Keywords in url - specific case question
-
There are a bunch of questions about keywords in the url and so far what I've gathered is that it's good to have them but keep it simple so it doesn't look stuffed.
I'm working on redesigning some sites that were originally setup by a group who had no understanding of SEO (or perhaps I should say a misunderstanding) and spent a lot of time stuffing keywords EVERYWHERE. In some cases they weren't too far off but in others I think they just went overboard.
One of the areas I'm trying to fix are the paths which leads to the following concerns.
One of the sites has a basketball section and through the use of the Adwords keyword tool they determined that most people are searching for "basketball hoops".
My first question is, how reliable are the monthly search numbers in the Adwords keyword tool? Are they accurate enough to warrant forming keyword strategies based on the results?
As it relates to the url issue, the current tree for the basketball section of the site looks like this:
- /basketball (the landing page for the whole section, there are other sport specific pages as well)
- /basketball/hoops (goes nowhere. not sure why they didn't just go to /basketball-hoops/x for other pages)
- /basketball/hoops/72in-backboards (the systems are split into three different backboard sizes, these pages group them onto one overview page per size)
- /basketball/hoops/72in-backboards/specific-basketball-goal (the actual basketball goal details page with options to buy and such)
So what I'm wondering about this setup is:
- does having /basketball/hoops take care of having the "basketball hoops" search term or would it be more effective to switch to /basketball-hoops?
- If it's fine to leave it at /basketball/hoops, do you think it would be beneficial to create an actual page for that path? We found that actually more people search for "basketball basket" than "basketball hoops" so maybe that would be a good page to try to make use of that term and explain maybe why people think "basket" instead of "hoop" and why we call ours "goals" or something.
I tend to navigate pages by deleting path arguments and I hate when I land on a nonexistent path so I'm leaning toward changing the paths but just don't know if it's worth it at this point.
Additionally, on one of the other sites, we have a domain that is the main keyword we want to rank for: swingsets.com
The other company I mentioned then decided to put all of the product pages under: swingsets.com/swing-sets/{category}/{set-height}-{'swing-set'|'playset'|'swingsets'|'play-set'|etc...}/combo{#}
So that comes out to look something like this: swingsets.com/swing-sets/outback/5ft-playsets/combo2
I've never liked that path setup. It looks stuffed to me, especially once they start using '5ft-swing-sets' and '6ft-play-set' on other product pages. It's inconsistent which is another issue I have since I tend to surf by path.
Another issue with that setup is the final argument of combo{#} but there's nothing I can really do about that because they call the products out as combinations. The only actual product name is the "outback" part.
I've been trying to come up with a better path setup for a long time now but again I'm concerned that I may just be wasting my time. The only thing I did do was make the height section consistently {height}-playsets. Is that good enough or should these paths remove /swing-sets from the beginning?
The actual /swing-sets page is a good and valuable landing page but then I'm not sure if it remains valuable to keep it in the paths for the product pages afterward.
Any insight into this dilemma would be appreciated. I've been stewing over this for a long time and my reasoning always becomes circular since I can see plenty of reasons for keeping them the way they are and simplifying them.
-
It's indeed not something people would look for..
Very difficult problem you have there, at least it's good that you're making changes to it.
Don't forget to set a 301 redirect to the new page on any page you delete and if there is no new page then to the most relevant or the home page.From what you told me i don't think it is an option to rebuild the entire site. The structure which is now there is way too difficult to change as much as it should in order for the best results.
The swingset website doesn't have very big descriptions either. I think you can make some good improvements on that area at least. There is one webshop in particular which i always use as a reference for how much content you should have on a product and that is vat19.com.
Not only is their marketing strategy perfect for their target audience. They offer so much information about their products. Images, text, specifications and video.
I hope i helped you at all with your problems and if you have any other questions or need more advice or a brainstorm partner let me know either in this thread (if it's relevant) or in a new thread (the you could send me a private message to let me know where to find it :)) or you could of course send me a private message directly, but then other people couldn't benefit from the problems and solutions we found.
