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Why backlinks still matter for AI visibility in 2026

Why brand mentions matter more than ever | PetalRank

Search for almost any competitive software category, and the same companies keep appearing.

They appear in comparison articles.

Industry reports reference them.

Publications quote them.

Review platforms mention them.

Eventually, they start appearing in AI-generated answers too.

Most marketing teams notice the visibility.

Fewer stop to ask what is creating it.

Yet one signal continues to appear in the background.

Backlinks.

Many SEO conversations reduce backlinks to a metric.

Domain Authority.

Domain Rating.

Referring domains.

Most SEO teams know these numbers well.

Those numbers can be useful.

They are not the reason backlinks matter.

A backlink is evidence that another website decided a page was worth referencing.

That distinction becomes important when visibility extends beyond search results.

A company that is regularly cited across publications, industry websites, research reports, and trusted resources creates a trail of references across the web.

Those references become part of its digital footprint.

The companies that get cited often get discovered often

Open a few industry reports.

Read several articles covering the same topic.

Browse enough resources within a category.

The same sources tend to appear repeatedly.

This is not usually an accident.

Writers reference sources they trust.

Researchers cite information they consider credible.

Publishers link to resources that add value for readers.

Look at AI-generated answers about SEO, digital marketing, or content strategy.

Names like Ahrefs, Search Engine Journal, HubSpot, and Google’s own documentation appear frequently.

Those brands are not visible because of a single article.

They have accumulated years of citations, references, backlinks, mentions, and industry recognition.

Over time, certain companies become embedded in industry conversations.

A buyer researching the market encounters them repeatedly.

The same pattern can influence AI visibility.

Many AI search experiences rely on information gathered from trusted sources across the web.

Companies that are frequently referenced naturally become easier to discover.

A backlink does not automatically create authority.

The context matters.

A mention from an industry publication often carries a different signal than a random directory listing.

A citation inside original research sends a different signal than a paid placement.

The strongest backlinks usually share something in common.

They exist because someone chose to reference the content.

Not because someone was paid to place a link.

That distinction is becoming increasingly important.

Search engines have become better at identifying manufactured authority.

AI systems are becoming better at identifying trusted sources.

Neither is looking for the largest volume of links.

Both are trying to understand credibility.

Backlink volume is one of the easiest metrics to compare.

It is also one of the easiest metrics to misunderstand.

A cybersecurity company cited by major security publications may build more authority than a website with thousands of unrelated links.

The value comes from relevance.

Context gives a backlink meaning.

AI search experiences are changing how people discover information.

They are not changing the need for trusted sources.

Recent research from Ahrefs analyzed 75,000 brands to understand which signals were most closely associated with visibility in AI-generated search experiences.

One finding stood out.

Brand web mentions showed the strongest correlation with AI visibility at 0.664.

Referring domains followed at 0.295.

Total backlinks showed a weaker correlation at 0.218.

The takeaway is not that backlinks stopped mattering.

The takeaway is that backlinks now operate within a broader authority ecosystem.

When AI systems generate answers, summarize topics, or recommend companies, they still rely on information available across the web.

Authority has to come from somewhere.

A company that is regularly cited, referenced, and linked to creates more signals that it is a recognized source within its category.

That does not guarantee visibility.

It increases the likelihood of being discovered.

The same reason journalists cite trusted sources is why search systems continue looking for authority signals.

Recognition tends to leave evidence.

Backlinks are one form of that evidence.

Backlinks still matter, but they are no longer the whole story

The Ahrefs research revealed something else.

Companies with strong AI visibility rarely rely on backlinks alone.

They were already part of industry conversations.

Publications referenced them.

Reports cited them.

Buyers encountered them repeatedly during research.

Many companies approach backlink building as a numbers exercise.

The stronger approach is to focus on earning references.

Publish research worth citing.

Create resources worth sharing.

Contribute expertise that others find useful.

The backlink is often the outcome.

Not the objective.

Companies that consistently earn attention from credible sources usually accumulate backlinks naturally over time.

They also tend to accumulate mentions, citations, recommendations, and broader recognition.

Those signals often reinforce one another.

Why this matters for visibility

The companies that appear most often during research rarely built visibility through a single channel.

Their presence exists across articles, reports, industry websites, communities, reviews, and recommendations.

Backlinks help connect those signals.

They help establish relationships between sources.

They help reinforce credibility.

Most importantly, they help create evidence that a company is recognized beyond its own website.

That recognition becomes increasingly important as discovery expands across search engines, AI search platforms, industry resources, and recommendation-driven research.

The Ahrefs data points in an interesting direction.

Backlinks remain important, but they are no longer the strongest visibility signal.

Brand mentions appear to play an even larger role.

Frequently asked questions

Yes. Backlinks remain one of the signals that indicate authority, credibility, and recognition across the web. They help establish that other sources consider a company or resource worth referencing.

Yes. Search engines continue to use backlinks as an authority signal, although relevance and quality generally matter more than volume.

AI search systems do not rely on backlinks in exactly the same way traditional search engines do, but backlinks contribute to the broader authority and trust signals associated with a source.

Links from relevant, trusted, and authoritative sources within a company’s industry typically provide more value than large volumes of unrelated links.

Both contribute to visibility. Backlinks provide explicit references, while brand mentions help establish recognition across the web. In many AI search experiences, both signals appear to work together.

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