5 Reasons You Should Link Out to Others From Your Website

Posted by randfish

There's a lot of debate in the web world, particularly in the SEO & marketing departments of mid-size and larger organizations, about whether or not to link out to other websites from their own. People are scared for a number of reasons; they worry that linking out could:

In my opinion, these concerns are largely unfounded. Linking is common practice on the web - expected and respected by users of all kinds - and therefore, extremely unlikely to harm your reputation. Even if you link to the occasional site or page that's been taken over by a domain squatter, aspiring pornographer or entranced Twilight fan, your visitors are likely to carry a great deal of forgiveness, especially if it's an old link.

In much the same fashion, search engines recognize that even the best websites sometimes carry a link to the nether regions of cyberspace (talk about bringing back your '90's lingo!). So long as you don't carelessly provide links to malware-installing, pop-under spouting, Shamwow hawking pages, you don't need to take especially more care than you would linking to possible 404s.

As for costing PageRank - yes, it's true. Technically, the original PR formula (described in great detail here by my grandfather, Si) dictates that any link equity spent on external pages is lost opportunity that could have been spent on internal pages. HOWEVER, I (and many other notable SEOs) have seen very compelling evidence to suggest that not only does linking out NOT harm a site's rankings, it appears to carry some positive correlations with ranking, trust, etc. on both a page and domain-wide level. I'll cover this more in my reasons to link out below.

The final argument - that users will leave the site - ignores ample evidence that sites & pages that link out actually benefit from those links. Think about the most popular, most used service on the web - a website we all turn to dozens if not hundreds of times each month - Google. They make it part of their corporate creed to get users off the site as quickly as possible, and have benefited from it tremendously. Likewise, a survey of major newspapers on the web found that those who link out tend to outperform those who don't on many performance metrics. If you want more examples, check out Digg, Reddit, Yelp, Twitter & Delicious- who all link off their own sites as part of their core business and still get visitors coming back again and again. I have yet to see any proof that linking out to good sites that users will appreciate and enjoy actually hurts long term revenue.

So, with all those arguments against shot down (or at least, slightly maimed), let's dive into the positives. These all refer to benefits you receive from raw linking without nofollow (though a few can be obtained even when you link with nofollow, though certainly not to the same extent).

I think there are plenty of other good reasons to link out as well, but these are certainly top of mind for me, and typically make a very compelling argument when we work with clients who are initially opposed to the idea. As always, I'd love to hear your thoughts, experiences and rationales for linking out (or not).

p.s. A big thank you to Tim Grice (aka seowizz) for his timely YOUmoz post on this topic. Read the post, How Effective are Outbound Links, and comments for more interesting discussion about the potential SEO-specific benefits of linking out.


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