Good luck with .. well everything
-
For basketball, yes, definitely. I'm actually in the process of changing them over on the dev site right now. Going to go with /basketball-hoops for the basketball pages. Just makes more sense.
As for swing sets, we have two main categories, outback and playhouse. Those two categories have a sub category that appends XL to the category name (such as outback-xl). Each category has combos 1 thru 5 and sometimes multiple or none of a combo (meaning you could have combo1, combo2, combo2-2, combo2-3, combo4 but no combo5).
I think the last time I did a count there were something like over 200 specific product combo pages. If we used AJAX it would reduce the actual pages to 12 (4 categories (including xl) and 3 heights per category). We have content issues with that site like you wouldn't believe and doing that would go a long way to fixing part of that problem but then it creates another even larger set of problems.
I think as a first step we will definitely eliminate /swing-sets from the paths of our product pages, though we'll need to keep the swing set overview page at /swing-sets. So once someone visits the overview page at swingsets.com/swing-sets, the sub pages would be at swingsets.com/category instead of swingsets.com/swing-sets/category.
Not sure there is really anything that we can do about the rest of the url though.
One thought I have after looking at your suggestion would be to go from swingsets.com/outback/5ft-playset/combo2 to swingsets.com/outback-5ft-playset/combo2
But again, I'm not sure if that makes any difference. I don't think anyone is searching for "outback" in terms of looking for a wooden swing set so I don't think we'd really benefit any by changing the / to a - in this case.
Actually, I just used the Adwords keyword tool to see and found that no one is searching for any iteration of {height} {playsets|play sets|swingsets|swing sets} so I don't think having that in the url helps any at all. Maybe having "playset" does but compared to all of the other SEO issues with that site I think it may not be worth worrying over.
So maybe swingsets.com/outback-5ft/combo2 would be just as useful. I think that's easier to remember. We do have landing pages for outback and playhouse but I'm not sure that should matter when making the path to the products. I think /outback-5ft looks better than /outback/5ft
-
That does make the situation quite difficult.
Are there a lot of different combinations possible?You could create a product page for every combination. This way your dealers can still direct the phone customers to the appropriate URL and you would still have a clean URL structure. For example: www.domain.com/category/outback-5ft-playset.
This still isn't perfect but as far as i can see it's the best option given the weird circumstances.
Hmm, all links are pointing to the home page with the brand name. That doesn't seem like a natural link profile and that is something which could get penalised.
But one problem at a time. Do you think the URL structure suggestion i provided will work?
-
No that was perfectly understandable.
From looking at our link profile, every single link we have to our site is to the home page and use our brand name as the anchor text, which explains a few other concerns I had about this particular site...
On the topic of AJAX, I had been considering, with the other site (swingsets.com), just getting rid of the "comboX" argument entirely and making the /outback/5ft-playset page use AJAX to load the different combos. Figured I could use a hash to make the page load a specific combos when first visited.
The concern I have with doing that is that our dealers use our site a lot to direct phone customers which means I'd still have to have links to each combo on the site. That makes me wonder if it wouldn't be a pain in the ass for users to remember a url (not that it's easy right now...) or if Google would ignore the # and think I have 200+ internal links split between 6 pages.
No matter what I do to the URL, there must be a specific "page" for each combination.
-
I think you would benefit from it because it removes difficulty from the URL. Furthermore you will get found better on 'basketball hoops' instead of on 'basketball' and 'hoops'. (Minimal difference though).
Just think about the user experience mostly. Keep the URL's as short and readable as possible. That you have to make combinations could be done on a single page with some AJAX (Asynchronous Javascript and XML) instead of doing it on multiple pages.
That way your URL structure would be cleaner and the user experience would be enhanced. Furthermore you remove the possibility that people are linking to multiple URL's like now. So you will have more links to a single page and that will improve your ranking.
Was anything unclear?
-
That would only apply if there are links to the non-page /basketball/hoops, right?
So if the links are only for /basketball and there are none for /basketball/hoops we wouldn't really benefit from a change to basketball-hoops?
