Google Webmaster Central Blog - Official news on crawling and indexing sites for the Google index

One-line sitelinks

Thursday, April 16, 2009 at 11:00 AM

Webmaster Level: All

You may be familiar with sitelinks, the links that show up underneath the first search result and which lead to specific pages deeper within the site. Sitelinks enable users to jump directly to important parts of a site, which is often useful for large, complex websites. Sitelinks have the additional advantage of giving users an overview of a website's content by highlighting some of the popular parts of the site. For webmasters, sitelinks are also beneficial because they help to expose parts of your site that users may not know about. For instance, a search for NASA provides links to a gallery of images, a page about Space Shuttle and ISS missions, and so on:


Until now, sitelinks have only ever appeared on the first search result, and so at most one site could have sitelinks per query. We're now launching an expansion of sitelinks: a single row of links can now appear for results that didn't show sitelinks before, even for results that aren't in the first position. This means multiple results on one query can now have sitelinks. Up to four sitelinks can show up right above the page URL, instead of the usual two columns below the URL of the first result. Here's an example where the first three results each have one-line sitelinks:


These one-line sitelinks have many of the same benefits as the full two-column sitelinks, but on a smaller scale: they show users some relevant sub-pages in the site and give an idea of what the site is about. Comparing the sitelinks that appear for each result can even illustrate the difference between the sites. Just like regular sitelinks, one-line sitelinks are generated algorithmically and the decisions on when to show them and which links to display are entirely based on the expected benefit to users.

For webmasters, this new feature means it's possible that your site will start showing sitelinks for a number of queries where it previously didn't. We expect this will increase the visibility of and traffic to your site, while also improving the experience of users. If, however, you absolutely would prefer not to have a particular sitelink show up, remember that you can always block a page from appearing as a sitelink for 90 days through Webmaster Tools. In fact, as part of our ongoing efforts at improving the Webmaster Tools experience, we're speeding up our response time to blocked pages, so you should see a blocked page get dropped as a sitelink even faster than before. If you need a quick refresher on how to use the sitelink blocking tool, take a look at this previous blog post. Currently you can only block sitelinks on your site's home page, but we're working on expanding this capability so you'll soon be able to remove them from any other page as well.

We hope you find these improvements to sitelinks and Webmaster Tools helpful for both your site and your visitors!

The comments you read here belong only to the person who posted them. We do, however, reserve the right to remove off-topic comments.

37 comments:

Roosevelt Purification said...

I absolutely love this idea :). From the user's perspective I definitely check the site links, so I know it can bring extra traffic if the original listing doesn't look satisfactory.

Good Move big G!

Dan Russell said...

Now they look more like content-related ads than sub-pages of that site. I'd guess these in-line links will get clicked less.

José said...

Hi,

This is a great idea.
I hope that with this new feature, visitors will stay longer on my blog.

Kind regards,

José

facu said...

definite positive.

contact said...

How would a webmaster specify links in the site that should be picked up as sitelinks?

Kaul said...

Another first from Google. Thanks.

Neeraj Srivastava said...

Really a nice idea....It will sure bring extra traffic and help users to get directly to their desired page...

The Gash said...

I think sitelinks are pointless until tehre's some more formal control over how they appear. These new ones do look like contextual as too, ad Dan says above.

Artiom said...

Completely agree with Dan and the Gash. Btw, your search example of nutrition does not show the same results for me: http://twitpic.com/3g17z I know, the results are personal, but why should the sitelinks appear for some and not for others? What "expected benefit for users" is there of not showing the sitelinks?

Nirupam said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Nirupam said...

In my opinion, I feel it will be of great help to the users if one-line sitelinks display appropriate pages in the search results. Sometimes I do see that the site links are displaying internal pages of a website that are not beneficial for users. Since the entire system is algo based, so we might definitely see more improvements in the later stagen

Ash said...

Not seeing this in Australia (for more than one result). In the nutrition example, only the first result - nutrition.gov shows the one-line sitelinks. For the NASA example, the old multi-line, two-column sitelinks show.

Obviously, this will be rolled out slowly across DCs.

Avera said...

We wrote a blog post on the mini site links back on th 5th April.
According to a survey we conducted, some people considered site links daunting when casually browsing because they represent an authorative website.

