Improve internal linking in your job board blog with AI

Find useful links between Cavuno posts, approve exact placements, and verify the updated articles.

First, connect Cavuno to your AI client. Cavuno MCP lets the agent read the complete article bodies and public slugs, so it can evaluate links in context rather than matching keywords across a sitemap.

Good internal links help a reader understand a concept, complete the next step, find a useful tool, or move between related parts of a topic cluster. The goal is not to place the maximum number of links or repeat the same commercial destination across every post.

Try it

Start with a read-only audit:

Use Cavuno to build a compact, paginated post inventory, then read the full content in batches and retain a compact map of the internal links already found. Find useful missing links between posts. For each recommendation, show the source post, destination post, exact sentence or section where the link belongs, proposed anchor text, purpose, and priority. Exclude self-links, duplicate links, generic anchors, and links that do not help the reader. Do not update anything yet.

Review the recommendations, then name the ones to apply:

Apply only the recommendations I approved. Keep the anchor text natural, change as little surrounding copy as possible, and do not alter the posts’ slugs or publication status. Read every changed post back from Cavuno and show me the final linked sentence.

You can also audit a new or refreshed article in both directions:

Find relevant outgoing links from this article to existing Cavuno content and inbound opportunities where existing posts should link to this article. Show the exact placement and reader benefit before making any changes.

What the agent will do

  1. Use Cavuno MCP to build a compact, paginated post inventory and derive the public URLs. It reads full post content in batches, extracts the links and relevant passages, and retains the compact map needed for the next batch instead of returning the entire blog at once.
  2. Map related posts by audience problem, topic cluster, entities, workflow stage, and search intent. Similar keywords alone are not enough when two pages compete for the same intent.
  3. Propose contextual links with an exact source, destination, sentence or section, anchor text, purpose, and priority. Useful purposes include a definition, next step, tool, template, comparison, cluster support, or natural conversion.
  4. Check that the destination is live, distinct from the source, useful at that point in the article, and not already linked nearby. It avoids repetitive exact-match anchors and generic phrases such as “click here.”
  5. Separate outgoing edits to the current article from inbound edits to other posts. This makes a larger rollout reviewable instead of quietly modifying the whole blog.
  6. Update only the approved posts. It preserves each slug, publication state, metadata, and unrelated body copy.
  7. Read every changed post back through Cavuno MCP and verify the saved link, final anchor, destination, slug, and publication status.

For a single new article, internal linking is already a required stage of the create and publish workflow. Use this dedicated recipe for a sitewide audit or a focused cleanup across existing posts.