-
Well, if there are links pointing to /basketball and there are also links pointing to /basketball/hoops then you would rank better on /basketball-hoops. Because of the redirects from the two old URL's to the one new URL you are creating a page which get more links. As long as the content on the page is of decent quality of course.
If you stick to the structure: www.domain.com/basketball-hoops/72in-backboard then the plural word is not a problem because it is the category name.
It would be awesome if they did that except that a lot of people would misuse it and SEO would be one giant scam (as it used to be with the meta keywords tag and cloaking and so).
-
Thanks for the response.
So does that mean that the path /basketball-hoops would rank better than /basketball/hoops?
One of my major concerns about the whole thing is just how much impact the keywords have in the url. I figure it doesn't come close to comparing to using them in the page title, H1 title and page content in terms of determining what the page ranks for, but just how much impact does it make when they are in the url as well?
I've considered dropping /hoops from the path and appending -basketball-hoops to the product name (/basketball/72in-backboard/dc72e1-basketball-hoops) but my two main concerns are: it seems odd to refer to a page about a single product using a plural word (feels forced), and we're back to having a long url that may not make any difference with or without the added keyword text.
Wouldn't it be awesome if Google would provide importance values to things like this that we could see?
-
If you can create a really good page for the basketball/hoops, then make a really good page for that.
If you can't create something good for that then you should change it to basketball-hoop. It will take care of being found on the query 'basketball hoops'.You should take a look at how many links are pointing to /basketball and /basketball/hoops. Make sure you set 301 redirects if you change the URL structure.
The second website path is a little more difficult.
swingsets.com/swingsets? That is what i would call stuffing + users don't like long urls.If it's possible try to stick to the following structure: www.domain.com/category/product-name.
I know it's difficult since you are doing something with combinations.I'll think about it some more and if i come up with something i'll let you know.
Hope i was remotely helpful at this moment.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Thinking about redesigning site to reduce bounce rate - have a couple of questions
BACKGROUND Im looking at redesigning the website for a creative consultancy to improve the user experience. The website is mainly an image portfolio along with “press”, “our services”, “about us”, “contact” pages. I originally designed the website a few years ago and when we did, we wanted to make the image portfolio the most important feature. So we made it a full screen JS image slider with lazy loading of images, so that there are about 40 full screen images on the homepage that rotate. From a users point of view i still feel this is the best system as it very quickly allows them to browse the portfolio, which we looking for a creative consultancy is their UPS (unique selling point). The site has a very strong backlink profile compared to its competitors in the SERPS it has about 20-25% increase in PA and DA. But our site has been slipping down the rankings in recent years / months. From spot 1-2 to about spot 5-7. MY HYPOTHESIS I think that the reason the site may be dropping back in the SERP is that although its a very usable site, all its portfolio information is “too easy to find / view” and results in a user coming to our site, seeing everything they need to see, then bouncing back to the SERP. Our site has a bounce rate of 40-60%. Where as on competitors sites, their “portfolio” is a separate page off the homepage, so a users has to click through to a separate page, and even if they don't like the design content of the portfolio it doesn't get logged as a bounce. MY QUESTION Does bounce rate affect SERP ranking ? Could the sites SERP performance be improved by redesigning the site to put the portfolio on a separate page so a user would have to click through to it, if that would get the bounce rate down, would the site see a benefit even if people still clicked back to the SERP results eventually after seeing our portfolio, even though it wasn't a true 1 page bounce ? Dose time on site affect SERP ranking ? Is there a way i can see a competitor's bounce rate ? Would welcome any other thoughts inputs on this matter.
Web Design | | sl_pa0 -
Is there a way to host my website.com/BLOG URL PATH from a different host than my main website.com host?
Is there a way to host my website.com/BLOG URL PATH from a different host than my main website.com host? Is it accomplish-able with DNS settings or are there other considerations that might lead to complications doing this? Specifically, we are investigating install WordPress on a dedicated host, JUST to power the blog for our main website, but our main website is on an internal proprietary hosting and CMS. So basically we're trying to host: website.com --> OFF OF CURRENT INTERNAL HOSTING website.com/blog/ --> OFF OF THIRD PARTY HOSTING (USING WORDPRESS) I know this is a technical question beyond the scope of SEO, but I'm figuring there are members of the community that may have tried this already so I'm floating it here. Many thanks! Cheers.
