Source and prompt context
Source and prompt context helps CLEA choose better internal links.
Prompt context shows how people ask questions. Source context shows what proof exists. When both are clear, the sitemap can connect pages in a way that supports real answers.
Use prompts to find the need
A prompt can show what the reader wants.
If prompt results show that AI tools mention a missing topic, that topic may need a page. If a prompt keeps asking for comparison, the sitemap may need a comparison path. If a prompt asks for setup, the next link should probably be a setup guide.
Review this sitemap page. Use the prompt notes in the file. Suggest two internal links that help answer the same user need. Explain why each link belongs.
Read the prompt
Use the question to understand the reader need.
Check the source
Confirm which page or note can support the answer.
Suggest the link
Connect the current page to the best next page.
Mark weak proof
Label planned pages as planned until reviewed.
Use sources to keep links honest
Source context keeps the link plan grounded.
If a page has no source proof yet, do not link to it as if it proves the topic. Mark it as a planned proof page or a draft. This keeps the sitemap honest while still allowing the page plan to grow.
Combine both before writing
The best internal links answer two questions.
First: what does the reader need next? Second: which page has the proof or explanation for that next step? If both answers are clear, the link probably belongs.