Where to Put Content For Product Pages - How To Structure Website?
-
Currently we have 300+ products. We do not have a CMS or Ecommerce site at the time being for certain reasons. Currently our site is set up with content on almost every single page. The main catagory page, explains everything on the main page, then our products page has a lot of text too. But right now, it seems as if our main pages are only ranking.
In the near future I will be using a cms and purchasing a template. I noticed most Ecommerce style websites have just the product with the name and price, then when they click on the product it brings you to that page with a brief product description and some photos.
My question is, does each page need content? Or can just the product page itself have content?
For example, say we have a link to SHOES. Then the shoes page displays dress, casual and athletic. Then the athletic page brings you to a page with, running, tennis, cross training shoes, and so forth. Is it best to write content on this main catagory page? If so, how much?
Or should we focus on putting content on the actual page of the individual product? Along with pictures and specifications?
I know Content is Key and we are doing pretty well at that, however, I am starting to wondering if we have to much content or too similar content.
What is the best structure to try and recieve GREAT organic rankings?
-
I am very much a novice and have had some success with cms systems. I have found they offer a variety of options and are very intuitive. Some even talk about trade offs regarding different styles and formatting issues. There are a lot of great cms platforms out there for you to use, I am sure you will find one which will work great for you. Dave
-
Cody, it was my understanding it does not matter how many directories deep a page is located, but instead how well it is linked to.
Using your first example (example.com/products/sports/tennis/tennisracket.html), if that page was linked to from the home page, it can perform very well on SERP. It would beat the second example if that was not linked to from the home page.
If a user actually had to click through all those links, then yes it would be inconvenient for the user and be buried content which would not be crawled as often.
-
You are right about the ecommerce layouts... typically product organization is by category then you can click in deeper for the product detail. Categories are commonly nested as well... like your Shoes category branching to dress, casual, and athletic.
Most decent ecommerce platforms will allow a full description on the product detail page and a short description for display on the category page. Furthermore, category pages themselves will often have a description/content field of some sort. Obviously, you want to avoid duplicate content issues, but you can use the combination of the category descriptions and product short descriptions on your list pages for ranking on the category. Then, you can use your product pages to rank as well. Again, you can keep the content different between the short and long product descriptions.
I've seen sites handle the category pages without much content; however I don't think you can go wrong with the additionally ranked pages if you set them up correctly.
Also, check to see if you can get an ecommerce template that supports related products - this will help with your internal linking. You can also check out up-sell/cross-sell areas of the product page as well.
Do you have a link we could check out for content suggestions? That may give a better idea of why the product pages aren't ranking well for you.
John
-
Good decision on the CMS. You'll love it. Be sure to use it to give your product pages relevant URLs, Titles, and other good on-page SEO attributes. This will very much increase their likelihood of getting picked up. Also, if it has canonicalization features built in, these are often good for e-commerce sites. You'll have a lot of dynamically generated duplicate content across categories.
My advice to you would be to build your site to give your user's the best possible experience first, then worry about search engine rankings second.
Think to yourself - "If I were a user on this site, would additional content on what this page is about be helpful on this page?" If Yes, go ahead and do it. If No, you might want to leave it out.
If it were me, I don't know how much useful content you can put on a category page alone. It might even be distracting. At this point your goal is to get your users to clickthrough to the next step in the buying process. This usually doesn't mean reading something. It usually means clicking a picture or link, right? I might just leave that one alone, but that's totally your call. It depends on the situation.
Keep in mind that the further down in your hierarchy you put your product pages the lesser their importance is in the eyes of Google.
For example, if I have a tennis racket I am selling, the second of the examples below is going to appear more important, because it is closer to my root domain. The flatter you can make your site architecture while still providing a good user experience, the better results you are likely to see in the search engines.
example.com/products/sports/tennis/tennisracket.html
vs.
example.com/tennis/tennisracket.html
Hope this helps get your wheels turning.
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
-
Unsolved Duplicate Contents in Order Pages of Multiple Products
Hi, I have a website containing 30 software products. Each product has an order page. The problem is that the layout and content of these 30 order pages are very similar, except for the product name, for example: https://www.datanumen.com/access-repair-order/
On-Page Optimization | | ccw
https://www.datanumen.com/outlook-repair-order/
https://www.datanumen.com/word-repair-order/ Siteliner has reports these pages as duplicate contents. I am thinking of noindex these pages. However, in such a case, if a user search for "DataNumen Outlook Repair order page", then he will not be able to see the order page of our product, which drives the revenue go away. So, how to deal with such a case? Thank you.1 -
Website went from page 10 to 31 for a keyword
Hey Everyone I hope someone could really help me here. My website: goo.gl/5fLqv, it is an ecommerce website and just in the last few days for one my keywords "Wedding Favours" it dropped to page 31 from page 10. Could someone help me please on how to resolve this? Thanks
On-Page Optimization | | VIVOWeb0 -
Old landing page modifications - should I change the content?
One of our most popular landing page is starting to be a little bit out dated, should I keep the old content and update with newer text or is it safe to completely replace the old content with the new content without losing our organic traffic on this page?
On-Page Optimization | | rusted880 -
Does having more products in a category than others help with ranking that page with a particular keyword like iphone cases. We have thousands of products and wondered if it would hellp these all being on the website.
does having more products in a category than other websites help with ranking that page with a particular keyword like iphone cases. We have thousands of products and wondered if it would help these all being on the website.
On-Page Optimization | | Casefun0 -
How do you avoid duplicate content when you sell products that are produced by other manufacturers?
I have a packaging product site, and they sell products from various manufacturers. What can we do with the product detail pages? As of now, the client has copy pasted content straight from the "About" sections on the manufacturers' sites. Obviously, those manufacturers want my client to sell their products, and the products need to be described. How much of a no-no is this copy pasting, and how can I fix it?
On-Page Optimization | | lhc670 -
How to avoid product's lists from making your site's content duplicated?
Hi there! We at Outitude, recently launched an outdoor activities marketplace and to make it easy for users to compare activities we show a list of available activities in each activity view. The problem is that though the content is different, the first half is practically identical. Example:
On-Page Optimization | | alexmc
Sailing for a full day: http://outitude.com/en/sailing/world/sailing-full-day and sailing for half a day: http://outitude.com/en/sailing/world/sailing-half-day both URL's are different, their content is different but most of it is not (first half of the page), so that the user can compare the activity it is currently seing with others. Questions: How can we show the activities list without it ruining the page rank? Do you advise the use of "", "" surrounding the duplicated content aka activities lists? Thanks in advance.0 -
Related products - random products or static
Hello, I was curious about where to get related products from. Currently I just grab some random products from the same category. Would there be any benefit to always linking to the same related products on a product page? Thanks
On-Page Optimization | | nux0 -
Duplicate content on video pages
Hi guys, We have a video section on our site containing about 50 videos, grouped by category/difficulty. On each video page except for the embedded player, a sentence or two describing the video and a list of related video links, there's pretty much nothing else. All of those appear as duplicate content by category. What should we do here? How long a description should be for those pages to appear unique for crawlers? Thanks!
On-Page Optimization | | lgrozeva0