Excessive Internal Linking...But it's a product page. What to do?
-
A few of our companies sites' product pages have the warning about excessive internal links. But these pages are product pages (for example). Should we be worried about this warning? Are there ways to avoid it? Or is it just the nature of the beast...? Thanks in advance!
-
Yes. They both go to the same page?
-
I'm not sure; I didn't design the site and only came on to the project recently. Do you mean (for example) how the 3×2-39″ H is hyperlinked but there is also a "view details" button?
-
I would not be concerned. There is no hard rule as to number of links, the SEOmoz tools reports it as such but dont believe it. If it makes sense for navigation for your users and isn't crazily over the top, then it will be fine
Btw why wouldn't you use a single "view 2x3 details" button instead of putting each link twice?
-
This is a tough one that I too have to deal with when it comes to ecommerce. Here are a couple of thoughts that I implemented to avoid warning issues (too many internal links and duplicate information).
1. Change your navigation, perhaps start with Call Center Cubicles as your primary nav button with a drop down or dynamic links that are by configuration. This way, the customer is taken directly to that cubicle and size;
2. Have one page conveying the call center cubicles - which has some keyword rich content. Then, show the images of various cubicles (slide show) and at download Quote button have a drop down of the various sizes to choose from which will allow the purchaser to choose. If they see the initial picture, they don't necessarily need to see the image of what they bought - if they already saw it in your images. BTW, if you alt tag each image - make each image unique. (Don't use Call Center Cubicle 3X2.extenstion, Call Center Cubicle 5X2.extension). Try something like C1_3X2.img, C2_4X2.img, etc. Or something creative.
I had the same problem with a e-commerce company that has a primary product that comes in a variety of colors, they wanted the product to be shown in every color - they were getting pinged for duplicate content because they were using the same product name and image over and over but, just adding the color in the description.
Remember you have a primary product - you can be creative in how it comes - size, color, etc...use that information to populate basic elements such as drop-down, radio buttons, check boxes. They are important for the order but, not necessarily important from a SEO perspective.
For the owners, CMO recommend to goal of the site is to keep it light, fast and engaging for the customer - when they can point and click what they want, it assures them that they will get what they expect.
Let me know if that helps1
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
-
Is there a limit to the number of duplicate pages pointing to a rel='canonical ' primary?
We have a situation on twiends where a number of our 'dead' user pages have generated links for us over the years. Our options are to 404 them, 301 them to the home page, or just serve back the home page with a canonical tag. We've been 404'ing them for years, but i understand that we lose all the link juice from doing this. Correct me if I'm wrong? Our next plan would be to 301 them to the home page. Probably the best solution but our concern is if a user page is only temporarily down (under review, etc) it could be permanently removed from the index, or at least cached for a very long time. A final plan is to just serve back the home page on the old URL, with a canonical tag pointing to the home page URL. This is quick, retains most of the link juice, and allows the URL to become active again in future. The problem is that there could be 100,000's of these. Q1) Is it a problem to have 100,000 URLs pointing to a primary with a rel=canonical tag? (Problem for Google?) Q2) How long does it take a canonical duplicate page to become unique in the index again if the tag is removed? Will google recrawl it and add it back into the index? Do we need to use WMT to speed this process up? Thanks
On-Page Optimization | | dsumter0 -
Page grader says we are keyword stuffing but we arn't. Page source shows different story.
Hi community! We have just run a page grader for the keyword 'LED Bulbs' on whichledlight.com and it comes up that we are keyword stuffing! However, a brief look at the source for the homepage and there's only 6 times that LED Bulbs pops up. We do have the non plural version of the word 'LED Bulb' on the page 27 times.. do we think that would contribute to the keyword stuffing? Thanks!!
On-Page Optimization | | TrueluxGroup0 -
Changing existing URL's to improve SEO
Here's a general question: At what PR/page rank (or Moz 'page authority') would you no longer change an existing URL that's cryptic to one that includes the related page keyword or at least relevant terms? Does using a 301 redirect to the new URL preserve the page rank? Thanks!
On-Page Optimization | | flyntime_tx0 -
What's the best practice for handling duplicate content of product descriptions with a drop-shipper?
We write our own product descriptions for merchandise we sell on our website. However, we also work with drop-shippers, and some of them simply take our content and post it on their site (same photos, exact ad copy, etc...). I'm concerned that we'll loose the value of our content because Google will consider it duplicated. We don't want the value of our content undermined... What's the best practice for avoiding any problems with Google? Thanks, Adam
On-Page Optimization | | Adam-Perlman0 -
To Optimize Brand Name or Product Name First on Product Pages for E-Commerce Website?
We are using your free month trial for optimization of our E-Commerce website. In regards to individual product pages such as this one http://www.amgair.com/air-purifiers/iqair-healthpro-plus-air-purifier/, would it be more effective to have the page title start with the brand name and then the product (as we have it now) or forgo the brand name and start with just the product. IE: IQAir Healthpro Plus Air Purifier or HealthPro Plus Air Purifier by IQAir. These are commodity type products and are price restricted so all competitive websites advertise at the same pricing and it would be helpful not only to have a keyword phrase that is searched for a lot but also one that is easy to rank for. Please give me a recommendation when possible.
On-Page Optimization | | youhow0 -
Nofollowed internal links from the home page
Hi, I'm conducting an on-page review for someone and have noticed something I've not seen before. Some of the major internal links from the home page are marked as no follow. For example: <a <span="">href</a><a <span="">="</a>/customer-services" rel="nofollow">Customer Services This is on the top navigation bar and the content in this and all other sections are marked as no-follow but they should all be crawled. Is this an error or am I missing something? Any ideas guys? Thanks Bush
On-Page Optimization | | Bush_JSM1 -
Too many on-page links
I manualy counted the links on my website http://www.commensus.com which came to around 50, but SEO moz says I have over 100 and google isn't seeing them all.
On-Page Optimization | | jawl44630