Posted by Hannah Smith

Hello there. You look lovely. I’m Hannah and I’m an SEO Consultant for Distilled. I’m British which means I spell things strangely sometimes, we like to make things more complicated than they really need to be here. This is my first post for SEOmoz, I hope you find it useful.


Whenever I kick off a new project with a client, they are typically very interested in how I might be able to get them some lovely links. They’re also pretty keen for me to create them some lovely shiny content. Sadly, most aren’t too interested in information architecture. Many don’t realise how important it is.
 
To be honest, up until fairly recently I was one of those people. Most of the sites which I had worked on previously were in the insurance niche. Now typically these sorts of sites don’t really have duplicate content issues. Likewise I had never encountered any problems with indexation. I secretly wondered what those other SEOs were whining about (bunch of big girl’s blouses).
 
But then… A rude awakening.
 
I’ll not name names (that’s just not nice) but I had a client who were part-way through a brand new site build. I figured the technical part of the project would be pretty straight-forward; after all when someone’s building a brand new site they’re bound to have given some serious thought to information architecture right? …Right? …Bueller? …Bueller? …Anyone?
 
Sadly not. The proposed architecture was riddled with so many issues it made my head spin. They would either have a lot of duplicate content or perhaps little or no content – it wasn’t quite clear which (and neither scenario made me jump for joy). They were likely to struggle with indexing. There were gaps you could drive a bus through in their landing page strategy. Their site was going to be a big old mess.
 
failure Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)
 
There was much lamenting, wailing, tearing of hair and gnashing of teeth… Then I calmed down.
 
What follows is a collection of the challenges I faced and how I dealt with them, plus definitions and explanations which I found useful when trying to fix these issues… Hopefully it’ll save you some pain. Once more unto the breach, dear friends…
 
The Challenge… No one cares but me
Yep, I came up against a whole heap of resistance when trying to fix these issues. No one really understood or cared about the situation. There was a lot of talk about how important the customer journey was; there was a lot of talk about brand experience – but SEO? Hmmm, well it wasn’t really getting much of a look in. The CMS being used for the build was apparently ‘SEO-friendly’ and there would be a sitemap, so the general consensus seemed to be that we were ‘all good’ for SEO thanks.
 
The Counter-Challenge – Education & Myth Busting
In my experience if you want to facilitate change, you’ll need to be prepared to do some serious ‘selling in’ of your ideas. But, the first step is to help people understand what the issues are, and as such, education is key. So, why should people care about information architecture?
 
Here’s what I went with…
Information architecture (or how the information on the site is organised) is important from a search perspective in two key ways:
  1. It enables the search engines to index all of pages on the site
  2. It provides suitable landing pages for all of the keywords (or search phrases) that you might wish to rank for 
Without sound information architecture your site may not get indexed properly, and if a site isn’t indexed, then clearly you’ll have no chance whatsoever of ranking. Likewise, without suitable pages to rank for your selected key phrases, again, you’ll struggle to rank for those keywords.
 
From an SEO perspective we’re also seeking to ensure that we’re not creating duplicate content (i.e. the same content available via more than one URL) – as ultimately this causes issues with ranking as you have more than one page from your site competing for the same search result.
 
Finally, as links equal strength when it comes to SEO we’re also looking to ensure that we have strong internal linking within the site in order to maximise the strength of our most important pages (i.e. the pages which we really want to rank). Of course, external links will play a major part here, but ensuring we’re passing internal ‘link juice’ is also important.
 
I also had to do a little myth busting. The most pervasive of which was the mythical power of the sitemap. There was a strong belief that the sitemap would cure all ills, that provided it included all the pages they wanted to get indexed, they’d duly get indexed and everything would be golden. I’m sure I don’t need to tell you that this isn’t the case. Sure sitemaps are helpful, but they aren’t a cure-all and I certainly wouldn’t recommend that anyone rely on a sitemap to get their content indexed. More importantly even if the sitemap assists with indexation, there was still the issue of providing suitable landing pages for all of the keywords which they wanted to rank for.
 
