How would you structure this content?
-
We have a site where we write about our son who was born with Down syndrome. I had a question regarding some content I'm trying to create and structure and hoping you guys can point me in the right direction.
One of the things we are often asked by new parents is what toys we suggest for people to buy for their child with Down syndrome, or as gifts for a friend who has a child with Down syndrome. So I'd like to write some posts that suggest great toys for each year of a kids life (and continue that as Noah grows.) However, there are some variations of key words that I would like to rank for as well and it gets a little messy, which is where I need the help.
For example for each year I could have a post titled:
- Top Ten (I could also change out top ten for Best, etc..)Toys For A One Year Old with Down Syndr
- Top Ten Christmas Gift Ideas For A One Year Old With Down Syndrome
- Top Ten Birthday Gift Ideas For a One Year Old With D.S.
- Top Ten Learning Toys For A One Year Old With D.S.
- Top Ten Toys Under 25 Dollars For A One Year Old with DS
- Top Ten Developmental Toys for a One Year Old With DS
- Top Ten Fisher Price Toys for a child with ds
- Best Light Up Toys For a one year old with ds
- best muscial toys for a one year old with ds
I could also think of other variations as well. Also I can make each of these with the various ages. 2 year old, 3 year old, etc...
So I'm not sure what the best way to go is. I could easily have a ton of content that is all virtually the same (birthday gifts / christmas gifts..although I could suggest different toys) so I'd have a ton of different toys pages trying to rank for one term each that is good for google searchers but probably not so great for folks coming to my site as I would have toy pages scattered all over the site.
I also don't know how landing pages would fit in to all of this. Would I want a "Down Syndrome Toy Guide" landing page, or "Down Syndrome Gift Guide" ... or both...or something else, and then link all of those other pages on that page?
I have a few pages on my site now that I wrote before I started to think about all the different combinations I wanted to rank for: http://noahsdad.com/gift-ideas-down-syndrome/ and http://noahsdad.com/best-fisher-price-learning-toys/
I'm open to any feedback you guys may have on this.
I'd also like to do some posts on "Down Syndrome Books" and hope to use the same info that you guys give me and apply to books. (Therapy books, touch and feel books, resource books, new parents books, etc..)
Hoping some folks chime in as your help would really be appreciated.
-
OK, yes I understand, no problem. It would be good to hear suggestions from others as there may be a better way to represent all of what you want to be able to do.
Peter
-
Thanks so much for the very helpful comment.
I don't want to have to write a post for every toy. That would take for ever as I would have to write a review on a post for every toy. No thanks.
I was thinking of making them more like this: http://noahsdad.com/gift-ideas-down-syndrome/
I wouldn't use the same product, and if I did I would say different things about it.
-
Hi again,
Yes, I understand your reluctance to have a top ten list given that some categories may not have ten, but maybe you could have a "The best of..." category which could have whatever number of toys etc that fitted into it.
What I meant by the top level "top ten page" is just a page that is linked to from your site's home page to be the home page of the "top tens" or "The best of" page, You could just have a dropdown menu from your home page for this, but if this section had its own "home" page so to speak, then it would be an opportunity to make a big splash on that page for various categories of products for Down Syndrome children. It would have more impact that way and would be a good hub for your reviews of these products.
The level below that would be the lists of products that fit that category but just with a summary of each and a thumbnail image with a link from each to a detailed page and review of the product.
Yes, I am suggesting you have a separate page for each toy because by doing that you make it flexible for a toy to appear in more than one "best" list without having to duplicate content. It would just be linked to from each list into which it belonged. See below.
Having said before about not going below 3 levels I have realised that this structure is 4 levels so maybe that is too deep, but it may work.
So you would have something looking like the following:
Home page: "The Best of..." menu item
|_ The Best Of feature (home) page with summary details of all the categories
|_ The Best Christmas Gift Ideas
|_ page listing a summary of all reviews for this category with read more links to...
|_ Gift (full) review 1
|_ Gift (full) review 2 (same page as Learning Toy review 1)
|_ etc
|_ The Best Learning Toys
|_ page listing a summary of all reviews for this category with read more links to...
|_ Learning Toy (full) review 1 (same page as Gift review 2)
|_ Learning Toy (full) review 2
|_ etc
|_ The Best of another categoryI hope that makes sense and is helpful for you,
Peter -
Thanks for your your very thoughtful. I'm not sure I would also do "top ten lists" if that makes sense.
