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Critical Length of URL

         

troels nybo nielsen

2:22 pm on Jan 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Not sure if this question belongs here. There really are so many different aspects to the question of URL-lengths.

I can think of two good reasons to keep a URL short:

1. A long URL may be broken in an email.
2. Search engines may dislike a long URL.

On the other hand there may be some fairly good reasons for some URL's to grow rather long even if you create them manually.

I am in the proces of rebuilding a 100+ page website with a rather complicated structure, and I try to give all directories and files names, that actually show what they are about.

For one page this results in a URL with about 100 characters. I fear that this length may create some problems and it would be better to either shorten some directory names or change the directory structure so that some pages are moved nearer to root level.

How do other members deal with such problems? Have you set a maximum for the URL length that you allow yourself?

tedster

5:29 pm on Jan 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I try to give all directories and files names, that actually show what they are about

This is an important question, and loaded with shades of gray and trade-off decisions. It involves both Information Architecture, the directory structure and the navigational structure - and these are not the same thing.

First, I've backed off my previously extreme concern about keywords in the URL. Yes, they can be a minor help on some search engines. But look at this very site, webmasterworld.com, as an example of succes in the SERPs without that factor at all.

So while I do use some keywords for page names and directory names, I don't worry about having the URL deliver the same clarity of description that, say, a title or an H1 element would.

Second, the navigational structure does NOT need to mirror the directory structure. Yes, this helps keeps things intuitive on a "macro" level, but again, look right where we're reading to see an excellent counter example. The breadcrumb trail on webmasterworld.com does not mirror the directory structure.

I've got lots more I could say on the topic, and I'll probably chime in again on this thread, but for now Ill make one comment directly about the quote I chose from the original post. It can be helpful to give directories a descriptive name, but HOW MANY directories you create is another question altogether.

What I'm saying is that you do not need one directory for every topic covered - and using an extreme number of directories and subdirectories is one reason for the "too long a URL" result.

eWhisper

5:46 pm on Jan 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The reason I like to use some KWs in the URL is for higher CTR rates. If a visitor scans the list of results, the title and URL both containing the KW will often get someone to click on your SERP result than someone elses.

It's not always about ranking #1, need someone to click on it as well.

troels nybo nielsen

11:16 pm on Jan 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Like so often in life this is really an individual decision that should be based on the specific situation. I tried to take all subdirectories out of the directories and place them in root, looked at them and decided that the resulting URL's looked well enough.

Many of them are significantly shorter and they still have the most relevant keywords in them. Keywords that both look nice in a URL in a SERP and make my editing easier.

But there are quite a few directories in root now.

Information Architecture, the directory structure and the navigational structure .... these are not the same thing

I tried to keep these three structures identical because I like structures in different dimensions to support each other. But in the end I decided to make the directory structure largely independent from the others.

This may actually prove to be an advantage because it is now easier to integrate new articles (or rewritten older ones) in the information architecture in a natural way. They do not have to fit into a rather rigid structure, dictated by a directory structure that was sensible two years ago.

But I will have to decide how my sitemaps should be now!

tedster

3:35 am on Jan 13, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This is an evolutionary journey I've been on for a while - and not just for directory sites. The simple URLs have many advantages. But I tell you, my clients with CMS systems will have none of it!

For me it's about focusing on the user experience from every angle, and requiring technology solutions to bend to the user rather than the other way around, as much as is feasible.