Profile-to-Website Linking
Session 3.3 · ~5 min read
Session 3.2 covered the outbound leg: your website linking to your profiles. This session covers the return leg: your profiles linking back to your website. Together, these form the bidirectional connections that convert claims into confirmed entity links.
This is the step most businesses skip. They build social profiles, fill in the basics, and never add their website URL to the profile's designated field. Or they add it once and forget about it, letting it go stale when their domain changes. The result: a one-way claim with no confirmation.
Why the Return Link Matters
When Google crawls your LinkedIn company page and finds a "Website" field pointing to https://www.yourcompany.com, it has independent confirmation that your website and your LinkedIn page belong to the same entity. This is not your website making a claim. This is LinkedIn (a trusted third-party platform) presenting data that you entered, which Google can cross-reference against your website's sameAs declaration.
The bidirectional link pattern looks like this:
Platform-by-Platform Guide
Every platform has a different interface for adding your website URL. Some make it prominent; others bury it. The following table shows where to add your website link on each major platform:
| Platform | Where to Add Website URL | Additional Entity Fields | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| LinkedIn (Company) | Admin > Edit Page > Website URL | Industry, company size, headquarters | Use canonical URL with https:// |
| LinkedIn (Personal) | Profile > Contact Info > Website | Custom label for URL | Label it with your brand name |
| Facebook (Page) | About > Contact Info > Website | Address, phone, email, hours | Ensure all NAP matches |
| Edit Profile > Website | Bio text, category | Single URL field; use homepage | |
| X / Twitter | Edit Profile > Website | Location, bio | Also add to pinned tweet if possible |
| YouTube | Customization > Basic Info > Links | Channel description, location | First link appears on channel banner |
| Google Business Profile | Info > Website | All NAP, hours, categories | Critical for local entity signals |
| Crunchbase | Edit Organization > Website | Founded date, HQ, funding, team | Strong authority signal for startups |
| GitHub | Organization Settings > URL | Location, email, description | Relevant for tech companies |
| Settings > Claim Website | Verified domain claim | Requires HTML tag or DNS verification |
URL Consistency
The URL you enter on every profile must be identical. Not "similar." Identical. That means:
- Same protocol:
https://everywhere (nothttp://on some) - Same www preference:
https://www.example.comorhttps://example.com, not mixed - Same trailing slash convention: if you use
https://www.example.com/, use it everywhere - No tracking parameters: do not add
?utm_source=linkedinto the URL in your profile
Tracking parameters are tempting because they help you measure traffic. But they create URL variants that Google may treat as different pages. Use your canonical homepage URL on all profiles. Track referral traffic through your analytics platform's built-in referral detection.
Key concept: Profile-to-website links are not just navigation. They are identity confirmation signals. When five different platforms all point to the same website URL, and that website's structured data points back to all five, Google has strong evidence that these are all the same entity.
Verification Features
Some platforms offer formal verification that strengthens the entity signal:
- Pinterest: Claim Website. You add an HTML meta tag or DNS record to your site, proving you control the domain. Pinterest then marks your profile as verified.
- Google Business Profile: Verification. Postcard, phone, or email verification confirms you control the business at that address.
- X/Twitter: Verified Organizations. Paid verification with blue/gold checkmark.
- Facebook: Page Verification. Requires business documents for the gray verification badge.
These verification steps create stronger entity signals than simple URL fields because they require proof of control. Pursue them where available.
Handling Multiple Websites
If your entity has multiple domains (e.g., a corporate site and a product site), choose one as the primary entity home. All profiles should link to that primary domain. The secondary domain should use its own structured data to reference the primary Organization via @id and parentOrganization.
Further Reading
- LinkedIn Help: Edit Your Company Page
- Google: Verify Your Business on Google
- Pinterest: Claim Your Website
- Instagram Help: Edit Your Profile
Assignment
- Log into every social profile and directory listing from your entity graph map (Session 3.1).
- For each, verify the website URL field contains your exact canonical homepage URL.
- Fill in every additional entity-relevant field (industry, location, description, hours) using the same data from your NAP audit.
- Where verification features are available (Pinterest, GBP, Facebook), initiate the verification process.
- Create a completion checklist with columns: Platform, URL Field Correct (Y/N), NAP Match (Y/N), Verification Status.