Can I have a strong brand category page and a strong product page?
-
It seems Google base and other Comparison Shopping Engines like to see the brand in the product name. But, on my category page for that brand, website optimizer tells me including the brand name with each product is cannabilizes links.
For example; I have a page for jewelerABC with 20 pieces of jewelry listed as well as original content about jewelerABC. I do not currently name these products as xyz by jewelerABC. This page comes up nicely in the serps.
But in Google base The top listings for jewelry by jewelerABC seem to have every product named xyz by jewelerABC or JewelerABC xyzs.
What is the best way to optimize.for both?
Stephen
-
I don't know if your CMS allows this (which I doubt and why I don't like most of them), but if you can inject your own code into the header, you can test the product page against the database, and if false, do a header redirect to the brand page while including a 301.
The question I have is, from what is your Title tag generated? It sounds like the linking text, which is odd. I would think if anything it is either pulled from a database or from a URL parameter.
-
Yes, Richard, that is very helpful.
My traffic comes mostly from organic searches. So what I am taking away from this is to keep my focus on SERP s unless CSE results become more important.
And thank you for the reminder about 301ing deleted products. It's one of those things that I hate doing, though I know I should.
Best wishes
Stephen
-
Brand Page
<title>Rolex Watches</title>
OR
Rolex 18K Gold Band & Diamonds
Rolex Gold and Silver Men's Watch
Rolex Gold and Silver Woman's Watch
Product Page
<title>Rolex Gold and Silver Woman's Watch | Rolex Watches</title>
If I have this correctly, your concern is the second title on the product page listing Rolex Watches twice vs. once if you leave off the Rolex prefix. And the fact that you get yelled at for having a link with Rolex pointing out of the Rolex brand page. Which is cannibalizing the link as you are sending anchor text out with the same keyword as you are targeting on the page.
This depends on if people are searching by brand or category. Gold Watch vs. Rolex Watches.
If you are selling more generic jewelry, then perhaps the brand is not as important. Also, if you are getting more traffic organically through SEs, or through CSEs? If 80% of the traffic is through CSEs then I would adhere to their way of doing things to rank better on them.
I would be more concerned with proper Page Title for rankings on your CSEs than cannibalization.
Two things to remember:
- Always build inbound links to the brand page to reinforce keywords for that brand.
- When a product is deleted, 301 that page back to the brand page. Again, reinforcing the keywords for that page as I am sure you will have some links coming into the product page.
I hope this helps
-
Thank you both for the replies. Following the Rolex example. I have a page for Rolex Watches. On that page I have 18 watches shown. My CMS (shopping cart) uses the product name as anchor text. This anchor text links to a specific Rolex watch product page.
I name the watches like this: "18 K gold band & diamonds"," gold & silver men's watch"," gold & silver women's watch", etc. The product page will have a title with both product name | and Brand. The problem is the comparison shopping engines.
The CSE,s seem to give weight to products named like this:"Rolex 18 k gold band & diamonds", "Rolex gold & silver men's watch", etc. I am still confused about naming these products to show their differences on the category (Brand) page and still optimize for the comparison shopping engines.
Isn't this an issue for any site with multiple brands and product categories.?
I really appreciate your inputs.
Stephen
-
Stephen, I see this all the time as well. and although most every other time I would agree with Mike on this one, it seems that people search jewelry by type + brand. Watches by Rolex or Rolex Watches.
Not only do people search this way, if they do not see the brand in the title, they may move on as they don't want just watches, but watches by Rolex.
With that said, if your pages are SERPing well for your keywords and are generating traffic, then I see no reason to change what you are doing.
Depending on your CMS you might have the text Watches by Rolex and have two links, one on watches leading to that page and one on Rolex leading to the category page.
I would still title the page XYZ Watch by Rolex as the brand is important.
