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Keywords

How to choose keywords

Keyword prominence

SEO

The factors that play a role in
your web site's ranking

Optimised web-design

Content layering

Search engines strategies

Optimized body description

Content is king

Invisible text

Comment tag optimisation

Meta tag optimization

Title tag optimisation

Hyperlink
URL tag optimisation

Alt tag optimisation

Getting your
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Alternative traffic
promotion techniques

Copywriting

Home page
design tips

Creating effective
body descriptions

Writing content:
focus on your target audience!

Content is king

Writing a business
website homepage

Actractive web page titles

Links

Linking tips

Linking strategies

Trading links

Link popularity development

Website's linking architecture

Automated linking software

16 rules for a good
link exchange request

Pay per click

 

Pay-per-click:
how to increase the
click-through-rate

Pay-per-click: PPC strategies

SEO versus PPC

Pay-per-click: PPC campaigns

Pay-per-click: Landing pages (1)

Pay-per-click: Landing pages (2)

Pay-per-click: PPC management

Pay-per-click search engines list

Pay-per-click:
how to avoid click fraud

How to improve effectiveness in PPC

Pay-per-click:
How to chose keywords

Pay-per-click:
Google AdWords

Pay-per-click:
Google AdWords account structure

Pay-per-click:
Yahoo Search Marketing (SM)

Yahoo SM versus
Google AdWords

Domain names

Domain name strategies

Domain registration rules

Country top domain level - TDL

Semantic Technologies

CIRCA technology:
applied semantics to search engines

Latent semantic indexing (LSI)

Block-level link analysis

Email Marketing

Real simple syndication (RSS)

Google

Google "jagger" update

Google quality score

Google "link" command

Google's ranking algorithm
part 1/4

Google's ranking algorithm
part 2/4

Google's ranking algorithm
part 3/4

Google's ranking algorithm
part 4/4

Google's original patent:
how Google works

Google's page rank

Google's sandbox:
delayed inclusion of new websites

Google's penalties:
getting penalized

Google's sitemap service

Google's search page

search engines

How search engines evaluate relevancy when ranking search results

How to be informed when a search
engine spider visits your site

How to instruct spiders with head-tags

How to prevent duplicate content

How search engines work

Australian search engines list

World major search engine list

Web searchers' behaviour:
shocking web users' statistics

Listing expectations:
how much better is ranking
No. 1 versus No. 10?

web marketing

Online media planning

Seven reasons why customers don't buy

The 7 most common marketing mistakes

12 ways to exceed your client's expectations every time!

Market reseach for new online business

How to set up your best customer profile

Web Marketing Plan

12 tips to build a new SEO Career

How to market your website:
five keys to web site marketing success

How to market your website:
the five web marketing laws

How to market your website:
miscellaneous marketing strategies

How to market your website: a mixed marketing media approach

miscellaneous

Site defacements

Link in a new window

Are you cross-browser compatible?
Learn how to do it

Javascript to let visitors
bookmark your website

Why your web pages don't
load fast enough

Javascript to open a
link in a new window

Hexadecimal

Hexadecimal color codes

Decimal RGB color codes

Content Layering
Using site architecture to improve SEO

Many times, a site gets very large and its ability to rank well in competitive markets decreases in part because of the size of the site. While we in the business know that content is king, more often than not it is a combination of content and effective site structure which will ultimately help your pages rank.

In this article I look at how to most effectively structure your site to take advantage of this.

I read this great article on layering on the SEOmoz Blog and while it does a good job of explaining what content layering is, I feel it could be improved just a little bit. I'm not saying it is wrong in any way. In fact, the tactic outlined will be very effective for a small to medium sized site, however I have also found another way to organize your site which can be more effective if done properly.

In the article, it explains how you use layers to organize your site. We're not talking about CSS layering or anything like that. It's more of a site structure issue than anything. According to the article, one can layer their site through the use of sub-folders.

By creating layers of sub-folders and then placing all related content within that sub-folder you can layer your site to help specific sections of it rank higher.

This is a great way to organize a smaller site because it allows you to place topical pages together, and promote links within the pages to help improve overall positioning of these sections. Further, it helps reduce the dilution factor often felt by sites that attempt to cover multiple topics in a flat file structure.

For example, if you sell widgets you could organize the sections by some common element, such as color. That way your site could be:

http://widgetts.com/blue/page1.html

and all blue widget pages would go into this sub-folder. You'd then organize all other sub-folders in a similar style.

Like I said, I think this is a very effective strategy for a smaller or medium site. There would be a much greater chance of blue widgets ranking highly in a structure like this. However, I feel that for larger sites there's an even more effective way to organize your content. Through the use of sub-domains one could further organize this content.

This would make it even more relevant to search queries and more likely to rank. If one sold a largër variety of widgets yet still wanted to organize them by color, then the structure of the site would be:

http://blue.widgetts.com

and all site content relating to blue widgets would appear within this sub-domain.

The reason I say sub-domains would be more effective is because search engines tend to treat a sub-domain as its own site.

In other words, a search engine sees http://blue.widgetts.com and http://widgetts.com as essentially 2 different sites.

Keep in mind that such a strategy is of the most benefit to larger sites. If you don't have a large site, or don't foresee your site growing to become a large site then I wouldn't recommend the sub-domain layering tactic.

This is because, as I've said, the search engines will treat your sub-domain as a unique site. So, if you've only got 10 or 15 or even 50 pages in your sub-domain, chances are it won't rank as competitively as it would have as a sub-folder of a larger site.

Now, to make your content even more competitive, why not combine these two strategies – use a sub-domain and sub-folders to provide you even more control in site organization as well as an even greater chance of ranking. This is because the broader sub-domain can rank competitively for the broader terms while the sub-folder content can rank competitively for the less broad, more specific terms.

What you are doing by combining the two strategies is getting more bang for your buck. This is because you are covering more area on the web, allowing your site to rank for both broad and specific terms.

Then, with some good strategic interlinking you will be able to even further promote the broad areas of your site by linking all your internal pages to the pages above it. While I'm not entirely dismissing the layered content theory presented above, I am saying consider your situation. If your site is a smaller site, by all means use the layered content approach.

If it's larger, then use the sub-domain approach. Also, remember that there could be multiple ways to organize the same content. For example, in addition to organizing your sub-domains or sub-folders by color in the widget example, also consider organizing them by features.

This way, a chosen widget could be linked to from multiple related categories. Not only that but you've now bulked up your site with a bunch of additional pages.

These new pages are required to help create the sub-domains and navigation required to drive visitors to the individual widget pages. This type of multi-category linking is common among many large sites. One good example is Ebay.

It organizes its top auctions into sub-domains like antiques, art, autos and clothing. Then, within the categories the sub-folder structure is used to further segment the site.

In conclusion, if you've been looking for a way to most effectively organize your site while helping to improve rankings, consider these options. Through the use of sub-folders, sub-domains or a combination of both you can effectively organize your site, segment your products and target searchers more effectively.

About The Author: Rob Sullivan is a SEO Consultant and Writer for Textlinkbrokers.