Key Takeaways
  1. If the search engines can’t index your content you will not rank.
  2. If you don’t have a page for each keyword (or at least each sub-set of keywords – you can of course target more than one keyword per page), again you’ll struggle to rank.
  3. A lack of rankings means a lack of traffic. A lack of traffic will likely mean a lack of revenue.
  4. A sitemap will not fix this. 
So, by this point they were finally pretty much onboard with why this was important. Yay! Time to sell in the solution (cue fanfare) – Faceted Navigation!
 
…Wait, what? What is that?
 
Faceted Navigation
A faceted navigation allows users to select and de-select various facets in order to search / browse for what they are looking for. As such, it allows visitors to utilise multiple navigational paths to reach their desired end goal.
 
Whilst that’s a fairly useful definition it’s probably easier to understand via an illustrated example: 
 
Let’s imagine that you’re shopping for a t-shirt. You might want to browse t-shirts by size (i.e. only those in your size), by colour, by designer, by price etc. To find the t-shirt you want it would be really handy if the website you were browsing allowed you to narrow down your search using some or all of those facets. It might look a little something like this:
 

faceted navigation(1) Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)

 

Now I think this is pretty darn lovely from a user’s perspective. Additionally, the flexibility this sort of structure gives you helps you to solve the ‘page for each keyword / sub-set of keywords you want to target’ issue. Whilst it may look fairly simple on paper there are quite a few things to think about when tackling this. Here are some of the things I came up against, and how I dealt with them…
 

1.       How many facets do you need in order to get everything indexed?

Ideally your deepest facet should contain no more than 100 products. This will assist you greatly in getting all of your products indexed. (NB whilst most SEOs are comfortable that the search engines will crawl more than 100 links on any given page, I prefer to stick with 100 product links as most websites will have a number of navigation links on every page in any case. Sticking to a maximum of 100 product links will help keep the total number of links on any given page at a sensible level).
 
By ‘deepest’ I mean however many folders down you decide to go. Let’s stick with hannahstshirts.com as an example – here you may decide to use the following facets:
  •  Womens
  •  T Shirt Type
  •  Designer
An example deep facet page: hannahstshirts.com/womens/v-neck/a-wear/ – on this page, visitors would see all women’s v neck t-shirts from A Wear.
Now this type of page should have no more than 100 products on it, so provided that none of your designers offer more than 100 of a particular style of t-shirt then this is as deep as you need to go. If this isn’t the case you’ll need to add in another facet – e.g. colour.

2.       Facets versus filters

There will probably be further search / browse options which you want to offer visitors to your site that you don’t really care about from a search perspective. For example – it’s really useful for visitors to be able to browse only items which are available in their size; but you may decide that you’re not particularly worried about the search engines indexing these pages. That’s where filters come in. These filters should be implemented using JavaScript or no-indexed to prevent these pages from getting indexed.
 

3.       Do you have pages to enable you to rank for all of the keywords that are important to you?

This is really linked to the previous two points. Again using the example above – if your facets were Womens, T-Shirt Type and Designer; but you had a burning desire to rank for the term ‘white women’s t-shirts’ – then bad news, friend. As colour is a filter rather than a facet you don’t have an indexable page for that phrase. If you want to rank for these sorts of keywords you’ll need to make colour a facet, not a filter. 
 

4.       Pagination

At the top level e.g. ‘Womens’ you’ll return a number of pages of results. Now really you don’t want these pages indexed. Page 2 onwards of a given set of results is rarely an awesome result for a user; plus of course you’ll effectively be having more than one indexed page competing for the same keyword in the SERPs. It’s bad all round. Therefore use Ajax or JavaScript to display page two and onwards.
 

5.       Sorting

Likewise, you may decide to offer sorting options – e.g. sort by price, sort by rating etc. These are great for users, but a potential duplicate content love fest for search. You don’t want the various sorted versions of the same page being indexed separately, so use JavaScript or Ajax.
 