I think that the mini site links look much more content related and I think that people will be more likely to click on them.

fabriciofuji said...

Fantastic, congratulations! Hope to see it in .BR asap!

carlg said...

As a user, I actually do not click or use site links. Don't think I ever have. I'm not sure why I never have.

Matthew R. Lee said...

I'm not a fan of sitelinks. I skip past them every time.

Mikes@Your Daily Word said...

this is very good idea. at the end of the day, the goal is to benefit the site themselves. thanks!

hmmm... hope my site can have sitelinks soon.

Simmonet said...

Definitely a boon for users and opportunity for webmasters / SEO to optimize sites more efficiently in topic-related silos.

Omar said...

Hey, Google Team.

We have sitelinkns too and it is very cool. But we think Google is being unfair with some websites sometimes.

We have built a site with a lot of effort and with no dark SEO techniques and now it seems that we have a penalty or filter and we don't know why.

It is interesting to see how some spammy sites are ranking high in some cases, while honest and hard-working webmasters like us have to fight with the issues in the Google algo.

Our site is http://www.myddnetwork.com and We have sent a reconsideration request, but no changes so far.

This is frustrating . So far, it seems we have lost 3 years of our work.

Anyway, thanks for any suggestion or help that you can give us. And we are sorry, we know this is a little off-topic. :(

dennis said...

What determines the sitelink term? The title tag?

Alpesh said...

"Currently you can only block sitelinks on your site's home page, but we're working on expanding this capability so you'll soon be able to remove them from any other page as well.
"

I was wondering about a feature which would allow the site owners to suggest the site links, they feel would be best for the readers and the visitors, in addition to the option of blocking the pages.

Any way great going to help the website owners.

Paul said...

I agree with others, As a web developer It would be nice to suggest pages for these links or a guide in how Google decides what pages it picks and ways we can structure our code to help this.

Darla Brown said...

sitelinks seem to work on larger sites that don't need the help.

UpDog said...

this may be naive, but why would I want to block sitelinks?

Amit said...

It is a good idea for presenting sitelink in a line. Ii is really interesting for the user.

omnicity said...

Any info on how a site owner can positively influence these links - ie which ones appear, any info on how the title of the link is chosen, etc.

Graham said...

Great, this helps me a lot. Thanks, Graham from www.logo-n-stitch.co.uk.

Vikram Naik said...

This for sure will enrich the user experience and give them what they want, without refining their searches to hit the page they want...

MOON SHAH-00923338372731 said...

Hi Dear
in my webmaster tools on site link page written.......
Google has not generated any sitelinks for your site. Sitelinks are completely automated, and we show them only if we think they'll be useful to the user. If your site's structure doesn't allow our algorithms to find good sitelinks, or we don't think that the sitelinks are relevant to the user's query, we won't show them. However, we are always working to improve how we find and display sitelinks.
may my site's structure dose't allow algorithms?
Please Check my site & guid me how i take benefit of site links?
http://www.mobixone.com

Eco Beauty said...

Hey I just got sitelinks for my site.. it really feel special when you see it as a special treatement for the hardwork you do to bring traffic to your site.
But yes giving some control is a good idea but that can be used by spammers as well. So it ok if Google is providing sitelinks on the basis of top search and maximum clicks on that search result.

All the best to others who still are waiting to be listed :)

Ghanshyam said...

Really this is wonderful post and very helpful…. SEO services

Absolute Domains said...

This is very good news for large sites who aren't ranked the highest.

Jonna said...

Anything which helps for more traffic and for more people to see what is on my site will make me alot happier. Thanks

Moozer said...

a little late to the party, but what recommendations does google have for improving the structure of my site to encourage site links? It's hard to know what I should do when I don't know what the algorithm is doing

tradinginbinaryoptions said...

Absolutely good idea...:)

KC Truby said...

I am a late comer to this conversation, but as a rookie, great info and need to start using this. Thanks

Google Webmaster Central said...

Hi everyone,

Since over a year has passed since we published this post, we're closing the comments to help us focus on the work ahead. If you still have a question or comment you'd like to discuss, free to visit and/or post your topic in our Webmaster Central Help Forum.

Thanks and take care,
The Webmaster Central Team