Unpopular opinion - build good content and you’ll win off page citations organically. If you’re not growing backlinks on the merits of your content your content isn’t good. - Change my mind
I'll give that a shot
Your opinion isn't unpopular, it's just incomplete. "Build good content and you'll win" is true the way "build a good product and you'll win" is true: directionally it sounds great but operationally, platitudes don't sell cars.
Here's the nuance I'd love to change your mind with. "Good content" isn't something you write, it's something you discover. You don't know what's good until it's tested against real audience and real intent, which means good content requires shipping mediocre content to earn the learnings. The iteration is the strategy.
And on backlinks as the scoreboard: the pages that earn citations and the pages that actually convert are usually two different sets. Top-of-funnel explainers attract links because they're broadly useful and easy to reference. But the white hot moment, when someone's ready to transact, happens on pages that aren't link magnets. They win by capturing intent and delivering value at the point of decision, not by being popular.
So I'd reframe it: good content earns citations, but a content system, test, measure, iterate, then map the right asset to the right stage of intent, is what actually wins. Merit gets you noticed. Strategy gets you paid.
Show me the dealership page earning editorial links on merit, I'll wait. Nobody's citing your VDP or blog, no matter how sexy. Dealership links come from hockey team sponsorships, supporting the local community centre and local engagement, we buy our way to "earned," we don't just create good content to make our way there.