Forum Moderators: martinibuster
On my own site, I usually break articles into multiple pages for several reasons:
1) The shorter pages look more readable;
2) I can use a photo at the top of each page, which works better than embedding photos in the article;
3) I can divide the article into subtopics, which helps with organization and--as a bonus--creates focused pages that do better in the search engines. For example, I just wrote an article on the subway system in a major city, and the article is divided by subtopic into four pages:
1 - Introduction
2 - Types of tickets and how to buy them
3 - How to enter the turnstiles and ride the trains
4 - Related Web links
This four-page structure is a lot more user-friendly than one long toilet-paper roll of an article. The fact that it creates additional listing opportunities in the search engines and displays more AdSense ads for the same amount of text (but with just one ad per page) is a serendipitous dose of icing on the cake.
Not only is the format very clean, I'll bet their ad guys told the execs how great their page view numbers would be once implemented across the site. Pretty slick if you ask me.
However, one of the pages has made it back to the original domain, and does perform well.
My personal feeling is that splitting the long article makes sense from the visitors point of view, and it may well work better on adsense for you, so I'd give it a go.
Shorter articles = lesser keywords = better targeting
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A few days ago I split up a very long page. Now I have 7 pages instead of one. This needed to be done from a user friendly perspective. I've been putting it off because it meant changing internal links on over a hundred other pages. But I thought I'd report the impact on Adsense here.
The page obviously was huge. I'm using a 120x600 skyscraper on the right side, same as before.
Early results show CTR a little up, not a lot.
But Impressions are way up, more than triple. Some of that is that the SEs are still sending people to the old, now first, page and they have to click thru if they want to see widgets from a later era. Before they'd just have to scroll down the one long page. So I expect that some of the additional page views will vaporize as the SEs index the new pages.
Earnings are up inline with the increase in pageviews. (That's the total earnings for the seven pages compared to the one old page.)
First, in the spirit of giving credit where credit is due, I should have mentioned in my previous post that I was partly spurred to make this change by comments JanetHuggard kindly offered about my site in another thread [webmasterworld.com]. I knew this needed to be done, but hearing it from someone else helped motivate me to do it. Thanks JanetHuggard.
It's now a couple weeks into this change. As I thought, now that the new pages have made it into the index and are all getting direct visits from the SEs (almost all Google) the total page views have dropped a bit, but they are still far more than the single page got before, on a daily basis.
Targeting seems to be a bit better, maybe because the pages are more focused, and epc seems a bit higher. But we all know how targeting and epc can fluctuate.
CTR has apparently settled at about twice the previous level.
To sum it up:
split them up = more page views, higher alexa ranking
one long page = possibly more traffic from search engines
That pattern has been the case since I started getting se referals.
Over the years I've divided what started out as a single page into what is now about 30 pages, each more focused than their predecessors.
Everytime I've done that traffic to those pages from the SEs has increased. Everytime. Other than my own experience I can't prove it, but I believe that if you have enough content on a big page that ranks well and you subdivide the page, the new pages will rank as well, if not better. At least that's been my experience.
I still have a few pages that need dividing, I just need to focus on getting it done. :)
Build new pages, subdivide old pages, keep time sensitive pages up to date, choices, choices, choices.... This could turn into work! :)
Most of my articles are split-up over several pages, but I also give the visitor the possibility to display the whole article on one page, e.g. for easier printing of the article.
An all-in-one page attracts more visitors via search engines as the words they search for are otherwise spread over several pages but together present on the all-in-one page. This all-in-one pages is also offered to SE spiders, next to the separate pages.
Regards,
Arjan
Once you do, clearly the multiple page approach is preferable. I have a site on which I was posting 600-word articles in the early phases, then switched to 300-word pages with a tighter focus. It's no contest. The shorter, more focused articles pull in a LOT more traffic from organic SERPs than do the longer ones, when you compare it on a per-word basis. In other words, twice as many articles with half as many words trumps half as many articles with twice the words. And the feedback I get from readers has always been positive about the shorter reads. It's win-win.
But you need to do your homework and pick topics that are actually searched for in order to reap the traffic results (unless you have an established site with high repeat visitor numbers or a ton of IBL's from related sites).
We've kept all our pages (up to 50K+) which we KNOW are frequently printed out for reference, all as one since the very beginning. When Adsense came along we simply inserted ads either spaced down the page periodically at paragraph breaks in leaderboards or as skyscrapers down one side or the other.
If you're going to break it up, give an option like, I think it is Time magazine online and/or NYT, which when you select the printer-friendly version COMBINES all the pages into one tightly formated one WITHOUT ads and with a narrow logo header at the top and a single line copyright at the bottom! I find I am 10 times more likely to print these sort of pages intact (with a "print all" option) than the former type. When there's garbage breaking up the text and the text is spread accross many pages I've frequently even gone to the extent of copying the text piece-meal into a word processor to print for my own use, which means your graphic header, URL or copyright in most cases gets lost too.
I could see the former working to improve SE ranking, but not the later. Also are you counting just impressions as people flip flop around looking for what they want, or unique visitors?
These pages that I'm splitting up are long index pages. Basically just a page with a lot of links to other pages. The one I just split up had around 140 links on it, with a blank line in between each one. So the page was maybe 20 - 30 screens long @ 800x600.
I can't imagine anyone would print these pages.
Visitors can use these pages to find their way to widgets of a given year, about half do that. Another group use the next/previous links on the individual widget image pages to flip through widgets of that time. This last group will frequently find their way to these index pages if they want to see widgets fom a different year, decade, or make.
The individual widget pages are not even close to being big enough to break up. They are basically photo gallery pages with pretty limited image related text.