you spend per month on an ongoing basis? Hosting, content, and maintenance don't stop. A network you can't afford to maintain is a liability. Build to a sustainable budget, not an aspirational one.
Who creates the content? You, a freelancer, an agency, AI-assisted with human editing? Your answer has implications for consistency and quality. Decide this upfront so you're not making it up site by site.
How will you track what's working? Track your links from the start. Record where each link points, which anchor text it uses, and whether it's still live. Then compare that data against ranking changes over time. A spreadsheet works fine. Whatever you use, build it before the network exists, not after you've lost track of your own links.
What's your plan if a site gets a penalty? It happens. If a domain gets hit, do you rebuild it, replace it, or absorb the loss? Knowing the answer in advance means you won't make panicked decisions when it occurs.
What's next?
The output of this phase should be a clear plan. You should know what you're trying to achieve, how the network will support that goal, and what resources you'll need to get there.
Once those decisions are made, the rest becomes much simpler. Domain sourcing, hosting, content creation, and link placement all have a clear purpose.
If you skip this phase, you're not building a network with a strategy behind it. You're just buying domains and hoping they turn into something useful.
With the planning complete, the next step is putting that strategy into action. Our guide on how to set up a private blog network walks through the process from domain acquisition to site deployment.
Happy building!