Internal Linking: Why Your Site Isn't Ranking
Your site might have solid pages, but if Google can't trace a logical path through them, it won't treat any of them as important. Internal linking isn't about adding more links—it's about architecting authority so search engines (and LLMs) know which pages matter most. Get this wrong, and you're leaving ranking power on the table.

You've probably noticed it: a competitor with fewer pages, less polish, and weaker writing ranks above you. Or your best page sits buried on page three while a thinner version on another site claims the top spot. The culprit is rarely content quality. It's usually architecture.
Internal linking is how you tell Google—and increasingly, LLMs like ChatGPT and Claude—which pages are important and how they relate to each other. Skip this, and your site becomes a pile of isolated pages instead of a coherent authority. Google will crawl it. Google will index some of it. But it won't rank most of it.
This isn't about adding hyperlinks for the sake of it. It's about deliberately structuring the link graph so that authority flows to your money pages, pages are crawled efficiently, and LLMs can understand your topical breadth. Get this right and you're compounding your SEO advantage with every page you publish. Get it wrong and you're diluting your domain's power across hundreds of orphaned pages that search engines never quite figure out how to rank.
The Orphaned Page Problem
Consider this scenario: you've published 800 pages over the years. Your analytics show that 300 of them get traffic. But Google knows about all 800. In one site audit, over 70% of pages were orphaned (≈800K orphan pages crawled vs. 300K reachable via internal links), yet structured pages drove 95% of organic visits while orphans drove only 5%.[2] The orphans exist in your sitemap and your server logs, but they're not connected to anything, so Google doesn't know whether they matter.
An orphaned page is one with no internal links pointing to it. Google can still find it through your XML sitemap or external links, but the search engine has no signal about where it fits in your hierarchy. It doesn't know if it's a top-level pillar or a throwaway footnote. So it gets crawled once every six months and never ranks.
The practical cost: you're burning crawl budget on pages that will never convert, and you're spreading your domain's authority thin across pages that shouldn't exist in the public-facing site at all. Every page you publish without an internal link strategy is a page that competes with your important pages for ranking signals.
Real businesses accumulate this debt. A SaaS company might have a feature page, a case study, a pricing page, and a blog post all targeting variations of the same keyword. Without explicit linking strategy, they're all fighting each other instead of one clear page owning the ranking and the others supporting it.
How Internal Links Signal Importance
Google and other search engines use link structure as a ranking signal. Pages linked to from many other pages, especially from authoritative pages, get treated as important. This is link equity, and it's not mysterious—it's how the web has worked since the 1990s.
Where most sites go wrong is thinking of internal links as a courtesy to readers. Yes, they should help navigation. But their primary job in an SEO context is to consolidate your site's authority on a topic.
Let's say you have a hub page on "enterprise software implementation" and five supporting pages on specific methodologies. If you link from the hub to each supporting page, and each supporting page links back to the hub, you've created a cluster. Google sees the hub as the authoritative source and the supporting pages as contextual depth. The hub is more likely to rank for competitive keywords. The supporting pages capture long-tail variants and feed authority back to the hub.
Without those links, each page is fighting alone. The "enterprise software implementation" page might rank, but it's not receiving the authority signal from related pages, so it ranks lower than it could. And the supporting pages are invisible.
This matters because understanding how search intent works shapes which pages should cluster together. Pages answering the same intent should link to each other. Pages answering different intents should be linked to strategically, not randomly.
A controlled test showed that adding internal links to nearby geographic regions produced a 7% uplift in organic traffic to the linked pages.[1] Seven percent doesn't sound dramatic until you realize it's seven percent with zero additional content, zero paid ads, zero technical changes—just link architecture. Scale that across a 50-page site targeting hundreds of keywords, and you're looking at a significant revenue shift.
Internal Links and LLM Citation
This is the part most SEO guides miss: Google rankings and LLM citations are not the same problem.
Only 12% of AI citations overlap with Google's top 10 results, meaning LLM citation requires distinct optimization beyond classic SEO.[3] ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity don't use Google's ranking algorithm. They use different training data, different recency rules, and different signals about what's authoritative.
Internal linking still matters for LLMs, but the mechanism is different. An LLM doesn't care about PageRank or link equity in the Google sense. It cares about whether your content is crawlable, whether it can understand your site's structure, and whether you've marked up relationships between concepts clearly.
