When done correctly, internal links create a network of connections between related content, helping your audience easily find what they need beyond the initial post or article they encounter on your site.
Of course, internal linking also matters from a technical perspective as the right strategy helps eliminate broken links and redirect loops while also building site authority.
Despite some challenges that come with internal links, they’re a small but mighty way to strengthen your content marketing program and shouldn't be overlooked.
Here's what we'll cover:
Let's start with a basic definition of internal links:
Internal links are hyperlinks from one of your web pages to another page that lives on the same domain.
They shouldn't be confused with backlinks (also known as external links), which are links that point to your site from another domain. Here's a quick refresher on internal versus external links.
We’ve covered the best practices on how to internally link in a previous blog. The why is where it gets a little more complex.
The process of interlinking your pages has several important benefits which all add up to one thing: how internal links improve and build your SEO.
To summarize:
Internal links matter because they turn isolated web pages into part of a bigger content infrastructure. They keep your users engaged and make them more likely to become customers. That, along with their ability to direct your link equity for highly relevant sites, results in significantly improved SEO.
SEO is not a one-size-fits-all approach when it comes to ranking factors. Between RankBrain, Hummingbird, BERT, and more, there is too much to consider. That’s why the focus has turned to the user experience.
Internal links offer your audience the ability to dig deeper and inform themselves more about a specific topic of interest.
Take this example from our own blog. When reading about homepage SEO, the topic of crawlers may come up and you might realize you don't know much about them. Voilà: an internal link gets you to an introductory article on web crawlers.
In our writing, we sometimes apply these internal links as “Recommended Reading” links to clearly tell the reader that there is additional information on our site to help them understand the topic fully. Here's one for you now…
Recommended Reading: Common Internal Linking Mistakes in SEO (and How to Fix Them)
Those connections help your audience build their knowledge on topics they find interesting. If you've ever been down a Wikipedia rabbit hole, you know exactly what we're talking about.
Laying out a clear journey for your audience to take encourages them to explore your site more deeply and view more pages.
This actively works to reduce bounce rate and increase time on page — two very important user experience metrics to keep an eye on!
Building a robust internal link structure enhances user navigation and guides your target audience towards a sale. By strategically linking relevant content, especially from your early funnel stages, you can lead users deeper into the funnel, increasing the likelihood of conversion.
Start by using links on your homepage to direct users to your content marketing pieces. From there, individual blog posts can guide them towards gated content, free trials, or product pages. Just like that, your audience moves from initial awareness all the way to becoming leads and customers.
To create an effective internal link network, analyze your content from the perspective of the buyer's journey. Approach it like content mapping:
Your website's basic structure, or site taxonomy, organizes content within your menus and navigation from your homepage to deeper pages. This taxonomy helps Google and users understand your site.
But your website architecture involves more than just this structure. Internal links add a layer that creates a web of content and pages.
Typically, your taxonomy is organized by topics and subtopics. For example, services are in one section, while About Us content is in another. But what if you need to link from one topic to the other? That's impossible to achieve within a linear taxonomy.
The second layer of your website architecture, your internal links, creates cross-links to improve your UX design, turning disconnected pages into a comprehensive online experience.
Related to the topic of your site architecture is the idea of crawl depth and crawl efficiency. Search engine crawlers work in a simple pattern:
Crawlers also check your internal and external links to discover new and updated content. A robust network of internal links can significantly aid this process.
To increase crawl efficiency follow these basic steps:
Search engines like Google appreciate when things are simple. The more easily they can crawl your site, the better for your search results.
For a more in-depth guide to improving your site's crawl budget using internal linking, check out "How to Optimize Your Crawl Budget For SEO Through Internal Links."
Every link on your site has something called link equity. It's a measure of authority that the link passes from one page to the next. Linking pages together helps to spread this link equity.
You know how Google ranks pages based on metrics like value, relevance, and authority? Internal links allow some of these to transfer from a high-performing page to another linked page.
Let's use the above homepage SEO example again:
That's the whole game. Strategic use of internal links ensures that your link equity spreads through to specific areas of your site, and the rising tide begins to lift all boats.
Since you have full control over creating internal links (no link building required here), you can send a clear message to Google about keyword and page associations via anchor text.
All internal links use anchor text (the blue text hyperlink that a user clicks on) to provide context to both users and search engines. In the previous sentence, the anchor text of the link is … “anchor text”!
Using contextually relevant anchor text that describes the linked page provides an added opportunity to boost relevance by telling search engines that page X should rank for keyword Y.
Recommended Reading: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet on Internal Link Analysis for SEO
Without a dev team, creating, implementing, and optimizing internal links across large sites poses a huge challenge. But with seoClarity's Link Optimizer, SEOs have the power to automatically improve their internal link structure across thousands of pages while still having complete control.
Now integrated with Sia, our intelligent AI-powered SEO assistant, Link Optimizer is the only solution that completely automates the process of internal link building from start to finish.
By connecting all of the data already present in seoClarity to build semantic link clusters, it uses the power of AI to automatically surface optimal internal linking opportunities and determine the most advantageous target pages to link to them. Then, with the click of a button, it instantly implements internal links across your entire site AND tracks their performance.
With the ease of use that Link Optimizer provides, link building goes from a tedious, time-consuming task to an efficient and effective staple in your site optimization strategy.
Watch how it works here:
Recommended Reading: Solve the Challenge of Internal Linking At Scale Using AI
You should consider internal linking as an important factor anytime you build a new page, and even as you revise your existing pages.
Our Internal Link Analysis helps you get started on the latter, creating a more purposeful internal linking strategy in the process.
Here's an internal linking workflow that our clients love.
Internal links are small but mighty components of your overall SEO strategy. Here's a quick summary of the importance of internal linking:
<<< Editor's note: this post was originally published in 2021 and has been updated. >>>