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Since the "real" product pages that members see requires logging in, the client created pages with "quick" product descriptions that robots can find. These pages are about 4 clicks in (site map > products page > product category list > product detail page) and have lost 4 PR points from the homepage.
I am considering the following architectural options:
1. Make the "quick" product descriptions no more than 2 clicks off home page, and increase content pertaining to each product.
2. Make "member" product pages accessible to public, require login only when user adds to shopping cart.
For both options above, I will urge the client to keep creating useful content for all products.
I'd like to hear feedback on my ideas, and any other solutions.
About 90% of the links on this site pop up a new browser that begins the registration process, and I'm wondering if these links might have other implications. Lastly, these "category" links are on every page, which seems to confuse the theme of each page. For instance, the product page for a DVD player has links for coffee, flowers, etc. on one side of the page.
If I am going around a site looking to see if they have everything that I am looking for, I am likely to add to the shopping cart till I see that they have most of what I want.
Registering or logging in is a real PITA that is likely to lose you a lot of viewers before they get to the point where they have enough invested to be willing to bother.
It will make both the spiders and your users happier.
The one thing you should absolutely NOT do is to allow googlebot to crawl the pages that require a login. When a user clicks on a link expecting information, and gets a login screen, it just annoys the user, which will make google unhappy.
The one thing you should absolutely NOT do is to allow googlebot to crawl the pages that require a login.
Hey BigDave -- that's exactly what I'm thinking about. If Google REPEATEDELY hits login screens (in new browsers, "oh, quit it!"), is this going to be a penalty of sorts? When you say they "won't like it", I'm trying to get a handle on what, exactly, this might mean.
Thanks!
Oops, scratch that just saw you second post ;o)
The one thing you should absolutely NOT do is to allow googlebot to crawl the pages that require a login.
That logic escapes me. Better to have *some* find you and log in than never be found at all.