6.       Duplicate Content

Ok, so we’ve dealt with pagination and sorting options but we’ve still got duplicate content issues? Why?
Because there are multiple navigational paths to a user can take, if you’re not careful there will be duplicate URLs for the same content . For example if you wanted to see all of the women’s white t-shirts by Bench you could go via:
 
www.hannahstshirts.com/womens/v-neck/bench
www.hannahstshirts.com/womens/bench/v-neck
 
Plus, depending on your site structure you might also be able to go via:
www.hannahstshirts.com/bench/womens/v-neck
www.hannahstshirts.com/bench/v-neck/womens
www.hannahstshirts.com/v-neck/bench/womens
www.hannahstshirts.com/v-neck/womens/bench
 
Uh oh. Imagine how many permutations of this you’ll have across the site. Bad times. You’ll need to make sure that no matter which route a user takes to reach a particular page, there is only one indexable URL. Now hopefully, you’ll either be custom building something awesome, or be using a CMS which will allow you to do this. If not? You’ll have to 301 all the variants back to one indexable URL.
 
Right, we’re nearly there, I promise. If you’re still reading then you definitely deserve a cookie. Possibly two.
 
Content’s Still King (well, nearly)
So, let’s imagine that you’ve finally got there. You’ve got a lovely looking faceted navigation. You’ve got all of the keyword targeted pages you need. You’ve defeated the duplicate content demons. You are made of win.
 
Don’t stumble at the final hurdle. Despite your best intentions, you still have a site with a lot of pages which look quite similar. Lists of products which are available on a variety of other pages. Doesn’t feel all that unique, huh? You’ll need to create some unique content for each of these pages, and the more important the page is to you; the more awesome this content needs to be.
 
Key Takeaways
  1. Use as many facets as you need to ensure that your deepest faceted pages contain 100 products or fewer AND to ensure you have all the pages you need to target the keywords you want to rank for.
  2. Pagination and sorting options can cause duplicate content – use Ajax / JavaScript to avoid this.
  3. No matter which route a user takes to reach a particular page there can be only one (think Highlander) indexable URL
  4. Remember to create unique content for each page – the more important the page, the more awesome the content 
More Helpful Stuff…
If you’re wrestling with faceted navigation right now, you might find our handy cheat sheet useful – this was distributed post the Pro SEO conference in October – you can download the PDF here.
 
Plus, you might also like to check out Rand’s Whiteboard Friday on Faceted Navigation.
 
 
Failure image credit

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 Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)  Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)  Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)  Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)  Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)

 Information Architecture, Faceted Navigation & Duplicate Content (Oh My!)

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Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign

Online Brand Promotion Mileage aka Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign The Why Bit?.. Facebook: The Word is not enough and so are the figures More than 400 million active users More than 50% of the active user log on to Facebook everyday More than 1.5 million local businesses have active Pages on Facebook More than 20 [...]

 Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign
 Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign

 Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign  Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign  Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign  Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign  Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign  Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign  Customized Facebook Marketing Campaign

Source: http://www.k2seo.com/index.php/2010/customized-facebook-marketing-campaign/

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5 Ways to Benefit from Videos on Your Website

Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services

5 Ways to Benefit from Videos on Your WebsitePost from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services Lately, I?ve been spending a great deal of time learning about video and how video can benefit you as an Internet marketer and as someone who wants to do SEO. While video isn?t searchable in the same way that [...] 5 Ways to Benefit from Videos on Your Website

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Businesses on Facebook need to have a Facebook Page. For the past couple of years, many business owners have struggled with using a profile or a business page. Many businesses start marketing on Facebook with a personal profile until they understand its limitations. Then, they have difficulty scraping their personal profile and starting from scratch on a new Facebook Business Page.

Facebook Profile Migration resized 600 Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages

Facebook recently launched a new tool for business owners that will now allow them to convert a personal Facebook Profile page into a Facebook Business Page. The new Profile to Business Page Migration Tool transfers the photo from the profile page and converts all friends of that personal profile into people who like the new Business Page. However, this migration will delete all other content from the personal profile page, including all wall posts and other photos.

