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Developing Your Internal Linking Structure

By Yuri Filimonov
Expert Author
Article Date: 2006-11-08

The core of the Internet is pages with links pointing to and from them. That's why it is not only important to have something to get links to, but to link from a page.

When it comes to the pages on your own site, you can develop a linking structure to increase conversions and get a slight boost with the search engines.

What is an internal linking structure?

Internal linking structure is a pattern you use to link one of your pages to another. You can only have links in the top navigation or you can also have links in a left or right navigation.

Additionally, you can have links in the body text (context, embedded links).

How to setup internal linking?

Generally, you'd rather be linking to pages the current page visitor should want to go. As there are various kinds of visitors and there are different things you may want on a website, there should be sufficient ways of finding what the visitor wants with one or two clicks (at most).

Apart from having top navigation, you can use secondary navigation.

Secondary navigation may be comprised of left or right navigation, a footer and body text. It is a good idea to list most important or all (if there are a few of) pages in the left or right navigation. A footer normally has the less important links (such as privacy policy, terms of use) and sometimes duplicates top navigation.

When it comes to links from the context (embedded links), you'd rather link naturally. Linking naturally means you link to a page when you refer to it in the text or the visitor should want to go somewhere after you write something.

For instance, if I speak about a website optimization services, I can link to one of my pages. Another example would be when I say that to get traffic and links, you need to create valuable content.

How to link?

Generally, it is a good idea to use two or three key words as the anchor text (the text you use to link to another page).

This not only makes it clear what the following page is about (apart from being understandable from the context), but also adds some weight with the search engines (just for the former reason, by the way).

Conclusion

Though internal linking isn't just for the search engines (though it helps sometimes), you can and should use internal linking to create clear click paths to increase conversions.

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About the Author:
Yuri Filimonov is a freelance website optimization and usability consultant, who writes about improving websites to gain more visitors, customers and profit at his blog, http://www.ImproveTheWeb.com.

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