For as long as search engines have existed, links have been the part of the currency of visibility. When Google’s PageRank algorithm launched in the late 1990s, it treated links as “votes of confidence” – the more quality sites that linked to you, the more important you looked.
That logic turned link-building into an industry. In the early 2000s, SEO was dominated by tactics focused almost entirely on volume: link farms, article directories, reciprocal linking schemes and worse. Over time, Google cracked down with major updates (like Penguin) and shifted the emphasis from more links to better links: relevant, authoritative, earned.
Today, we’re going through another shift. AI-powered and generative search tools are changing how people discover brands. Instead of a list of blue links, users increasingly see summarised answers with a handful of citations – often drawn from trusted media and high-authority sites. Research into Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) finds that generative search has a strong bias towards earned media and third-party sources – more so than traditional Google search.
So where does that leave link strategies in PR? Are backlinks still worth chasing? And how should SMEs think about links in press releases and media coverage in 2026?
To understand where we are now, it’s worth briefly revisiting how we got here:
In parallel, AI-driven search has arrived. Large language models and generative engines don’t crawl the web in quite the same way as Google’s link graph. They infer authority from patterns in text, entity relationships and, crucially, the sources they choose to cite. Studies suggest that generative engines lean heavily on earned media and high-authority sites when deciding what to surface.
That means our concept of “link strategy” needs to widen. Traditional backlinks are still important – but they now sit alongside brand citations, mentions and context as part of a wider authority picture.

So, are links less important than they used to be? Recent analysis from SEO and GEO specialists paints a consistent picture:
The emerging consensus is that it’s not a choice between backlinks and AI citations. Both matter, but in different ways.
In practical terms for SMEs:
So yes – links are still valuable. But PR strategies now need to think in terms of authority signals, not just getting links.
This is where expectations can get misaligned. Many businesses assume that if they stuff a press release with keyword-rich links and push it out via a distribution service, they’ll get an SEO bump.
That’s not how it works. The key reason is it doesn’t matter what you put in your press release so much as what the journalist who publishes it keeps in.
1. Include links – but for readers, not robots
Include homepage links, product pages, or campaign pages. They help journalists find what they need. If they think it’s valuable for the reader to keep them in, they might do. But this should not be an expectation. It should be seen as a bonus to the citation and brand-building value of the story.
2. Editors may strip or modify them
Newsrooms may remove links, change anchor text, or automatically add no-follow in their CMS. This is something you just have to accept. Journalists are not there to market your business. Never ever ask a hard news journalist to add a link to your coverage. It’s the equivalent of asking a policeman to pop to McDonald’s for you. It shows a deeply disrespectful, and potentially dangerous misunderstanding of their role in the world.
3. Don’t over-optimise text
Overly keyword-stuffed text might work against you. If you describe your business as a “tax efficiency strategist and financial services and solutions provider” a journalist will just change that to “accountancy firm” if they know that’s what you actually are, or just bin the release because they cannot be bothered working out what you actually do. Use natural phrasing and brand names.
4. The real SEO value is in actual coverage – not hosting on newswires
The press release might be optimised to the hilt, but will have zero affect on rankings if it is not published. The value comes when journalists write a story off the back of your release and choose to link voluntarily.
If you want journalists to keep your links in – and even better, add their own – the question becomes: Have we given them a good reason to link? There are ways to do this, but they require dedicated extra effort and possibly investment. Options include:
This is where PR, SEO and GEO intersect.

For SMEs, the takeaway isn’t links don’t matter anymore: it’s far from it, but links alone are not the goal – authority is.
In practical terms:
Get this right, and you’ll build a visibility engine that works across traditional SEO, AI-powered search and human audiences. Links will still matter – but alongside brand citations, earned media and genuine authority.