I hope that helps
-
You can really only optimize 1 page for 1 key phrase. Putting the brand in the phrase for every page is a mistake, IMO. Maybe optimize the home page for the brand name phrase, and each product page for just the product name, like this:
Home page: optimized for "BrandName"
product 1 page: optimized for "product name 1"
product 2 page: optimized for "product name 2"
If the brand is in the url that leads to the product page (ie www.brandname.com/product-name-1) then you will get some brand association for each product.
Trying to optimize product page 1 for "brandname product name 1" is too much use of brandname (IMHO).
The best strategy is to pick one succinct, unique phrase for each page and then optimize that page for just that phrase.
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
-
Do You Include Product Prices In Your Page Titles?
Hi Guys, So I'm currently mapping out a load of meta recommendations for a new client we're working with and i just wanted to get an idea about the do's and don'ts of adding product prices into page titles etc. I've looked around to see how people and other marketer feel about this and the response seems to be mixed. I've included prices in titles in the past and had mixed success - I was just wondering if it's something you do regularly or something that you prefer to avoid? I don't think there is any right or wrong answer here - just be good to see how people feel about it. Thanks! 🙂
On-Page Optimization | | daniel-brooks0 -
How can I maximize my On Page for these two common usages
I have a page that is tuned for this query: 1886 ten dollar bill and I am happy with my placement. The same page performs poorly if someone types: 1886 $10 dollar bill Is there anything I can do short of having another page tuned for the $ rather than 10?
On-Page Optimization | | Banknotes0 -
Contact pages coming up for keywords above landing pages
I have two examples of contact pages coming up over designated landing pages Keyword: Nickel Alloys for www.neonickel.com Keyword: Artificial Grass for www.artificialgrass4u.co.uk Is there anyway I can stop this happening?
On-Page Optimization | | icansee0 -
We have 5 postions on page 2 in a google search, but none on page 1\. How can we fix this?
For one of our most important key phrases we have 5 listings on page 2 but none on page 1. We are an ecommerce company, the key phrase we're trying for is a Top Level Category name for us, so the 5 links we have on googles second page for the key phrase (in order) are the appropriate top level category page, the sites home page and than three sub categories of that top level category. So while that all makes sense, can't we convince google to concentrate all that link power/juice into just the top level category page? Hopefully bumping it to first page rank? The 5 ranks are 11-15
On-Page Optimization | | absoauto0 -
How many keywords max can I optimize each page for?
I don't want to over optimize by doing 1 keyword per 1 page, but then if I do more, seomoz on-page tool report doesn't give an A grade for each keyword I optimize. I usually optimize for max 3 keywords that are very closely related, meaning they use the same words. Ex. dentist los angeles, los angeles dentist, dentist in los angeles Am I on the right track or what's your recommendation? Should I create different landing pages for each keyword?
On-Page Optimization | | sub90900 -
How can I get on-page analysis reports ?
I started trying out seomoz' facilities as a way to give myself a checklist of things to do-and-don't while learning SEO. Faced with a ton of new and interesting information, I started optimizing my home page and writing some content that can tell a story to people in my business. So I started using on-page analysis tools. But the campaign opening screen is telling me to wait for reports approx. two weeks. There are some reports ( not so good ones, a lot to improve ) but not the one I need most: the on-page analysis one. I set up two campaigns and I have the same problem for both. Am I doing something wrong ? Can I change my pages to make this work ?
On-Page Optimization | | wiebe0 -
Some of my pages are ranking for terms which I want other pages to rank for. What can I do to effectively switch the ranking?
Some of the pages are ranking for terms I have optimised other pages for. The pages which are ranking are quite rightly falling, because they aren't optimised for the terms they're showing for. However, I have pages which are optomised for those terms. How do I switch the SERPS to the page I want?
On-Page Optimization | | GlobalLingo1 -
Optimally, how many times should the key word or phrase you are targeting for a particular page be mentioned or appear on that page?
Our marketing team is debating how many times the key phrase on each of our web store's product pages should include the word/phrase we are trying to be competitive with. Can you advise?
On-Page Optimization | | Glynlyon0