Links Should Really Look Like Links – Moz

Skip to content

Moz logo

Menu open

Menu close

Search

Products

Moz Pro

Moz Pro Home

Moz Local

Moz Local Home

STAT

Mozscape API

Free SEO Tools

Competitive Research

Link Explorer

Keyword Explorer

Domain Analysis

MozBar

More Free SEO Tools

Learn SEO

Beginner’s Guide to SEO

SEO Learning Center

Moz Academy

SEO Q&A

Webinars, Whitepapers, & Guides

Blog

Why Moz

Agency Solutions

Enterprise Solutions

Small Business Solutions

Case Studies

The Moz Story

New Releases

Log in

Log out

Products

Moz Pro

Your All-In-One Suite of SEO Tools

The essential SEO toolset: keyword research, link building, site audits, page optimization, rank tracking, reporting, and more.

Learn more

Try Moz Pro free

Moz Local

Complete Local SEO Management

Raise your local SEO visibility with easy directory distribution, review management, listing updates, and more.

Learn more

Check my presence

STAT

Enterprise Rank Tracking

SERP tracking and analytics for SEO experts, STAT helps you stay competitive and agile with fresh insights.

Learn more

Book a demo

Mozscape API

The Power of Moz Data via API

Power your SEO with the proven, most accurate link metrics in the industry, powered by our index of trillions of links.

Learn more

Get connected

Compare SEO Products

Free SEO Tools

Competitive Research

Competitive Intelligence to Fuel Your SEO Strategy

Gain intel on your top SERP competitors, keyword gaps, and content opportunities.

Find competitors

Link Explorer

Powerful Backlink Data for SEO

Explore our index of over 40 trillion links to find backlinks, anchor text, Domain Authority, spam score, and more.

Get link data

Keyword Explorer

The One Keyword Research Tool for SEO Success

Discover the best traffic-driving keywords for your site from our index of over 500 million real keywords.

Search keywords

Domain Analysis

Free Domain SEO Analysis Tool

Get top competitive SEO metrics like Domain Authority, top pages, ranking keywords, and more.

Analyze domain

MozBar

Free, Instant SEO Metrics As You Surf

Using Google Chrome, see top SEO metrics instantly for any website or search result as you browse the web.

Try MozBar

More Free SEO Tools

Learn SEO

Beginner’s Guide to SEO
The #1 most popular introduction to SEO, trusted by millions.
Read the Beginner’s Guide

How-To Guides
Step-by-step guides to search success from the authority on SEO.
See All SEO Guides

SEO Learning Center
Broaden your knowledge with SEO resources for all skill levels.
Visit the Learning Center

Moz Academy
Upskill and get certified with on-demand courses & certifications.
Explore the Catalog

On-Demand Webinars
Learn modern SEO best practices from industry experts.
View All Webinars

SEO Q&A
Insights & discussions from an SEO community of 500,000+.
Find SEO Answers

August 7-9, 2023
Lock in Super Early Bird savings for MozCon

Snag tickets

Blog

Why Moz

Small Business Solutions
Uncover insights to make smarter marketing decisions in less time.
Grow Your Business

The Moz Story
Moz was the first & remains the most trusted SEO company.
Read Our Story

Agency Solutions
Earn & keep valuable clients with unparalleled data & insights.
Drive Client Success

Case Studies
Explore how Moz drives ROI with a proven track record of success.
See What’s Possible

Enterprise Solutions
Gain a competitive edge in the ever-changing world of search.
Scale Your SEO

New Releases
Get the scoop on the latest and greatest from Moz.
See What’s New

New Feature: Moz Pro
Surface actionable competitive intel

Learn More

Log in

Moz Pro

Moz Local

Moz Local Dashboard

Mozscape API

Mozscape API Dashboard

Moz Academy

Avatar

Moz Home

Notifications

Account & Billing

Manage Users

Community Profile

My Q&A

My Videos

Log Out

M

By: Michael Sparer
September 18, 2008

Links Should Really Look Like Links

Marketing Psychology

The author’s views are entirely his or her own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of Moz.

As there haven’t been any posts in the usability category of YOUmoz since March, I thought I write a short usability entry. You SEOs out there certainly know how a link should look like for search engines. But do you also know how they should look like for real people, I mean the ones visiting your page and spending money on your products?
1. Links online
Links have been changing over the years. In the beginning all links were underlined, blue and, let’s face it, quite ugly. Nowadays links generally look better. They have different colours, nice hover effect,s and some of them even provide previews of the target page. But did you know that those ugly links still work best when it comes to link perception? Studies proved that underlined blue links still work better than any other colour. In order to be not too theoretical, here are some examples:
1.1. Content that looks like links

In the above pic, the labels (e.g., “Location”) have the same font and look exactly the same as the links on the left side. To be sure what’s clickable and what’s not, you have to point the cursor on the text. That’s additional work you force a user to do. Why not avoid it by strictly underlining each link? Or a common colour for the links? In the above screenshot, there are way too many different links. They are:

white and dark-blue (in the top navigation)
black (in the side navigation)
grey (in the content, e.g., “spielen”)
orange (on the top right)

1.2. Links that look like ads

When first visiting the above page, I accidentally clicked on one of the links in the left column as I took them for content links, but they’re in fact Google ads. I consider such attempts to fool the user as insults and so my first visit ended up being my last visit to the website.
1.3. Links that look like links

The ease of use of Amazon is definitely one of their major pros. Just take a look at the links. Each underlined word actually is a link (and they’re blue too).
Conclusion #1:
Links should be

… recognisable without having to point on them
… underlined
… blue if you want to be sure
 … equipped with an appropriate anchor text (no “here” or “click here”)
… easily distinguishable from ads

2. Links in real life
Since a major point in my thesis was usability, I got accustomed to notice usability flaws even in real life. I recently came across a fake link, or, rather, a command link or button, when calling the elevator in a shopping mall in Innsbruck/Austria. Look at the pic below and tell me where you would have pushed first:
 
The majority of people I observed calling the elevator (well I didn’t look at more than ten people so as not to get framed for voyeurism :-)) pressed one of the “buttons” next to the big A, B, C and D, which actually aren’t buttons. They’re just visual assistance for knowing which elevator just arrived. But aren’t such blinking lights supposed to be above the elevator door?
Again, that’s additional work you force the user to do. If there was just one button “call elevator,” there couldn’t be any misunderstandings … by the way, the real buttons were the tiny round ones at the bottom of the plate.
Conclusion #2:
If you ever have to design buttons for elevators, make them look like buttons 🙂
Hope you enjoyed my short usability post. If you did, please tell me as I’d love to do some more in the future. I already have some online and offline flaws prepared 🙂

With Moz Pro, you have the tools you need to get SEO right — all in one place.

Start your free trial!

Read Next

The Top 5 Soft Skills SEOs Should Develop

Read this post

Optimization Tips for Your SEO Career (and Your Life)

Read this post

How to Win Potential Consumers with Customer Journey Mapping on Google

Read this post

Comments

Please keep your comments TAGFEE by following the community etiquette

Comments are closed. Got a burning question? Head to our Q&A section to start a new conversation.

Moz logo

Contact

Community

Free Trial

Terms & Privacy

Jobs

Help

News & Press

Copyright 2022 © Moz, Inc. All rights reserved.

类似文章