Would this still work for things like Top toys, best toys, etc..
Also, I'd hate to get into doing lists like this then get to a category where I can't find then things and have to make a top 4 things...if that makes sense. And I'm not sure what you mean by the top level top ten page, followed by the 2nd level top ten lists....what would be reason for having a top level top ten list before the actually list? Sorry if I'm not understanding.
Also I"m not sure if I'm understanding correctly, but are you suggesting I make a new post for every toy? So one top ten list would have ten posts that go with it?
Love to hear ideas from other folks as well.
-
Hi Noah's Dad
Yes, it can be quite a challenge organising content when you have lots of it. In these cases, I think it is best to try to take a step back and think through the pathway a user would want to follow if they were coming to your site. By doing that it will give you a better idea of how to structure that content so the user's experience is as straightforward and hopefully as intuitive as possible.
I would be inclined to create a structure around your Top Tens, so that becomes your top level menu with its own home page so to speak within that category. Then, branching off of that starting point you can have your top ten sub-categories, i.e.
- Top Ten Christmas Gift Ideas
- Top Ten Birthday Gift Ideas
- Top Ten Learning Toys
- Top Ten Toys Under
- Top Ten Developmental Toys
- Top Ten Fisher Price Toys
- etc
Then you could drill down to the age brackets, but I would avoid going any lower than a third-level. If you can, I would avoid the third-level, but I understand it may be needed.
What you need to be careful of from an SEO perspective is to not have big blocks of duplicate content across the site for each of the toys. You don't really want to repeat the same paragraphs for a toy that appears in more than one sub-category..
My suggestion to resolve that therefore is for the top ten pages to be compilations or lists of the top ten toys in that sub-category. To do that you would write a little bit of summary text on a toy, enough to give the user a taster with a thumbnail image, but then with a read more through to an individual page for that toy where you can include the full information and link(s) to where they can view and/or buy the product online.
By having individual toy pages it means you can include a single toy page in any list you choose to create. Probably on the toy page itself you need to include a list of "top ten fors...". What I mean is on the individual toy page it could say something like "Noah's Dad rates this toy in the top ten for..." and then what you rate it top ten for, e.g. one-year old, learning etc.
It is complicated and which ever way you cut it up, it's not going to suit everyone, but hopefully the above will give you some ideas.
All the best to you,
Peter
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
-
Site structure for location + services pages
We are in the process of restructuring our site and are trying to figure out Google's preference for location pages and services. Let's say we are an auto repair company with lots of locations and each one of them offer some unique services, while other services are offered by all or most other locations. Should we have a global page for each service live with a link to the location page for each shop that offers that service? OR Should we built a unique page about each service for every location as a subfolder of each location (essentially creating a LOT of sub pages because each location has 15-20 services. Which will rank better?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | MJTrevens1 -
Duplicate content, the distrubutors are copying the content of the manufacturer
Hi everybody! While I was checking all points of the Technical Site Audit Checklist 2015 (great checklist!), I found that the distrubutors of my client are copying part of the content to add it in their websites. When I take a content snippet, and put it in quotes and search for it I get four or five sites that have copied the content. They are distributors of my client. The first result is still my client (the manufacturer), but... should I recommend any action to this situation. We don't want to bother the distributors with obstacles. This situation could be a problem or is it a common situation and Google knows perfectly where the content is comming from? Any recommendation? Thank you!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | teconsite0 -
Duplicate Content... Really?
