Welcome to WebProNews Breaking eBusiness and Search News
Advertise | Newsletter | Sitemap | News Feeds News Feed 
 WebProNews Search Part of the iEntry network iEntry inc. 

Web Site Architecture And Search Engines – Part 2

Shari Thurow
Expert Author
Published: 2004-04-26

WebProNews RSS Feed


Reader question: I hear search engine marketers talk about site architecture all of the time and how important it is for search engine optimization. What exactly is site architecture and how should I be implementing it on my Web site?

Answer: In Part 1 of this article series, I addressed the directory structure and navigation schemes as a part of Web site architecture. In Part 2, I will address URL structure, file names, and hyphenation.

To review, the building blocks of site architecture are:

· How directories are set up on your server

· Site navigation scheme

· URL structure

· Type of Web page

· Page layout and structure

· Cross-linking


Subdirectories, file names and URL structure



Many Web developers like to divide different sections of a site into subdirectories in order to keep related pages close to each other (on a Web server).

On a larger site (>250 pages), this strategy makes sense. On a smaller site, this so-called SEO strategy might be confusing for site visitors.

Search engine spiders might have difficulty reaching deeper pages in your Web site, particularly if the site navigation scheme and cross-linking structure is not spider-friendly. Keep your pages closer to the root directory instead of in deeply nested into subdirectories.

Some search engine marketers recommend creating extra subdirectories in order to place extra keywords in the URL, particularly if a domain name does not contain an important keyword phrase. For example, let's use one of my company's domains:

http://www.grantastics.com/

This domain is supposedly poor because it contains no keywords. One of the design services we offer is logo design. In this instance, search engine marketer might recommend that we create a subdirectory called "logos."

In this example, the subdirectory structure will look like this (excluding all pages except the home page):

/cgi-bin
/css
/images
index.html
/logos
/pdf
/robots.txt
/scripts

The URL will look like the following:

http://www.grantastics.com/logos/

Then, to really increase the number of keywords in the URL, search engine marketers might suggest the following file names:

logo.html
logodesign.html
logodesigns.html
logo-design.html
logo-designs.html
logos.html
logosdesign.html
logosdesigns.html
logos-design.html
logos-designs.html
designlogo.html
designlogos.html
design-logo.html
design-logos.html
designslogo.html
designs-logo.html
design-logos.html
designs-logos.html

In my opinion, this search engine marketing strategy can be a waste of time AND can confuse site visitors.

Suppose your target audience wants to find the page that showcases your logo designs portfolio. Just by viewing the following file names, can you tell me which is the most likely URL that visitors will select:

logos-design.html
logo-designs.html

Confusing, isn't it? Using keyword-rich file names appears to be a popular search engine marketing strategy yet it can easily confuse site visitors.

File-naming structure is often a good focus group question or usability test question. Before you listen to any search engine marketer's advice on this topic, always use a focus group or usability testers. You might find that directory structure and file naming hurts more than it helps.

URL structure - hyphens or no hyphens



The reason search engine marketers like to use hyphenation in both domain names and file names is to get keywords in the URL. They use term highlighting in a search engine results page (SERP) as evidence of its importance.

For example, if you perform an INURL search at Google or Yahoo, you will see that keywords separated by hyphens are highlighted in the search results.

Let's be honest. How many of you have reviewed your Web analytics software to determine the number of site visitors who use INURL searches to find your site? If people do not generally perform INURL searches to find your site, then do not obsess with using hyphens in your domain names and file names.

Sometimes, using hyphens can be a good strategy. Some good reasons for using hyphenation are:

· Your company name is not available as a domain name. Another company has already registered it. For example, we market a company called Corrugated Metals, Inc. (CMI). When they decided to register their domain name a few years ago, some other company (that sold corrugated metals) already reserved it. However, the hyphenated version, corrugated-metals.com, was available. Since it makes sense for this company to own the hyphenated version of their company name, using the hyphen is fine.

