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  4. Question on Breadcrumb and Canonical

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Question on Breadcrumb and Canonical

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  • TommyTan
    TommyTan last edited by Feb 25, 2013, 6:52 PM

    Hi SEOmozers,

    I have another question.  =]  Thanks in  advance.

    First question: How important is the breadcrumb for SEO? I know that breadcrumb makes better UX because it shows how the visitor landed on this page and the breadcrumb may show up in the search engine.  But other than that, how important is it?

    Second Question:

    If I have a page that can be found via 2 locations, how should I handle this in regards to breadcrumb?

    For example, I have page A.  You can access page A via Category A and Category B.  Therefore, what I did was list Page A under Category A and when someone visit Category B and click on Page A, it will redirect to the page A that was found via Category A.

    The problem is on page A, the breadcrumb is Home > Category A > Page A.  So if someone visit Category B and click on Page A, it redirects and the breadcrumb shows Home > Category A > Page A.

    What should I do with the breadcrumb for Category B > Page A?

    Should I create another page A and just use canonical on it?

    Should I create another page A but do not index it?

    or leave it as is? 1 Page A, can be access via 2 categories.

    Please advise.

    Thank you!

    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
    • TommyTan
      TommyTan @Ryan-Bradley last edited by Feb 27, 2013, 4:35 PM Feb 27, 2013, 4:35 PM

      You are spot on on the question.

      I was thinking along the same line as your answer.  So now you just confirmed it.

      Thank you very much!

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Ryan-Bradley
        Ryan-Bradley @TommyTan last edited by Feb 27, 2013, 4:35 PM Feb 27, 2013, 12:19 AM

        Hi Tommy,

        Not exactly. I think I misunderstood your original question.  I thought you had two pages with the same content, and they were accessible via two different categories.

        But I think you're saying you have one page, but you can access that one page via the two different categories, but the breadcrumbs are the same no matter which route they took, whether through A or B, they show category A breadcrumbs.

        I wouldn't worry so much about the breadcrumbs, I would worry more about duplicate content and urls.

        Let's say you're selling a flashlight, and you just have one flashlight product page. But, because of the content of your site, you listed it under two different categories.  Let's just say the categories are tools and gadgets.

        So if you had two urls:

        http://www.site.com/tools/flashlight and http://www.site.com/gadgets/flashlight

        but they were technically the same page (same content and everything just different url), this would be bad.

        The fix for this would be to pick the url you want to rank, then put that url as the canonical for the other, so when google crawls it, they know you prefer the other url.

        However if it were the same url, no matter which category they came from, there is no problem, because there is no duplication.

        Now back to the beginning 😉

        If you really want the breadcrumbs to reflect which category they came from, instead of just redirecting to category A, then create another page for category B, make it identical to the page for category A. But on the new page, put the url of page A as the canonical on the new page for B.

        So users get the same product page (content speaking) with the breadcrumb that reflects their path, but Google will only count one url no matter which one they crawl.

        TommyTan 1 Reply Last reply Feb 27, 2013, 4:35 PM Reply Quote 1
        • TommyTan
          TommyTan @Ryan-Bradley last edited by Feb 26, 2013, 3:02 PM Feb 26, 2013, 3:02 PM

          Hi Ryan,

          Thanks for replying.  So you are saying I should create a new Page A and have it list under Category B and use the canonical tag on the one I want to be indexed.  So in the end I will have 1 Page A in Google's eye and 2 Page A in users' eye.

          Ryan-Bradley 1 Reply Last reply Feb 27, 2013, 12:19 AM Reply Quote 0
          • Ryan-Bradley
            Ryan-Bradley last edited by Feb 25, 2013, 7:54 PM Feb 25, 2013, 7:54 PM

            Breadcrumbs are more for UX like you say, however they do help search engines crawl your site's pages better as well, especially if they're not in main navigation.

            I think the canonical issue is the more important one rather than what links appear in the breadcrumb.  I would select which page you would prefer to rank, then put that url in the canonical tag of the other page.

            So the canonical would be for Google, and the breadcrumb would be for user.

            Also, who knows, maybe having the different breadcrumb is better for the user, because they came from a different path to that product in the first place. But Google would count both pages as the same.

            TommyTan 1 Reply Last reply Feb 26, 2013, 3:02 PM Reply Quote 1
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