Link Analyzer


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About Link Analyzer

Every page on your website is a junction in a vast network, and the links on that page—both internal and external—are the roads that guide both users and search engine crawlers. For an SEO, understanding this micro-network is not a once-a-year task; it's a daily essential. Seowolf's Link Analyzer is a sharp, focused tool built to instantly assess the health and structure of these connections on any single page, revealing opportunities to sculpt PageRank, prevent crawl waste, and guide your visitors toward conversion.

Why an internet marketer/SEO needs this tool

A link audit is often framed as a site-wide technical crawl, but the biggest, most actionable insights frequently hide on individual key pages. The Seowolf Link Analyzer is perfect for that quick, laser-focused diagnosis. For a marketer, this tool is your scalpel for on-page optimization. It instantly shows you the total number of links, the precise split between internal and external links, and, critically, which of those external links are dofollow vs. nofollow. This isn’t just a number; it's a direct window into how link equity flows from any single page. Too many external dofollow links can drain the authority you've built, while too few internal links can leave your best content stranded as an "orphan page," invisible to search engines. By using this tool, you proactively ensure your pages are optimally connected, keeping users engaged and authority concentrated on your money pages.

Example Scenario: The High-Traffic but Low-Conversion Blog Post

Imagine your highest-traffic pillar blog post, "The Ultimate Guide to Home Workouts," gets thousands of visits each month but has a terrible conversion rate for your premium fitness app. You suspect the internal linking structure might be weak or that you've given away too much link juice to external sources.

You open the Link Analyzer and enter the post's URL. The tool returns:

  • Total Links: 127

  • Internal Links: 4

  • External Links: 123 (of which 118 are Dofollow)

In an instant, the problem is crystal clear. The page has almost no connection to the rest of your site, effectively burying it. Worse, it's leaking authority through over a hundred dofollow links to external sites like YouTube, equipment manufacturers, and research papers. A common guideline is to aim for about 70% internal links and 30% external links on a page. Your page is the complete opposite.

Armed with this data, you don't need to guess. You edit the post and immediately add contextual internal links to your app's "Features" page, a "Success Stories" case study, and another blog post about "Diet Plans for Home Fitness." You also switch a significant portion of the non-essential external links to nofollow. This helps to redistribute link equity back to your own site and provides clear paths for users to go deeper into your funnel.