Forum Moderators: open

Message Too Old, No Replies

Quality Level Depth vs. Page Content

         

agerhart

2:00 pm on Aug 1, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I am in the process of co-developing a site that is very important, and I got to thinking:

We all know that it is good to have lots of quality content on pages.

But, we also know that themes are good, and that if you have a properly themed site that it can be beneficial to have a index -> sub page -> sub page or content.

This draws up the question of whether it is better to have:

1) the index page -> sub-index -> content page

2) the index page -> sub-index -> content page1, content page2, contentpage3, etc.

The thing is that with option #2 you are going to have some more pages that are on topic but a smaller.

With the first option the pages will still be on theme, but will be larger.

What to do, What to do........

engine

3:52 pm on Aug 1, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Depth (option 2) will give you more flexibility to focus on important and more keyphrases per page, although, it can make a site look a bit thin if it's not got much substance to it.

With a smaller site (option 1) you are keeping the surfer's attention without an unneccessary number of clicks.

I'd prefer to go for option 2 where practical.

rcjordan

5:47 pm on Aug 1, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>2) the index page -> sub-index -> content page1, content page2, contentpage3, etc.

Options 2 with 2 twists added:
1) I like separate domains for one or two of the primary sub-indices, particulary if they can be made to stand alone as a topic in the overall theme of the site network.

2) Small, numerous, on-topic pages seem to work best for me overall, but I do alter the mix by including large, text-heavy (1500 words) articles. By number, these represent only 2% of the pages, though they may account for 30% of the total site word count. (I'm going for authority hub status.)

Brett_Tabke

2:03 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Option 2 for sure.
- Laser targeted keywords (1 kw per page). Easy to optimize.
- Se's tend to like smaller pages under 20k.
- Easier navigation for users to find their way up and down the tree.
- Use "related links" to your other content at the bottom of each short page. Trust the user to keep looking for more info on the topic.

caine

3:18 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I agree with option 2 definetly,

However i am struggling for content if i get down to kw's under five per page.

i.e - motor = kw / dosen't actually mean anything and certainly would'nt be searched for in the context's that the word and/or concept can be implied to mean or be.

so i add, servo, to make 'servo motor' this is closer though still vague as it dose'nt represent a manufacturer of it/ nor what the servo motor does, how big it is, what current feed it is, polarity it has, and so on.

I find, that with certain products, i can get quite close to specifics of the item, but never actually to a singular kw/ or even keyphrase, as the the possibilities of queries in the arena, i'm involved in is staggering.

It's got me thinking though, how close i could get to a singular kw' as it would expand a relatively small site to a considerable size. Allowing for more optimaization towards differing engine's.

agerhart

3:33 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The reason I like option 2 is actually for a few reasons:

1) Builds alot more content....site ends up being larger than thought of

2) site is filled with solid content

3) makes optimizing for each section much easier as you can break it down and get into specifics.

4) leaves the search engines alot of room to crawl around when they send their little robots to the site

agerhart

6:52 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This question was stickmailed to me, and I am posting it with the permission of the sender:

-------------------------------------------------------
I was wondering about the second opinion
is it the same as:

www.blah.com/blaf/keyword1, keyword2

That is just an example or have I missed something here?

Take Care
Ove
-------------------------------------------------------

You make a very good point and you are thinking correctly with your example, but you are speaking about something different.

What we were referring to is the depth of the site, or how many layers it has. We were also discussing if it is better to have one large page with all of the content on it, or if it was better to have numerous smaller pages that are all related and linked.

I believe the general concensus, which I agree with, is that the second option is the better way to go.

Your question deals with directory structures and the correct naming conventions for them. This can be a benefical factor for your website if used correctly and if it uses a proper naming convention.

(edited by: agerhart at 1:59 pm (utc) on Jan. 9, 2002)

glengara

7:30 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Why not use sub-domains? IMO they have greater perceived "weight".

agerhart

7:38 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I actually second your opinion......but there are many that think that they have equal weight.

I think that if you use both, with a proper naming convention, it can be even more beneficial.

Travoli

7:40 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



agerhard, can you give an example please? Thanks!

agerhart

7:42 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>>agerhard, can you give an example please? Thanks!>>>>

Keyword = web design

[webdesign.blah.com...]

heini

11:32 pm on Aug 3, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>http://webdesign.blah.com/webdesign/design.htm [webdesign.blah.com]

Man, was I disappointed when I clicked on this...

mivox

12:33 am on Aug 4, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



You could go a step further (into the "hypen or not" debate) and do this:
[webdesign.blah.com...]

