An astonishing percentage of what I do with my clients’ web copy involves eradicating the phrase “click here” from their links. For more information, click here.
You see it everywhere. Everyone’s doing it, so it must be a best practice, right?
Wrong. It’s the worst possible practice. You should never, ever use “click here” in a web link.
Why?
“Click here” requires context.
You’re already getting sick of seeing it on this page, aren’t you? But it’s so much worse for people with attention deficit problems or visual impairments.
Our eyes are drawn to things that are different. Links stand out, so if we’re skimming text–which most of us do–we tend to zoom right past the text leading up to the links and focus on the links themselves. But if all it says is, “click here,” we have to read back up to establish the context and figure out where that link might go. If several links on a page say, “click here,” we have to remember the context of each one. Links written with unique and descriptive phrases don’t make us do the extra work of building this mental model as we read.
Context for the visually impaired
Screen readers, if you aren’t familiar with them, are applications that read the text of web pages aloud. They’re mostly used by people with visual impairments. If you’ve never heard one in action, listen to a couple of minutes:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PMuBQ7LyOw&t=5m10s
Notice how it announces how many links are on each new page? That’s Colleen’s cue to press a button if she wants to hear only a list of the linked phrases on the page. This feature allows her to skim the page, just as we do when we let our gaze slide across the paragraph and focus on the links.
Now imagine what that list sounds like if all your links are the same:
Click here.
Click here.
Click here.
Click here.
Click here.
Click here.
This list is useless to Colleen, but instead of merely reading back a couple of sentences to establish context, she’s going to have to listen to the entire page.
“Click here” forces everyone to work harder to establish the context of the link, but it’s especially hard on the visually impaired.
Context for search engines
“Click here” is deadly for your search engine optimization. Google reads your page more or less the same way Colleen’s screen reader does, except it follows each and every link. How does it figure out what a page is about? It compares the phrases people use when linking to a page and the text on the page itself.
When you use “click here” for all your links, you’re removing half of the information Google uses to establish context.
That’s bad enough if you’re linking to other people, but when you’re linking to your own content? That’s even worse. You are, in theory, the most authoritative source of information about your subject. Why would you forfeit such an important opportunity to describe the content you’re linking to?
“Click here” is too restrictive.
Check your traffic reports. Does more than half your traffic come from mobile devices? That’s true for me and most of my clients. Most of those visitors aren’t using a mouse.
There’s also a huge range of assistive devices available to those who have trouble using a mouse. A short list of things people might be doing instead of clicking:
- Mobile screen taps
- Keyboard navigation
- Puff sticks and joysticks
- Voice recognition
Writing “click here” not only ignores those other modes of navigation, but implies that other modes are not supported. Why give the impression that your responsive, accessible site works only on desktops?
“Click here” is patronizing.
It’s not about the journey, it’s about the destination. What will the reader find at that link? Describe the destination instead of dictating how she should get there. She knows how to do that, using whatever device she has–which might not involve clicking.
People started writing “click here” back in the mid-90s, when web designers were getting too artistic with their designs and removing the underlines from links. Needless to say, if links are indistinguishable from plain text in your design, fix that instead of writing bad copy to compensate for it.
Assuming that the reader can tell what’s a link and what isn’t, you don’t have to tell her to click it. The web has been part of our professional lives for twenty years now. Even the grumpiest old technophobe in your organization knows what to do with a link.
Writing better links without “click here”
The easiest way to write great links is to simply use the name of the destination page. This reassures your readers that they have arrived on the page they intended to reach, and haven’t gotten lost by accidentally clicking something else.
Consider these three versions of a sentence:
a. For more information about the publisher, click here.
b. For more information, visit the author’s publisher, Macmillan.
c. For more information, visit the author’s publisher, Macmillan.
The first example obviously offers the least context. Who is providing the additional information? Where is this link taking the reader? Who knows.
In the second example, the writer has linked the word that describes his relationship to the destination site. That might not be a bad choice in some contexts, but here it fails to answer the fundamental question of where the link leads. When this link is taken out of the sentence’s context (for example, in lists of links read by screen readers), it doesn’t provide sufficient information to guide the reader.
In most cases, it’s best to identify or describe the link’s destination, as in the third example.
Further reading
Writing Hyperlinks, from the Nielsen Norman Group
Thomas says
Wow! nice
Lonnie Wormley says
I am glad you wrote this. I can now send this to my colleagues via email with a “click here” hyper link.
Gloria Barr says
I wonder if there might be exceptions to this rule. For example, I use click here on this page at the bottom for my TripAdvisor link. But the entire sentence is linked, not just the words “click here”. Does that make a difference to the search engines?
Gus says
There is never a reason to say ‘Click here’. Most people don’t click, they tap. And no, do NOT say ‘tap here’. Just briefly describe the destination. People know what to do (tap or click or whatever) with a link. The phrase ‘click here’ was always stupid, right from the beginning.
Fingerprint says
Thanks for the great tips! I do have a question however that I think you could probably answer.
I was wondering, When doing freelance web design, do I pay
for and manage the domain name and web hosting for my clients?
Or is that something the client does? Any insight would be greatly appreciated!
EPFO says
Nice info, nicely explained.
Steve Sorbo says
Stephanie, thank you for this very informative post. I changed my copy from “Click here to see a map of our service area to “For more information about our service area, please refer to our map.”
Mike says
Great article!!! There ought to be NO exceptions… unless you want your site to appear amateurish. I spend many hours on a large site eradicating the antiquated “Click here” links that content creators consistently generate.
I suggest taking it a step further by also squashing the overly verbose, “For more information,” phrase. Instead of: “For more information, visit the author’s publisher, Macmillan.” … lead with an ACTION verb (ie: Visit or See):
“Visit the author’s publisher, Macmillan”.
The fact that a hyperlink leads to more information is as implied as the fact that it’s a clickable (or touchable) hyperlink.