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The tittle matters to Google but how about the naming of the actual html file? Because I have a great deal of pages I gave them numbers - seemed to be the right thind to do at the time. The Q is - will it help my ranking including keywords when creating new pages?
Ig so - what would be best if I was to "rename" my pages? Leave the old ones and create new or renaming the old ones?
By the way - I just love this place. I have been coming here the last 5 months and have great succes thanks to all the threads here. Beets the few Danish sites on the matter.
Thanks.
blue_widgets.html
red_widgets.html
green_widgets.html
(personal choice if you use hyphen or underscore inbetween the keywords)
Having text on your pages relating to each of the colours, your keywords title and description all relating to each colour and you would find this an advantage instead of having page1.html page2.html which mean absolutly nothing because a visitor to a search engine will not type in a search box "page 1"
but he will type in "blue widgets"
But here's a thought... what effect might it have on your clickthrough rate?
I always check the URL before I click on a site in the SERPs, and am much more likely to click on a relevant looking URL.
It's a behaviour that I've also noticed in user testing.. both with novices and experienced users.
The domain name can often give a good indication whether the site is actually about what you want, and the file name is part of that, particularly for sites dealing with more than one subject.
And andreasfriedrich, would you and your senior buddies please cosider this: considering the few Danish sites offering this kind of information, this forum will be visited by Danes. Being Danish, English is not our first language. That is why I opened my thread the way I did - being humble hoping not to encounter your reaction. Believe it or not, I was trying to do right by you and your fellow friends.
Your reaction was not what I was hoping for.
Thanks to the rest.
How would you say would be best? Renaming my pages, now thay are indexed by several searchengines, my not be great. Duplicating them and then renaming them? Will that cause problems?
I wil sertanly take it in to account in the future - any suggestions?
Thanks..
I would also like to add that I have been visiting this excellent forum for 3 years and have only just started to post because of the Fear of being made to look small by posting a comments which is not quite correct. No one is perfect and anyone and everyone is allowed to make a mistake if it be a spelling mistake or by posting the wrong information
We all know that there are some very clever people involved with this forum and no one would take that away from them, but even these super humans started off knowing nothing about SEO
I may be wrong, but I think it can make a large difference. . There is a good chance that links to those pages will be structured like so: www.site.com/widgets.html - If you didn't have the word 'widgets' in that text, then you would be missing out on that potential anchor text. In situations where you can't control how people link to your pages, I think it is a worthwhile thing to do.
NOTE: My understanding is that the / and . will help seperate that word from the phrase - someone more knowledgeable than myself please correct me if I am wrong.
If a person searches for 'blue widgets' and the google return shows the following URLs for numbers 3 and 4 -
3 - www.mydomain.com/376.htm
4 - www.mydomain.com/blue-widgets.htm
then it would be highly likely that the user will select 4 ahead of 3, all other things being equal.
If file naming had very little relevance, why does Yahoo! bold those words from a search query? There are other SE's that also do this. I think it would be to your advantage to name the files accordingly. If the page is about aqua widgets, then name it aqua-widgets.htm.
Eg.
blue-widgets.html - good
blue-furry-widgets-with-white-zig-zagged-stripes.html - bad
Anyone back me up on this with more detail? a number would help. (I have observed 0 pr's on some of my longer filenames - but have some other factors that are really confusing the issues).
(personal choice if you use hyphen or underscore inbetween the keywords)
I would use a hyphen.
Hyphen or Underscore? [webmasterworld.com] see message #8 and #12.
gethan
I have pages with wording as you would type in a search phrase with underscore beween each word and these pages are spidered and also viewed on a daily basis. OK they are not PR 6's and 7's but they were done to prove a point
blue-widgets.html - good
blue-furry-widgets-with-white-zig-zagged-stripes.html - bad
What do you think about
blue-furry-widgets/with-white-zig-zagged-stripes.html
I got the same "problem". Currently my url is like that:
dive_centre/35-indonesia/17-bali/99-bali_divers.htm
............^^ - id of country
.........................^^ id of island / region
.................................^^ id - of dive centre
I think diver are looking for 'dive centre indonesia' or 'diving centre bali' - so imho is a good choice.
But as deeper the directory as smaller the PR of this page.
So isn't it better with
dive_centre_35-indonesia_17-bali_99-bali_divers.htm
? Maik
Basically the issues complicating it are:
1) Directory depth
- google uses the -1 to each level to estimate PR, not to assign real values so
2) Internal linking structure (also external links but ignored for this arguement)
- actually gives the PR. So a small number of links on the front page would pass on a greater percentage of the available PR to each linked page than a huge number but...
3) Url length
- google has a cut off on the length of a query string eg. dynamic.php?parameter1=12343¶meter2=34333¶meter3=43d45d
- why would static pages not have a similar cut off?
The chances are if you have to go with pages with names that long or that deep, then we're talking about a large number of pages and some kind of CMS (content management system) - in our case working with mod_rewrite.
I don't think that having a page in subdirectories as opposed to long filenames would make any difference. For organising data though and user experience I would go with sub dirs.
Finally case study - WebmasterWorld - keeps URL's nice and short,
eg. /forum17/1393.htm
Brett has steered clear of making titles also appear in the url. I guess that is because there is very little control over what users can select for a title and the processing of it isn't worth the tiny advantage that it confers.
Another advantage of the keyword in the filename or url is inbound link text - some pages will link to you using the url as the link text. Minor, but another added plus.