A well-structured internal link graph makes it easier for LLM crawlers to map your topical authority. If you have a page on "demand forecasting" linked to from your "supply chain" hub and your "inventory management" cluster, an LLM is more likely to understand that you cover supply chain topics comprehensively. That understanding feeds into citation—LLMs tend to cite sources they perceive as authoritative on a topic, and link structure is one signal of that authority.
The practical implication: your internal link strategy should serve both search engines and LLMs. That means clear hierarchies, contextual links that make topical relationships explicit, and pages structured so that a crawler (human or AI) can trace a logical path from your most general content to your most specific.
What a Real Internal Link Strategy Looks Like
Most sites don't have a strategy. They have a navigation menu and a few random links in body copy. That's not enough.
A real strategy starts with topic clusters. You identify keyword families—say, "data migration," "data integration," "ETL," "middleware." You choose one as the pillar (the authoritative page that owns the widest, most competitive keyword). The others become supporting pages. Each supporting page links to the pillar. The pillar links to each supporting page.
You also link contextually. When a supporting page mentions a related topic that has another page on your site, you link to it. Not every mention, but meaningful ones where the link adds value to the reader.
Then you ask: where should this page sit in my site hierarchy? Is it a top-level category or nested deeper? The URL structure and link structure should reflect that. A page about "data migration for healthcare" might be nested under your healthcare vertical, and it should be linked from your healthcare landing page. That tells Google it's relevant to your healthcare authority.
Finally, you audit for orphans. Use a crawl tool to find pages with no internal links pointing to them. For most pages, that's a problem. Either link them in, or delete them. Pages with 0 internal links are weight you don't need to carry.
This requires some rigor, but it doesn't require engineering work. A marketing lead with a spreadsheet and a crawl tool can map out a link strategy. The dev team executes it.
The Crawler Efficiency Angle
There's also a practical crawl efficiency question. Google allocates a crawl budget to your site based on its size, your server speed, and how often you update content. If you have pages that no one links to, you're burning crawl budget on pages that won't rank.
This becomes significant when you're managing Time to First Byte or dealing with a large site. A slower server means Google crawls you less frequently. Orphaned pages take up crawl capacity that could go to pages you're actually trying to rank. The compounding effect is that your important pages get crawled less often, updates take longer to index, and your rankings lag behind faster competitors.
For a 5,000-page site, this is real. For a 50-page site, less so. But the principle holds: every page should earn its place in the crawl queue.
Starting Point: Audit What You Have
If you're inheriting a site or trying to fix one that isn't ranking, start with an audit.
Use a crawler (Screaming Frog, Botify, or similar) to map your internal link graph. The tool will show you:
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Which pages have no internal links pointing to them (orphans)
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Which pages have the most internal links (potential pillars)
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How deep the average page is from your homepage (deeper = harder to crawl)
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Which pages are siloed (not linked to the rest of the site)
Then ask: do these patterns match my business model? If your best-performing pages are the orphans, your link structure is inverted. If your homepage links to 500 pages directly, you've lost hierarchy. If your blog doesn't link to your product pages, you're missing topical bridges.
There's no single right answer, but there are clearly wrong answers. Fix the worst problems first. Bring orphaned money pages into the link graph. Consolidate pages fighting on the same keyword. Use navigation to reflect your hierarchy, not to provide a massive menu of everything.
This work is invisible until someone Google and sees traffic move. Then it's very visible.
Internal linking is architecture. It determines whether your site looks like a coherent authority to search engines and LLMs, or a pile of isolated pages. Most sites under-invest because the work feels administrative rather than strategic—but the difference between a site that ranks and one that doesn't often comes down to link structure, not content.
If your site has been stagnant in search traffic, or if you're publishing content but pages aren't ranking where they should, the problem is likely not that your writing is weak. It's that Google doesn't know which pages matter. Fix that, and everything else becomes easier.
References
[1] SearchPilot. Impact of internal linking on SEO. https://www.searchpilot.com/resources/case-studies/impact-of-internal-linking-seo
[2] Botify. Orphan Pages. https://www.botify.com/blog/orphan-pages
[3] Discovered Labs. AI Citation Patterns: How ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity Choose Sources. https://discoveredlabs.com/blog/ai-citation-patterns-how-chatgpt-claude-and-perplexity-choose-sources

