The Outgoing anchors report shows you the anchors of all the internal and external links of a target website, URL, or subsection.
Here are some actionable use cases for this report.
It makes sense to link to useful external resources when publishing content. But as time passes, you may end up creating your own resources about those topics.
To solve this, search for an anchor related to a post you recently published and switch to External links.
Here, we’re linking to a competing guide about crawl budget. We've since changed this link to point to our own guide.
Nofollow internal links acts as a hint for Google to not crawl content on your website and might prevent the transfer of link equity.
To find them, just add a Nofollow filter. Switch to Internal links, then sort the report by the Links from target number of internal links from high to low.
Where relevant, remove the nofollow attribute on the link.
See only anchors in a specific language by adding a Referring page language filter.
Enter a website (works best with publishing types: news, reviews, etc.) and add your competitor under the Target domain page filter to see all the anchors pointing from that website to them.
Judging by the high number of links, it looks like SEMrush is actively running ads on searchenginejournal.com.
How to analyze yours and your competitors’ websites with Site Explorer
How to master keyword research with Keywords Explorer
How to improve your on-page and technical SEO with Site Audit
How to track and improve your Google rankings with Rank Tracker
How to discover untapped keyword and link building opportunities with Content Explorer
How to get keyword and link building opportunities on autopilot with Alerts