Most SaaS founders waste days hunting for places to submit their product, then quit after ten forms. Linkto gives you a free database of 800+ SaaS directories and 75+ launch sites so you can find real backlink shots without guessing. It’s built for shipping faster, getting indexed sooner, and stacking organic traffic over time.
Traffic isn’t hard. Finding where to post is.
You don’t need “more content”. You need distribution.
Most new SaaS products die quiet because founders do the same loop: build → tweet → refresh analytics → blame SEO. Meanwhile, there are hundreds of directories and launch sites that still rank, still get crawled, and still send the kind of links Google understands.
Linkto (lin-k.to) shows up with a blunt offer: a free database of 800+ SaaS directories and 75+ launch sites you can use as your submission hit list.
What Linkto actually gives you
This isn’t a “community”. It’s a pile of places to get listed.
Linkto organizes backlink opportunities into two buckets:
SaaS directories (800+)
These are the classic “list your tool” sites. They’re not sexy. They work because they: - create a crawlable page for your product - give you a clean citation link - help you show up for branded search faster
Launch sites (75+)
Launch platforms live and die on fresh products. When you time them right, you get: - early clicks - fast indexing - another batch of mentions you can reuse in your own marketing
Why this matters if you’re small
You don’t have a team.
So stop acting like you do. A directory/launch push gives you a repeatable play: 1) pick a lane (directories or launches) 2) submit in batches 3) reuse the same copy + screenshots 4) track what sticks
That’s the whole game. Boring work. Real outcomes.
The advantage: speed and focus
The win with lin-k.to isn’t “secret sites”. It’s momentum.
Instead of searching, you execute. Instead of “maybe later”. you run a simple backlog of submissions that compounds into links, crawls, and long-tail discovery.
But there’s a catch.
Directories don’t save weak products. They amplify whatever you already have. If your onboarding sucks or your pitch reads like mush, you’ll just spread the mush further.
Fix the basics. Then ship the submissions.