Then of course, you get into the hyphen vs. underscore argument, and could do this:
[webdesign.blah.com...]

or:
[web-design.blah.com...] (but that one might be going a wee bit far with the whole idea. :) )

I think basically, if your domain name contains your major keywords, in a format that makes sense to the searcher, you're doing yourself a favor... not only in potential search engine ranking, but in click through numbers on the search engines.

[webdesign.blah.com...] is going to look more appealing/logical to click on than [design.blah.com...]

WebGuerrilla

3:46 pm on Aug 4, 2001 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member




The web design example is good, except the second web design directory is a bit redundant. The dot replaces, (and IMHO is much better than) the slash. If blah.com was a web development company that offered both design and marketing services, I'd set it up like

blah.com

web-design.blah.com

web-design.blah.com/graphics
web-design.com/copy
web-design.blah.com/programming

marketing.blah.com

marketing.blah.com/banners
marketing.blah.com/email
marketing.blah.com/search-engines

The individual content pages would look like

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/index.html, positioning.html, reporting.html, etc.

web-design.blah.com/programming/index.html, perl.html, php.html, etc.

repeating the theme of the subdomain as your first subdirectory just adds an unecessary depth level that I've personally never found to be beneficial.

nell

3:36 am on Aug 5, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



On each of the many pages I have link to a single site "directory/contents" page with nothing but links and descriptions to the other pages on the site.

dogboy

2:36 pm on Aug 5, 2001 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



agerhart, check your sticky:)

scorpi

11:39 am on Jan 9, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi, I'm new to the site and have found the content and forum discussions very interesting and useful so far (many thanks).

I'm just building my own web site and have an additional question on this thread.

Taking the going example of blah.com, what (if any) would the preference be between:

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/positioning.html

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/positioning/index.html

Assume 'positioning' is a KW. Do SEs assign a different ranking finding it as a directory name or as a page name?

In the second case, the depth of the actual page would increase. Is there a maximum depth one shouldn't exceed?

WebGuerrilla

9:26 pm on Jan 10, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member




Hi Scorpi,

Welcome to WebmasterWorld

>>Taking the going example of blah.com, what (if any) would the preference be between:

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/positioning.html

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/positioning/index.html

For me, it would depend on the amount of positioning content. If you had several pages, then the second would probably be the best choice. If, on the other hand, you only had a single page, I'd go with the first option.

Page depth does have a negative impact if you're trying to compete for fairly competitive terms. If you have a lot of content, and you build a decending tree type structure, then you need to make sure that the content that is deeper in the struture is targeting more percise, and less competitive search terms.

A twist on the idea that I've found to work quite well even if you have a lot of content is to pull your subdirectory index pages out and place them top level and then link off of them into the corresponding directory.

Using your example, the page you would use for your positioning home page would be

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/positioning.html

Additional positioning pages would be located in

marketing.blah.com/search-engines/positioning/

If you do set it up like that, you just need to remeber to put a blank indext page in the directory so people can't view ALL THE CONTENTS.

scorpi

12:18 pm on Jan 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi WebGuerrilla,

Many thanks for the info.

Taking your point to the extreme, would it make sense to put all my pages in the root directory (1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th level pages).

e.g. blah.com/search-engines.html
blah.com/positioning.html
blah.com/positioning_with_google.html
etc...
(Assuming I can live with the development issues)

This would mean that my high value pages (level 4) are as high up as possible.

However, would this cause problems when the SEs create my theme pyramid? When the SEs look through the site, would they take into account the directory structure, or just the link structure?

agerhart

2:38 pm on Jan 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Scorpi,

Determining how many levels you will have and whether or not too dump all the pages in the root depends on the amount of pages that you have.

Let's say that you want to have 5 categories: used cars, new cars, chevy cars, honda cars, and ford cars. If you only have under 5 pages for each of the categories than I would suggest that you do not put them into seperate categories or a deeper level. On the other hand, if you have a larger number of pages for each category than you could go forward with following the categories:

- blah.com/used_cars/
- blah.com/new_cars/
- blah.com/chevy_cars/
- blah.com/handa_cars/
- blah.com/ford_cars/

scorpi

10:56 pm on Jan 11, 2002 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Agerhart,

Many thanks for the reply. That sounds a very good approach. As most of my subdirectories contain less than 5 pages (2 on average), I'll be moving all the stuff up a few levels.

I just wonder if you could confirm my reservation with regards to how search engine's create my site theme. I looked through the columns on this site re. theme based SEs and site pyramids, and I'm just a bit worried that if I drop all of my pages (about 40) in the root, SEs wont be able to construct my 4 level pyramid (my target pages are at level 4, so that's why I'm hoping to move them up as high as possible).

One could construct the pyramid by following the links, but obviously not by following a directory structure. How do SEs compartmentalise the site and construct it?