· To protect your brand. If you find that both the hyphenated and unhyphenated versions of your company name are available, purchase both of them. But remember, with an optimization campaign, only submit one domain to the search engines.

· Different spellings. The example I am using pertains to our own site, though I am sure many businesses have the same experience. Our company name is based on the CEO's first name, Grant. However, when people hear our domain name on a radio show, at a conference, or in general conversation, they mistakenly believe our company name is a combination of two words: grand and fantastic. Hence the misspelling of grandtastic. Since we commonly see this misspelling in our site statistics software, we also registered the hyphenated and unhyphenated versions of the misspelled domain.

Conclusion



Recently, in Google's search engine results pages (SERPs), keywords are being highlighted in the URL, words that are not separated by hyphens or forward slashes. I observed this for standard keyword searches - not INURL searches.

What does this mean to a Web site owner? Remember, information from a site can be used for display in SERPs that might not be used for relevancy.

Part 3 of this article series will address the types of Web pages, page layout, and cross-linking. View Part 1 here.

Related articles:



· Web Site Architecture and Search Engines - Part 1

· SEO Corner: Keyword-rich URLs and Search Engine Visibility - Part 1

· SEO Corner: Keyword-rich URLs and Search Engine Visibility - Part 2

· Receive Our Daily Email of Breaking eBusiness News


About the Author:
Shari Thurow is Marketing Director at Grantastic Designs, Inc., a full-service search engine marketing, web and graphic design firm. This article is excerpted from her book, Search Engine Visibility (http://www.searchenginesbook.com) published in January 2003 by New Riders Publishing Co. Shari can be reached at shari@grantasticdesigns.com.

Shari Thurow Answers SEO Questions: Click Here For Free Answers

WebProNews RSS Feed

More Insider Reports Articles

Contact WebProNews
Advertisement





TOP NEWS

Targeted Information for Business
WebProNews is part of the iEntry network

Internet Business: Marketing: Small Business:
WebProNews MarketingNewz SmallBusinessNewz
WebProWorld AdvertisingDay PromoteNews
EcommNewz SalesNewz EntrepreneurNewz

Software: Search Engines: Web Design:
WebMasterFree Jayde B2B DesignNewz
NetworkingFiles SearchZA FlashNewz
SecurityConfig SearchNewz WebSiteNotes

Developer: IT Management: Security:
DevWebPro ITManagement SecurityProNews
DevNewz SysAdminNews SecurityConfig
TheDevWeb NetworkingFiles NetworkNewz

The iEntry Network consists of over 100 web publications reaching millions of Internet Professionals. Contact us to advertise.
eBUSINESS RESOURCES






 Advertise | Contact Us | Corporate | Newsletter | Sitemap | Submit an Article | News Feeds
 WebProNews is an iEntry, Inc. ® publication - 1998-2009 All Rights Reserved
About WebProNews
WebProNews is the number one source for eBusiness News. Over 5 million eBusiness professionals read WebProNews and other iEntry business and tech publications.

WebProNews provides real-time coverage of internet business.

Free Email Newsletters:
WebProNews SearchNewz
WebProWorld DevWebPro
Marketing SecurityNews
Plus over 100 other newsletters!

Send me relevant info on products and services.


WebProWorld
Ten most recent posts.

NetworkingFiles
Featured Software

WebProNews in the News
View all recent mentions of WebProNews from around the world!

Recent Articles On ...
Google eBusiness
Yahoo Ask Jeeves
MSN Blogs
Search Engines Blogging
Affiliate Programs Marketing
eCommerce Advertising
eBay Sun Microsystems
AOL Adsense
Microsoft Adwords
Oracle IBM
Amazon Apple
SEM Mac
SEO iPod
Adsense XBox
PR Adobe



iEntry.com WebProWorld RSS Feed WebProWorld Contact WebProNews Print Version Email a friend Bookmark us