Definition
Anchor text is the clickable text in a link. It tells users and search engines what the linked page is about.
Key Takeaways
- Anchor text should read naturally and clearly describe what the link leads to.
- Strong internal linking helps visitors move from education to the right program page.
- Over-optimized anchor text can look unnatural and reduce trust.
Why It Matters for Treatment and Behavioral Health
Visitors often need to learn and then act. Clear anchor text helps them navigate to program pages, insurance information, and next steps without confusion.
Treatment Lens: Internal Linking That Supports Fit
Link condition education pages to the most relevant program page or next-step page. Use descriptive anchors like “intensive outpatient program” instead of generic text like “click here.”
SEO Note
Natural, descriptive anchors help clarify topical relationships. Avoid repeating exact-match anchors excessively across many pages.
Common Mistakes
- Using generic anchors that do not help the reader.
- Stuffing keywords into anchors and making links feel forced.
- Linking to the wrong page because the site structure is unclear.
Related Terms
Internal Link, Topical Relevance, Program Pages vs Condition Pages, Keyword Cannibalization
FAQ
Should anchor text include location names?
Only when it naturally describes a location page and helps the reader.
Is “click here” bad?
It is usually less helpful. Explain what the reader will get by clicking.
How many internal links should a page have?
Enough to guide the reader to next steps, without clutter.
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