The web address or homepage of a particular business or organization. Examples: JoesPlumbing.com, PortlandDentists.com, etc. Domain names are reserved and purchased from domain name registrars. See also: WHOIS, URL (uniform resource locator)
What is a Domain Name?
Deep linking refers to linking to content deeper in a website (or application), such as a blog post, product page, or article, rather than linking only to its homepage or top-level category pages.
In the SEO context, deep links help distribute linking authority (sometimes called “link juice”) more evenly across a site, enabling more internal pages to gain visibility, relevance, and indexing.
Deep linking also improves user experience: instead of forcing users to click through a site’s navigation, a deep link takes them exactly where they want to go.
In mobile apps, deep linking is used to open a specific section or screen inside an app (if installed) rather than just launching the app’s home screen. Deferred deep linking allows that navigation even if the app is not yet installed, by directing users through the app store first.
Yes. Deep links allow search engines to find and rank more internal pages, rather than concentrating link value only on the homepage.
No. You can have internal deep links (linking within your site) or external deep links (other sites linking to your inner pages).