How to find all crawlable links on a particular page?
-
Hi! This might sound like a newbie question, but I'm trying to find all crawlable links (that google bot sees), on a particular page of my website. I'm trying to use screaming frog, but that gives me all the links on that particular page, AND all subsequent pages in the given sub-directory. What I want is ONLY the crawlable links pointing away from a particular page. What is the best way to go about this? Thanks in advance.
-
Thanks for sharing this information Thomas. Appreciate your time and help here. Regards.
-
I understand yes are referred that is a parameter or how far from home here's some information on a tool I'm using right now
http://www.internetmarketingninjas.com/seo-tools/google-sitemap-generator/
here is an HTML file of the results however you can see the how far from home on the left hand side I suggest you run the tool yourself so you can see the full results
Using the IMN Google Site Map Generator
Links are critically important to webpages, not only for connecting to other, related pages to help end users find the information they want, but in optimizing the pages for SEO. The Find Broken Links, Redirects & Google Sitemap Generator Free Tool allows webmasters and search engine optimizers to check the status of both external links and internal links on an entire website. The resulting report generated by the Google sitemap generator tool will give webmasters and SEOs insight to the link structure of a website, and identify link redirects and errors, all of which help in planning a link optimization strategy. We always offer the downloadable results and the sitemap generator free for everyone.
Get started
To start with the free sitemap generator, type (or paste) the full home page URL of the website you want scanned. Select the number of pages you want to scan (up to 500, up to 1,000, or up to 10,000). Note that the job starts immediately and runs in real time. For larger sites containing numerous pages, the process can take up to 30 minutes to crawl and gather data on 1,000 pages (and longer still for very large sites). You can set the Google sitemap generator tool to send you an email once the crawl is completed and the data report is prepared. The online sitemap generator offers several options and also acts as an XML sitemap generator or an HTML sitemap generator.
Note that the results table data of the online sitemap generator is interactive. Most of the data items are linked, either to the URLs referenced or to details about the data. For most cells that contain non-URL data, pause the mouse over the cell to see the full results.
Results Bar
When the tool starts, a results bar appears at the top of the page showing the following information:
- Status of the tool (Crawling or Done)
- Number of Internal URLs crawled
- Number of External links found
- Number of Internal HTTP Redirects found
- Number of External HTTP Redirects found
- Number of Internal HTTP error codes found
- Number of External HTTP error codes found
For those who need sitemaps provided by either an HTML sitemap generator or an XML sitemap generator,
there are corresponding options offered here. Also shown are the following:- Download XML Sitemap button
- Download tool results in Excel format
- Download tool results in HTML format
Lastly, if you love the free sitemap generator tool, you can tell the world by clicking any of the following social media buttons:
- Facebook Like
- Google+
Email notification
Next, you can submit your email address to have a copy of the report emailed to you if you choose not to wait for it to finish crawling. We offer this feature as well as the sitemap generator free to all users.
Tool results data
When results are ready, the HTML sitemap generator will organize the data into six tables:
- Internal links
- External links
- Internal errors (a subset of Internal Links)
- Internal redirects (another subset of Internal Links)
- External errors (a subset of External Links)
- External redirects (another subset of External Links)
The table data is typically linked to either page URLs or to details about the data. Click on column headers to sort the results.
1Internal Links table
The Internal links table created by the XML sitemap generator includes the following data fields:
- URLs crawled on the site
- Link to The On Page Optimization Analysis Free SEO Tool for that URL
- URL’s level from the domain root
- URL’s returned HTTP status code
- Number of internal links the URL has within the site (click to see the list of URLs)
- Link text used for the URL
- Number of internal links on the page (click to see the list of URLs)
- Number of external links on the page (click to see the list of URLs)
- Size of the page on kilobytes (click to see page load speed test results for this URL from Google)
- Link to the Check Image Sizes, Alt Text, Header Checks and More Free SEO Tool for that URL
- The tag text from the URL’s page
- The description tag text from the URL’s page
- The keywords tag text from the URL’s page
- Contents, if used, of the anchor tag’s “rel=” attribute
2External Links table
The External links table includes the following data fields:
- URL’s returned HTTP status code
- Number of times that URL is linked to from within the site (click to see the list of affected URLs)
- External URL used in the link
- Link text used for the URL
- Internal page URL on which the link was first found
3Internal HTTP code errors table
The Internal errors table gathers all of the pages returning HTTP code errors (4xx and 5xx level codes) in one place to help organize the effort to resolve the problems. It includes the following data fields:
- URL’s returned HTTP status code
- Number of times that URL is linked to from within the site (click to see the list of affected URLs)
- Internal URL used in the link
- Link text used for the URL
- Internal page URL on which the link was first found
The Internal errors table is a subset of the Internal links table showing just those pages returning HTTP status code errors.
