Website
URL
structure
is an
important part of SEO that is
underestimated by many.
Beyond putting keywords into
the URL, many don't give it
second thought. And yet, it is
one of the simplest and most
important things to optimize,
and plays an important part
in search results. Today, we
will discuss some URL
optimization techniques to
improve your websites'
rankings.
When talking about URL
structures, a few things come
to mind, namely the URL
length, keywords, sub-
directories, special
characters, and the effect of
each of them on direct traffic
as well as search visibility.
Let's start with the simplest
of them all.
URL Length
The URL length isn't a game
changer in search rankings,
but it still is an important
factor. Not to say that long
URLs don't rank well - they
can because it ultimately
boils down to the content. But
on average, the dominating
search results mostly
average between 35-40
characters.
Not only that, the URL length
is a major contributor when it
comes to direct traffic - i.e.
people who come over by
typing the URL into their
browsers. The shorter the
URL, the easier it is to
remember.
Sub-directories
URLs often contain many sub-
directories/sub-folders. This
very page you are on
contains two. 2015/ and 05/.
As far as hierarchies go, it is
OK to have as few as you
want, or as many as you can
manage. There is no co-
relation between the number
of sub-directories and search
rankings. However, there are
a few things to keep in mind.
Generally, from the user-
friendliness aspect, it is
considered as a good
practice to keep it simple. It
accounts for more direct
traffic. Also, it is advisable to
keep numbers out of URLs,
and generally go with easy to
read words. For blog posts,
you can either use a dated
structure such as
site.com/2015/05/article.html,
or category structure such as
site.com/how-to/article.html.
Personally, I prefer the latter,
but you can go either way.
Also, make sure that the
images you upload are
named properly, so that when
opened, their URL is readable
and looks decent.
Keywords
Having a keyword within your
domain name and URL is a
declining factor in rankings. It
is becoming less important
over time since Google is
placing more emphasis on
other search factors. When
you create URLs within your
site, don’t worry about
making them keyword rich. It
doesn’t hurt to add keywords
if it makes sense, but you
shouldn't stuff your URLs with
keywords, or they will seem
unnatural.
Special Characters
Sometimes you see strange
characters in URLs such as
&, %, $, and @. It is more
difficult for search engines to
crawl websites if their URLs
contain a lot of these special
characters. Consider the fact
that Google has gone on
record to state that you
should be using dashes over
underscores because it
affects how their search
engine reads the keywords in
your URL. This is how
seriously you should take
these special characters.
According to an estimate by
Neil Patel, only about 0.2% of
high ranking URLs have
special characters in them.
If you are using images, don't
let spaces come in when you
name them. "autumn-sunset"
is better than "autumn
sunset" because the space
gets replaced by special
characters.
Long story short, optimizing
your URLs can't hurt your
rankings. However, don't
focus too much of your
marketing efforts on your
URL structure because it
doesn’t impact rankings as
much as backlinks or content
quality. It is just there to give
you a small edge, so might as
well avail it when you can.
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