Hi all, My site is www.actronics.eu Moz reports virtually every product page as duplicate content, flagged as HIGH PRIORITY!. I know why. Moz classes a page as duplicate if >95% content/code similar. There's very little I can do about this as although our products are different, the content is very similar, albeit a few part numbers and vehicle make/model. Here's an example:
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | seowoody
http://www.actronics.eu/en/shop/audi-a4-8d-b5-1994-2000-abs-ecu-en/bosch-5-3
http://www.actronics.eu/en/shop/bmw-3-series-e36-1990-1998-abs-ecu-en/ate-34-51 Now, multiply this by ~2,000 products X 7 different languages and you'll see we have a big dupe content issue (according to Moz's Crawl Diagnostics report). I say "according to Moz..." as I do not know if this is actually an issue for Google? 90% of our products pages rank, albeit some much better than others? So what is the solution? We're not trying to deceive Google in any way so it would seem unfair to be hit with a dupe content penalty, this is a legit dilemma where our product differ by as little as a part number. One ugly solution would be to remove header / sidebar / footer on our product pages as I've demonstrated here - http://woodberry.me.uk/test-page2-minimal-v2.html since this removes A LOT of page bloat (code) and would bring the page difference down to 80% duplicate.
(This is the tool I'm using for checking http://www.webconfs.com/similar-page-checker.php) Other "prettier" solutions would greatly appreciated. I look forward to hearing your thoughts. Thanks,
Woody 🙂1 -
Multiply domains and duplicate content confusion
I've just found out that a client has multiple domains which are being indexed by google and so leading me to worry that they will be penalised for duplicate content. Wondered if anyone could confirm a) are we likely to be penalised? and b) what should we do about it? (i'm thinking just 301 redirect each domain to the main www.clientdomain.com...?). Actual domain = www.clientdomain.com But these also exist: www.hostmastr.clientdomain.com www.pop.clientdomain.com www.subscribers.clientdomain.com www.www2.clientdomain.com www.wwwww.clientdomain.com ps I have NO idea how/why all these domains exist I really appreciate any expertise on this issue, many thanks!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | bisibee10 -
Opinion on Duplicate Content Scenario
So there are 2 pest control companies owned by the same person - Sovereign and Southern. (The two companies serve different markets) They have two different website URLs, but the website code is actually all the same....the code is hosted in one place....it just uses an if/else structure with dynamic php which determines whether the user sees the Sovereign site or the Southern site....know what I am saying? Here are the two sites: www.sovereignpestcontrol.com and www.southernpestcontrol.com. This is a duplicate content SEO nightmare, right?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | MeridianGroup0 -
Best internal linking structure?
We are considering implementing a site-wide contextual linking structure. Does anyone have some good guidelines / blog posts on this topic? Our site is quite (over 1 million pages), so the contextual linking would be automated, but we need to define a set of rules. Basically, if we have a great page on 'healthy recipes,' should we make every instance of the word 'healthy recipes' link back to that page, or should we limit it to a certain number of pages?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | nicole.healthline0 -
Duplicate content
I run about 10 sites and most of them seemed to fall foul of the penguin update and even though I have never sought inorganic links I have been frantically searching for a link based answer since April. However since asking a question here I have been pointed in another direction by one of your contributors. It seems At least 6 of my sites have duplicate content issues. If you search Google for "We have selected nearly 200 pictures of short haircuts and hair styles in 16 galleries" which is the first bit of text from the site short-hairstyles.com about 30000 results appear. I don't know where they're from nor why anyone would want to do this. I presume its automated since there is so much of it. I have decided to redo the content. So I guess (hope) at some point in the future the duplicate nature will be flushed from Google's index? But how do I prevent it happening again? It's impractical to redo the content every month or so. For example if you search for "This facility is written in Flash® to use it you need to have Flash® installed." from another of my sites that I coincidently uploaded a new page to a couple of days ago, only the duplicate content shows up not my original site. So whoever is doing this is finding new stuff on my site and getting it indexed on google before even google sees it on my site! Thanks, Ian
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | jwdl0 -
How Many Words in Content for Good SEO?
I have heard it's best to have 400+ words of content for strong SEO per page. I believe this is true for the most. I have a project in mind, however, that I am considering doing 100-200 words of content per page. This is for a glossary of terms for my industry, where I have a unique page for each term that describes what that term means w/ 1 image and a few links to related products. Is having just 100-200 words going to be enough? Each page will still be unique, original content. Or is it best to really try for longer articles? In other words, is there a general rule for # of words per page for search engines to see the page as valuable and unique and to give it good ranking? Give me a BIG THUMBS UP if you found this question useful. It won't cost you anything! Thanks!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | applesofgold0