4Internal HTTP redirects table
The Internal redirects table combines all of the pages returning HTTP redirects in one list so you can easily review them. You should not have to rely on redirects internally. Instead, you can fix the source code containing the redirected link. This table contains the following data fields:
- URL’s returned HTTP status code (click it to go to the HTTP Response Code Checker tool)
- Number of times that URL is linked to from within the site (click to see the list of affected URLs)
- Internal URL used in the link
- Link text used for the URL
- Redirect’s target URL
- Internal page URL on which the link was first found
The Internal redirects table is a subset of the Internal links table showing just those pages returning 301 and 302 HTTP status code redirects.
5External HTTP code errors table
The External errors table gathers all of the pages returning HTTP code errors (4xx and 5xx level codes) in one place to help organize the effort to resolve the problems. It includes the following data fields:
- URL’s returned HTTP status code (click it to go to the HTTP Response Code Checker tool)
- Number of times that URL is linked to from within the site (click to see the list of affected URLs)
- Internal URL used in the link
- Link text used for the URL
- Redirect’s target URL
- Internal page URL on which the link was first found
The External errors table is a subset of the External links table showing just those pages returning HTTP status code errors.
6External HTTP redirects table
The External redirects table combines all of the pages returning HTTP redirects in one list so you can easily review them. As the redirect to the targeted page does not affect your page, fix these URLs is a lower priority. This table contains the following data fields:
- URL’s returned HTTP status code (click it to go to the HTTP Response Code Checker tool)
- Number of times that URL is linked to from within the site (click to see the list of affected URLs)
- External URL used in the link
- Link text used for the URL
- Redirect’s target URL
- Internal page URL on which the link was first found
The External redirects table is a subset of the External links table showing just those pages returning 301 and 302 HTTP status code redirects.
-
Hi Thomas! When I say 1 click, I mean all links that can directly be reached from www.wishpicker.com. For example
wishpicker.com/gifts-for can be reached directly from wishpicker.com
wishpicker.com/gifts-for/boyfriend cannot be reached directly from wishpicker.com. I would first need to go to wishpicker.com/gifts-for, and then go to wishpicker.com/gifts-for/boyfriend. So wishpicker.com/gifts-for is 1 click away, and wishpicker.com/gifts-for/boyfriend is 2 clicks away from wishpicker.com.
I am looking to crawl all links that are only 1 click away. Thanks for your help here. Really appreciate it.
-
when you say one click away are you talking about a parameter?
I will run this through screaming frog and a couple other tools and see if I can get your answer.
-
Hi Thomas
Thanks for your response. Here is my website: www.wishpicker.com
What I am looking for is all the links present only 1 click away from the page www.wishpicker.com (both internal and external).
Performing a crawl with screaming frog is giving me all links (1, 2, 3, 4, and more clicks away). Not sure how to limit the crawl to show links that are only 1 click away, and exclude links that are 2 or more clicks away from this page.
Look forward to your response.
Thanks!
-
Hi,
Screaming frog does in fact show you the links that would be considered external links. Here is a great guide.
http://www.seerinteractive.com/blog/screaming-frog-guide
If you look at the external part of Screaming frog you'll find what you're looking for however you may also do this with
using either the campaign tool or the browser plug-in.
I would suggest reading the seer interactive guide and sticking with screaming frog it is an outstanding tool.
Here are some other tools which I hope will help you if that is not the route you wish to go.
If you could post a photograph of what you are looking for or what you mean by it only showing you the internal link count I know what you mean by that I just want to see what screen you're looking on to get the The answer you're looking for.
