How Broken Links Can Hurt Your SEO - Outbound & Inbound

How Broken Links Can Hurt Your SEO - Outbound & Inbound


Imagine that you and your significant other are heading to a quaint, romantic Italian bistro for Valentine’s Day dinner. You follow the directions of how to get there, you’re already excited to try the raviolis that your friends recommended, and everything is going great. That is, until you reach the door of the restaurant and your heart sinks. You feel disappointed, and whether you consciously know it or not, you might even resent the restaurant a little for ruining your amorous plans. In the digital marketing world, a broken link is a lot like this heartbreaking Valentines scenario. When visitors follow links to or from your site they are expecting certain content to be available to them once they get to that page. Broken links are not only bad for user experience but can also be harmful to your site’s loving relationship with Google, i.e. your SEO. Avoid linking out to broken content, and also avoid having pages on your site that are broken. Today is a day about love, so let’s keep the link juice flowing! Why Should Broken Outbound Links Make You Forlorn? When you link out to other sites from your own site, these links are called outbound links. Limiting, or eliminating all broken links pointing to external pages can be tricky, as you likely don’t have control over the external content you are linking to and might not realize it has been removed or relocated on the external site. When your site has outbound broken links, it’s bad for your users and your SEO. Google’s web crawlers, or “Googlebots” travel link to link and collect data about each page. Be backlink service to regularly audit your outbound links to insure you aren’t pointing people (or bots) to broken pages. If you have a very small site, this check might be possible to do manually with “Check My Links” chrome extension by manually reviewing each page of your site and performing checks individually for broken links. The tool will discover both internal (links to your own site) and external (links to other sites) broken links. Keep record of occurrences of broken links in a spreadsheet so you can go back and fix or remove links later. If your site is large, it likely won’t be possible to manually check each page for broken links. In this case, it is worthwhile to invest in a paid backlink checker such as Ahrefs, which can help to find broken links in bulk on your site. Ahrefs makes checking for outbound links incredibly easy: they have an “outgoing broken link” report that takes minutes to find, and export all of your sites broken links. Finding the outbound links that are broken is only half of the job, now it’s time to fix those links! This is the more time consuming step. Export your list from Ahrefs, and start chipping away at it. If it’s been some time since you’ve audited your outbound links, or you have never audited them, then you will likely have a lot to correct. If the context of the content can stand alone without the link, and it was not a citation, then simply mark “remove” on your excel sheet and move on. If the link is needed, check what the linking anchor text included. It can provide contextual clues to what used to live on that page. Perform a site search on the site to see whether the content has a new location on the site. When possible, search for more recent or updated versions of the content to replace the broken link with. If you need to refresh your content to accommodate a new source doing so can help keep your site fresh and updated for visitors.

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