Web Design | | AlexVelazquez0 -
We added hundreds of pages to our website & restructured the layout to include 3 additional locations within the sub-pages, same brand/domain name. How long could Google take to crawl/index the new pages and rank the keywords used within those pages?
We added hundreds of pages to our website & restructured the layout to include 3 additional locations within the sub-pages, same brand/domain name. The 3 locations old domains were redirected to their sites within our main brand domain. How long could Google take to crawl/index the new pages and rank the keywords used within those pages? And possibly increase our domain authority hopefully? We didn't want our brand spread out over multiple websites/domains on the internet. This also allowed for more content to be written on pages, per each of our locations service's, as well.
Web Design | | BurgSimpson0 -
Switched from Wix to Wordpress dreaded hashtag URL
Recently took over managing a site for a non-profit which was using the dreaded Wix. Switched over to Wordpress but now Google still has the old URL's with the hashtag. Can't forward them in .htaccess and don't want to add javascript for fear of slowing down load time. I found a solution that seems like it will take hours and hours of work. I found the solution at http://www.thedriversgarage.com/web-technology/redirecting-hashbang-urls-wix-urls/ but it seems like it would take hours with all the URL's. I submitted an XML sitemap in Google webmaster tools. My question is, how serious could this effect SEO for my site? Google accepted the new sitemap but still has the old URL's in SERP. How long does this generally take to remove? Will the hashtag URL's penalize the site for duplicate content? If so is there a way to tell Google the homepage without hashtags is the page with original content? Sort of like the rel=canonical tag which I know wont work as the hashtag URL's all redirect to the homepage so they will all have the tag. Does Google ignore the hashtag? Could there even be a benefit to this, possibly the homepage getting more page authority due to the redirects? How serious is this? Thanks in advancing.
Web Design | | limited70 -
How would a redesign, content update and URL change affect ranking?
Hi guys, I have a question that I suspect there is no simple true or false answer to, but perhaps someone has done the same thing as we're pondering wether or not to do? We're taking over an existing site that ranks very well on all the important keywords and is obviously very well liked by Google. The site is today hosted on a sub-domain (xxx.domain.com). When taking over, we'll have to redesign the site and recreate most of the content on the site (unique). The site structure, URLs, incoming links etc. will remain exactly the same. Since we are recreating the site, we also have the opportunity to move the site off the sub-domain and on to the main domain (domain.com/xxx - 85/100 Moz rank) and do a 301 Permanent Redirect on all old URLs. Our long-time experience is that content on the main domain, ranks way better than the sub-domain. The big question is wether or not Google will punish us for both changing the content and the location of the site at the same time? Cheers!
Web Design | | mattbs
Matt0 -
URL parameters causing duplicate content errors
My ISP implemented product reviews. In doing so, each page has a possible parameter string of ?wr=1. I am not receiving duplicate page content and duplicate page title errors for all my product URLs. The report shows the base URL and the base URL?wr=1. My ISP says that the search engines won't have a problem with the parameters and a check of Google Webmaster Tools for my site says I don't have any errors and recommends against configuring URL parameters. How can I get SEOmoz to stop reporting these errors?
Web Design | | NiftySon1 -
How do you get rid of the .html and .php extensions at the end of urls?
What is the whitehat way to properly remove the .html and .php extensions at the end of urls? Example: http://www.seomoz.org/learn-seo.php should be (and is) http://www.seomoz.org/learn-seo
Web Design | | Ryan-Bradley0 -
SEO ethical practice in question
A family friend asked me to take a look at her website. www.designsbymaida.com First thing i noticed is what seemed a 301 redirect or a forward to http://funktionaldesignstudios.com/dbm-old/ So her site is hosted with what it looks like, in his site(funktonaldesigns). What does this means in terms of how google sees her site and in terms of SEO. My thought is that he is boosting his domain name. He is getting the link juice. Thanks for the insight and help.
Web Design | | QualityHosting1