Here are some more tools that will allow you to scan up to 1000 pages of your website for free and will tell you the information you're looking for.
http://www.internetmarketingninjas.com/tools
if you cannot find what you're looking for in their you might want to try
http://www.quicksprout.com/2013/02/04/how-to-perform-a-seo-audit-free-5000-template-included/
distilled.net/U might be the best way to find out these types of things however it is a complete search engine optimization training course.
Sincerely,
Thomas
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
How come only 2 pages of my 16 page infographic are being crawled by Moz?
Our Infographic titled "What Is Coaching" was officially launched 5 weeks ago. http://whatiscoaching.erickson.edu/ We set up campaigns in Moz & Google Analytics to track its performance. Moz is reporting No organic traffic and is only crawling 2 of the 16 pages we created. (see first and third attachments) Google Analytics is seeing hundreds of some very strange random pages (see second attachment) Both campaigns are tracking the url above. We have no idea where we've gone wrong. Please help!! 16_pages_seen_in_wordpress.png how_google_analytics_sees_pages.png what_moz_sees.png
Technical SEO | | EricksonCoaching0 -
Does rel= canonical combine link juice for 2 pages?
If two pages are very similar, and one should rel= canonical to the other, will the page authority pass from the page with rel= canonical to the target page? Also, what happens when you a page rel=canonical's to itself?
Technical SEO | | SkinLaboratory0 -
Linking without loosing link equity.
Hi, I was wondering if anyone had a solution to linking without loosing link equity? From what I have read using 'no follow' on both internal and external links DOES NOT pass any equity across the link to the link target, but also, the latest thought goes that it DOES loose link equity (as if it were a FOLLOW' link). So is there a method of retaining link equity using another method? Thanks
Technical SEO | | James770 -
Ratio of linking C-blocks to Linking domains
Hi, Our linkbuilding efforts have resulted in acquiring a high number of backlinks from domains within a C-block. We all know Google issues penalties whenever someone's link profile looks unnatural. A high number of backlinks but a low number of linking C-blocks would seem to be one of reasons to get penalized. Example: we have 6,000 links from 200 linking root domains coming in from 100 C-blocks. At what point should we start to worry about being penalized/giving off an unnatural look to mr G?
Technical SEO | | waidohuy0 -
When Is It Good To Redirect Pages on Your Site to Another Page?
Suppose you have a page on your site that discusses a topic that is similar to another page but targets a different keyword phrase. The page has medium quality content, no inbound links, and the attracts little traffic. Should you 301 redirect the page to a stronger page?
Technical SEO | | ProjectLabs1 -
What can be the cause of my inner pages ranking higher than my home page?
If you do a search for my own company name or products we sell the inner pages rank higher than the homepage and if you do a search for exact content from my home page my home page doesn't show in the results. My homepage shows when you do a site: search so not sure what is causing this.
Technical SEO | | deciph220 -
Do you get credit for an external link that points to a page that's being blocked by robots.txt
Hi folks, No one, including me seems to actually know what happens!? To repeat: If site A links to /home.html on site B and site B blocks /home.html in Robots.txt, does site B get credit for that link? Does the link pass PageRank? Will Google still crawl through it? Does the domain get some juice, but not the page? I know there's other ways of doing this properly, but it is interesting no?
Technical SEO | | DaveSottimano0 -
Link juice distributed to too many pages. Will noindex,follow fix this?
We have an e-commerce store with around 4000 product pages. Although our domain authority is not very high (we launched our site in February and now have around 30 RD's) we did rank on lots of long tail terms, and generated around 8000 organic visits / month. Two weeks ago we added another 2000 products to our existing catalogue of 2000 products, and since then our organic traffic dropped significantly (more than 50%). My guess is that link juice has been distributed to too many pages, causing rankings to drop on overall. I'm thinking about noindexing 50% of the product pages (the ones not receiving any organic traffic). However, I am not sure if this will lead to more link juice for the remaining 50% of the product pages, or not. So my question is: if I noindex,follow page A, will 100% of the linkjuice go to page B INSTEAD of page A, or will just a part of the link juice flow to page B (after flowing through page A first)? Hope my question is clear 🙂 P.s. We have a Dutch store, so the traffic drop is not a Panda issue 🙂
Technical SEO | | DeptAgency0