Other rules from the migration include page brands and interests. Profiles with fewer than 100 friends will be able to rename their new business page. However, profiles with more than 100 friends will have to use their profile name as the name of their business page. Additionally, converted pages will not appear in the interest sections of users who were previously friends with the profile. Profile friends will not be notified that their friendship has been turned into a Like.

Marketing Takeaway

Facebook Pages are public pages and have distinct marketing benefits over Profile Pages. As a business looking to increase traffic and leads from social media marketing, you should create a Facebook Page or migrate your existing profile into a Business Page. But simply having a page isn’t enough.

You need to think about the content that appeals to your prospects and customers. Share your blogs posts on your Facebook Page as well as articles from other quality industry sources. Begin to think about Facebook News Feed Optimization. Attracting likes to your page is only the first step. The more a person interacts with your content, the higher the likelihood that your Page updates will appear in their Facebook News Feed. Engagement on Facebook is a critical component for increasing the reach of your content and calls-to-action.

Do you think Facebook’s new migration tool will increase the number of Business Pages?

Free Download: Facebook Marketing Guide

FaceBook 128x128 thumb Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages

How should businesses create, manage, and grow their Facebook pages? Find out from industry experts and marketers!

Download the free 30-page complimentary Facebook Marketing Guide.

Connect with HubSpot:

icon twitter Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages icon facebook Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages icon linkedin Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages icon buzz Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages 

 

 Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages  Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages  Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages  Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages  Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages

 Facebook Now Allows Profile Pages to Become Business Pages

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The 5 Best Books on Social Media Optimization

Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services

The 5 Best Books on Social Media OptimizationPost from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services I?ve said it before and I?ll say it again: social media is a critical part of any website marketing strategy. Unfortunately however, social media is also a hard nut to crack for most people. Heck, I?m still learning a lot [...] The 5 Best Books on Social Media Optimization

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Posted by Dan Deceuster

This post was originally in YOUmoz, and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author’s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc.

Far too many of us in the SEO industry tend to think in absolute terms. You are either White Hat or Black Hat, this works or it doesn’t, this link is amazing or it is worthless…you get the point.

This is dangerous thinking because if something isn’t absolutely perfect or golden, we tend to evaluate it as useless. In nothing is this more obvious than in link building.

Link builders come from two schools of thinking. They either (a), pursue and take any link from anywhere or (b), research and scrutinize every potential link opportunity.

If you think like the first group, then this post is not for you. But if you are in the second group, this post should help you evaluate the value of a link.

seo link anatomy Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link

The anatomy of a link can be thought of in five parts: anchor text, trust, relevance, placement and outbound links. Each one makes up a piece of the link pie.

I already know what you are thinking- what about authority? The five pieces of the pie mentioned above are what make the pie, but authority is what determines the size of the pie.

This means that if your link is on a high quality, authoritative website, search engines will pay a lot more attention to the metrics of that link that one on some spammy website.

Let’s look at each individual metric then and see what they all mean.

1. Authority

As I just mentioned, authority is what determines the size of the pie. The more authority a domain has, the more weight search engines give to the metrics of their outbound links.

Tip: Any search in Google will bring up websites with domain authority at least in the thirties. If the website you are considering for a link opportunity does not have at least a 30 for domain authority, you won’t get much value from it.

2. Anchor Text

For the better part of the last decade or so anchor text has been the most important metric of a link. Marketers understood this and it is precisely because of this metric we saw the rise of the Google Bomb.

Blog comment spam is another malady that is directly tied to the importance of anchor text. It’s only because of this metric that I have to delete comments on my blog from readers like "cheap online cash advance overnight."

Exact match anchor text isn’t the only way to be successful here. A website that sells mountain bikes and targets that keyword should not turn down a link with the anchor text "bicycles."

Tip: Try and get links with your keywords in the anchor text. Be sure to maintain some variety though; search engines can detect unnatural amounts of identical anchor text.

