SEOHow the Web Uses Anchor Text in Internal Linking [Study]

How the Web Uses Anchor Text in Internal Linking [Study]

Internal anchor text can significantly impact search visibility. This research includes data from more than 3,000 ecommerce and non-ecommerce domains and examines more than 280,000 internal links and their corresponding anchor text.

Even with the ongoing changes taking place in the SERPs, SEOs still rate anchor text as the most important of all ranking factors.

How the Web Uses Anchor Text in Links [Study]” served as a good reminder about the significance of anchor text in links for natural search ranking. More than 4.2 million external links from 650+ domains were analyzed in Searchlight, Conductor’s enterprise SEO platform, to understand more about how external links flow to websites (disclaimer: I work for Conductor).

While the significance of external links in ranking is well known, it may be less well-known that internal anchor text — links coming from your own domain pointing to pages within your own domain — can significantly impact search visibility.

Given the important but less-talked-about significance of internal links for ranking, and based on feedback after last month’s article asking how websites implement internal links, this month we’ll narrow our focus and examine how websites implement internal links.

This research includes data from more than 3,000 ecommerce and non-ecommerce domains and examines more than 280,000 internal links and their corresponding anchor text. With this sample size, the resulting analysis should give us a good sense of how websites implement internal anchor text.

Internal Anchor Text More Condensed than External

anchor-text-by-number-of-words

Let’s first look at a distribution of links by length of anchor text. We compared internal to external links to discern how anchor text might differ for each.

In comparing internal to external link text, we found more than three-quarters (77 percent) of internal links were between 1-3 words, compared to just over half (53 percent) of external links

Most Common Words Used in Internal Anchor Text

Analysis of the most common phrases used in anchor text gives us insight into the 1 to 3 word skew for internal linking: 100 percent of the 20 most commonly-used anchor text has between 1 to 3 words in it. The majority reflect the kind of navigational and standard enterprise page links found on websites such as ‘Careers’, ‘Customer Service’, ‘Home’, and ‘Blog’.

Ranked Frequency of Term Most Common Words Used in Internal Anchor Text
1 Privacy Policy/Privacy
2 Contact Us/Contact
3 Terms and Conditions/Terms of Service/Terms of Use
4 email
5 Sitemap/Site Map
6 About Us/About
7 FAQs/FAQ/Questions
8 Home
9 Print
10 Customer Service/Customer Support/Support
11 Careers/Employment
12 RSS/RSS 2.0
13 Blog
14 Bookmark This Site
15 Help
16 Register
17 News
18 Log In/Login
19 Services
20 My Account

Avoiding over-optimization of one’s website is key, and a natural link graph is important to the search engine algorithms, but our data suggests marketers may have opportunity to build more long-tail anchor text into their internal linking structure to rank for more specific, longer tail queries.

Internal Links in Text vs. Images

internal-link-images-v-text

Analysis of the breakdown of internal image links vs. links contained in text shows the vast majority of links are textual, while 16 percent of website internal links were located in images.

Compliance With Internal Linking Best Practices

Josh McCoy wrote a great article earlier this month about internal linking. In it, he reminds us about the importance of internal linking to a website’s search rankings and lays out a series of best practices. Based on the best practices laid out by McCoy and others we gathered from industry sources, we evaluated the websites’ internal links for how well they comply with several key best practices:

  • Image Alt Text: The search algorithms use an image’s alt text to determine relevancy for universal search and image search. Recent research shows 8 out of 10 high-volume keywords now have universal listings of some kind, making optimization of digital assets more important than ever. However, more than a quarter of images (28 percent) with internal links we analyzed did not have alt text.
  • User Site Maps: McCoy points out that an important part of a complete internal linking strategy includes a sitemap. SEOs understand the importance of submitting a sitemap to Google via Webmaster Tools; but in this Google Webmaster video Matt Cutts is explicit that an HTML sitemap for users will help with search rankings — both in passing page rank to internal pages and in helping the Google bot with crawling. Our analysis of the internal link data for the presence of ‘sitemap’ (both in anchor text and in the URLs) shows that the a large percentage of sites still don’t have a navigational sitemap: 4 out of 10 of domains don’t have a user site map.
  • URLs Containing Anchor Text Wording: It may not be possible or practical for every url to contain the linking anchor text wording in it, but many in the industry suggest it is a best practice. Nearly 6 out of 10 (58 percent) internal links we evaluated did not contain the link’s anchor text.

best-practices-evaluation

Internal Linking Can Positively Impact Rankings, Provided They are Given Due Attention

Most industry discussion on the subject of links seems to center around external links. But internal links can have a significant impact on natural search visibility as well.

Search marketers typically have greater control over internal vs. external links, and our data suggests many fail to utilize internal linking to its fullest capacity. If SEOs ensure best practices are adhered to and give internal linking practices due attention, we expect many sites will benefit in their natural search visibility.

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