Brand mentions and unlinked brand mentions

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Your brand is mentioned on websites right now without linking back to you. Someone quoted your founder in an article but didn't include a link. A news outlet covered your product launch by name but forgot the URL. A blog recommended your service without linking. These are unlinked brand mentions, and they are more valuable than most small business owners realize.

Google's algorithm has been tracking brand mentions—both linked and unlinked—for years. These mentions signal to Google that your brand is real, recognized, and relevant. More importantly, many unlinked mentions can be converted into actual backlinks with a simple outreach message.

Brand mentions are any online reference to your business name. Unlinked brand mentions are mentions without a hyperlink. Both matter for SEO, but unlinked mentions represent untapped opportunities.

Why brand mentions matter for SEO

Google confirmed years ago that it uses brand mentions as a ranking signal. Here's how it works:

They establish your brand as an entity

Google maintains a Knowledge Graph—a database of interconnected entities like companies, people, places, and things. When your brand is mentioned across multiple websites, Google gains more confidence that you are a real entity worthy of inclusion in that graph. A brand with many quality mentions ranks higher in Google's entity understanding than one with few mentions.

They signal authority and credibility

When news outlets, industry blogs, and reputable websites mention your brand, they are vouching for you. Google interprets these mentions as credibility signals. A brand mentioned in 50 articles looks more authoritative than one mentioned nowhere outside its own website.

They provide context about your brand

When articles mention your brand while discussing your industry, they add topical context. If you run projectmanagement.com with WEMASY and are mentioned in articles about "productivity software" and "team collaboration," those mentions help Google understand what your brand is about.

Linked vs. unlinked mentions

Linked mentions—mentions with a backlink to your site—are obviously valuable. They're backlinks with context. But unlinked mentions are not worthless. They still signal your brand's existence and relevance.

Unlinked mentions are especially valuable because they often represent an opportunity. If someone mentioned your brand but didn't link, you can ask them to add a link. Many will do it, because they already thought your brand was worth mentioning.

The ideal scenario: turn unlinked mentions into linked ones. You get the mention value plus the backlink value.

How to find unlinked mentions of your brand

Finding where your brand is mentioned requires tools and strategy. You cannot manually search the whole internet, so you need technology to help.

Using Google Alerts

Set up a Google Alert for your brand name. Google will email you whenever your brand is mentioned on a new webpage. This gives you real-time discovery of mentions. The downside: you only get new mentions going forward, not historical ones.

Using a URL search operator

Search in Google for: "[Your Brand Name]" -site:yourwebsite.com

This shows you pages mentioning your brand that are not on your own site. You can scroll through results and find mentions. This is manual but works for getting a baseline sense of where you are mentioned.

Using brand monitoring tools

Tools like Mention, Brand24, or similar brand monitoring services track where your brand is mentioned online. They can identify both linked and unlinked mentions, categorize them, and alert you to new ones. These tools cost money but save tremendous time if you want comprehensive data about your mentions.

Using SEO tools

Ahrefs, SEMrush, and Moz all have features to track brand mentions and backlinks. You can see which sites mention you and which ones link to you. The difference between these two lists reveals your unlinked mention opportunities.

Converting unlinked mentions into backlinks

The real opportunity is turning unlinked mentions into links. When you find an article that mentions your brand but does not link, you can reach out and ask them to add a link.

The outreach is simple and should be appreciative, not demanding:

"Hi Sarah, I noticed you mentioned projectmanagement.com in your recent article about productivity tools. Thanks for including us—we appreciate the mention. Would you be open to adding a link? Here's the link: projectmanagement.com. Let me know if you need anything else!"

Short, friendly, specific. Many people will add the link. Some will not. But your response rate will be higher than with cold outreach asking for links from scratch, because they already thought your brand was worth mentioning.

This approach works especially well for:

News coverage — journalists often mention companies but forget to include links. A friendly reminder usually gets them to add one.

Industry blogs and publications — if your brand is mentioned in an industry blog post, the author usually knows about you. A link request is often welcomed.

Product reviews and comparisons — if your product is reviewed or compared but not linked, reaching out can get a link added to the original article, increasing its value.

Building your brand to get more mentions

You cannot wait for mentions to happen naturally. You need to actively build your brand's presence so that more mentions occur.

Publish original research and data. When you publish research, reporters and bloggers cite it. A brand mentioned in 20 articles covering your research gets significant mention value.

Position executives as experts. When the founder of fitnesstraining.com is quoted in articles as a fitness expert, those mentions build your brand authority. Help your team get featured in interviews and speaking opportunities.

Sponsor industry events and initiatives. Sponsorships often lead to mentions: "presented by [Your Brand]," "powered by [Your Brand]." These mentions add up.

Build relationships with journalists and bloggers. When people know your brand and have relationships with your team, they are more likely to mention you. Make it easy for them by offering commentary, data, or expertise when they are working on relevant stories.

Engage in industry conversations. Participate in forums, discussions, and communities where your industry hangs out. Contribution and visibility lead to mentions.

The long-term impact of brand mentions

Brand mentions are not a quick fix. They're a long-term signal that builds over time. A brand with 100 quality mentions across relevant sources has more SEO authority than a brand with none, even if the mention brand has fewer backlinks.

The cumulative effect: as your brand is mentioned more, people search for your brand name more often. More brand searches signal to Google that you are an important entity. More searches plus more mentions create a reinforcing cycle of growing authority.

WEMASY and brand mentions

Your WEMASY website should include your brand prominently: in meta titles, in page content, in your footer, everywhere. When articles mention your brand and link to your site, they'll land on a professional, fast-loading website that reinforces the credibility that the mention suggests.

If you run fitnesstraining.com, set up Google Alerts for "fitnesstraining" so you catch new mentions. Use your WEMASY analytics to see how often people search for your brand. As mentions of fitnesstraining.com increase, brand searches should too. This data shows the real-world impact of building authority.

Frequently asked questions

Are unlinked mentions really worth pursuing?

Should I be aggressive about getting links from every mention?

How often should I search for brand mentions?

What if someone mentions my brand in a negative context?

Does it matter if my brand name is mentioned as part of a comparison or on its own?

How does mentioning my brand in quotation marks vs. without them affect SEO?