3. Trust

A lot of people struggle to understand the difference between authority and trust. SEOmoz has their own metrics called authority, mozRank and mozTrust. I would recommend reading up on them to get a better idea for the difference.

Building trust with search engines is key to achieving great rankings. There is only one way to build that trust and that is to get links from websites that have a lot of trust built up already.

Tip: Writing a press release is a great way to get some trustworthy links. Lots of news and media outlets have trust with the search engines.

4. Relevance

Relevance is a measure of how connected your content is to the page that is linking to you. It makes a lot more sense for an exercise blog to link to a website that sells treadmills and not one that sells telescopes.

It is difficult to determine how relevant another website is to you however. One handy way is to use the LDA tool from SEOmoz. Just plug in your keyword and the URL of the page you are looking at and see how relevant it is to that term.

Tip: Try to get links from websites that have similar content to yours.

5. Placement

The original PageRank formula by Google treated all links on a web page the same. Each one would pass an equal amount of PageRank. This was called the Random Surfer Model.

Google and other search engines are a bit more advanced now. Bill Slawski explains how Google could be using a Reasonable Surfer Model in their current algorithm.

This means that having your link in the footer of a web page isn’t going to help you out a whole lot. A contextual link right at the top of the page in the middle of the content is more likely to be clicked, and thus, likely to pass more PageRank.

The same is true of lists. People are a lot more likely to click links at the top of the list, so those links could pass more link juice.

Tip: Get links that have a higher chance of actually being clicked.

6. Outbound Links

If all links on a page passed an equal amount of PageRank, then more outbound links on a page meant less PageRank per link. Every outbound link on a page devalues your link ever so slightly.

This is why some directories seem pretty useless these days. With hundreds of links on a page, what value is there in adding just one more?

Tip: Don’t post links on link farms or other pages with lots and lots of links already on them.

Conclusion

Back to my original point: in the SEO industry we tend to think all or nothing. It’s not uncommon to see people turn down a link opportunity with great anchor text and great placement on a relevant page because it didn’t have much trust or authority.

This seems flawed to me. Just because you can’t get every piece of the pie you don’t want any of it? Why turn down a little just because you can’t have a lot?

The same goes for partial pieces. A partial anchor text match is not as good as an exact anchor text match, but it’s better than nothing.

I’m not saying you have to settle for any link from anywhere, but if you can get even two pieces of the pie, I would take it, even if you don’t get the other three.

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 Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link  Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link  Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link  Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link  Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link

 Link Anatomy   Understanding The Value Of A Link

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The latest buzzword to hit the web world is the ‘QR Code’. My objective here is to put my understanding about this phenomenon and to communicate to you whether there is any substance in this or it is just one other technical application having no real use. What is a QR Code? QR Code stands [...]

 Use QR Code as an integration tool of offline campaigns with the online ones
 Use QR Code as an integration tool of offline campaigns with the online ones

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Source: http://www.k2seo.com/index.php/2010/qr-code/

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3 Reasons To Create Your 2nd Product

On the fence about whether to release a 2nd e-book or not? This article will help you make a better decision on your publishing business. Reason #1: Having a real online business It rarely takes you only 1 e-book to achieve a life long financial freedom. You need to write and publish multiple items to [...]

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Are Text Link Ads Effective?

Are Text Link Ads Effective?

Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services

Are Text Link Ads Effective?Post from: Quality SEO Services & Link Building Services I have to admit something: this is going to be based entirely on research rather than my personal experience. That?s because I myself have never purchased any advertising. I prefer to work with free advertising (aka SEO) to get my sites noticed as [...] Are Text Link Ads Effective?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/quantumseolabs/~3/eUrx3syrNCE/

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Social Media was a buzzword last year and numbers show that in 2010 it will find new opportunities &challenges. Big as well as small companies will more inclined towards social media to market themselves and find new customers. There?s no doubt that adopting a good social media strategy can be an economical and effective technique [...]

 How to get best out of social media in 2010
 How to get best out of social media in 2010

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Source: http://www.k2seo.com/index.php/2010/social-media-in-2010/

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