Home / Featured / Tips On How To Improve URLs For Better Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

Tips On How To Improve URLs For Better Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

You can rank your website high with simple SEO methodsYour URLs provide an avenue to let search engines and people know what your page is about.

Conversely, if you don’t pay attention to your URLs, they may provide no value for your site’s SEO (search engine optimization) or for your human visitors, either.

Badly designed URLs may even trip up search engines or make them think you’re spammy.

How To Improve URLs For Better Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

1. Include a few important keywords in your URLs

A keyword-infused URL can:
• Help visitors see that the page they’re on is really what they’re looking for. Would you rather see example.com/blog/219058 or example.com/blog/cute-puppies? People will see your URL in search results, at the top of their web browser while they’re on your page, and any place where they may save the URL for themselves – like in bookmarks, or an email.

•Give search engines one more indication of what your page is about, and what queries it should rank for. A URL without keywords won’t hurt you, but it’s a missed option. A competitor who’s placed relevant keywords in his URLs may rank higher than you for those keywords.

“If you have got a three, four or five words in your URL, that can be perfectly normal. As it gets a little longer, then it starts to look a little worse. Now, our algorithms typically will just weight those words less and just not give you as much credít.” -Matt Cutts of Google

2. Keep your URLs to fewer than 115 characters.

• Research shows that people click on short URLs in search results twice as often as long ones. Shorter URLs are also easier to share on social sites like Twitter and StumbleUpon.

• Long URLs can look like spam. As the URL gets longer, the ranking weight given to each word in the URL gets spread thin, and becomes less valuable for any specific word.

You can manually check the character count of all your URLs to make sure they’re not too long. The AboutUs Site Report can do it automatically, and point out any URLs that are longer than 115 characters.

3. Don’t use more than a few query parameters in your URLs

In a URL, a ? or & indicates that a parameter (like id=1234) will follow. Here’s an example of an okay URL (the kind you use to track your marketing in Google Analytics with 1 query parameter: http://www.example.com/page?source=facebook

Bad URL with too many query parameters: http://www.example.com/product?id=1234567&foo=abc123def&color=yellow&sort=price

Too many query parameters can cause search engine robots to enter a loop and keep crawling the same pages over and over again. You could end up with search engines failing to index some of your most important pages.

4. Use hyphens instead of underscores in your URLs

Search engines see underscores as a character. This means that your keywords will be seen as a single long keyword, and you’ll lose any SEO benefit they could have incurred. A hyphen, however, is seen as a space that separates words. Hyphens are better for SEO because they allow search engines to interpret your web page as relevant for more keyword phrases. That said, Wikipedia’s links have underscores, and they seem to be doing okay in search results :-)

Also, people can’t see underscores in a URL when the link is underlined, as many links on the Web are. So hyphens are friendlier for people, and make your site more usable. So… example.com/adorable-kitten-pics is better than example.com/adorable_kitten_pics

Keep all of your important content less than 3 sub-folders deep

A sub-folder is a folder that is visible in a URL between two slashes. For example, in http://www.example.com/articles/name-of-page, articles is a sub-folder and name-of-page is an article in that sub-folder.

When it comes to sub-folders, search engines assume that content living many folders away from the root domain (like example.com) is less important. So it’s best to organize all of your important content so each URL has no more than two sub-folders.

Here’s another way to think about it: Make sure your URLs have 3 or fewer slashes (/) after the domain name. Here is an example URL that is a web page that is two sub-folders deep: http://www.example.com/articles/foo/page-name.htm

Using sub-folders allows you to use “content drilldown” in Google Analytics to easily view data for all the pages in a given sub-folder.

5. Don’t have too many subdomains

A subdomain, or directory, is something that comes before the domain name in a URL. For example: http://blog.example.com. Technically speaking, www. is actually a subdomain.

Too many subdomains can cause problems for search engine optimization. For more information, read Multiple Subdomains: Classic SEO Mistake.

How to change your URLs

Ideally, you’d set up a search-friendly URL structure when you first create your website. Then it just works for you without having to lift another finger. Click Here To Read More


This article was originally written by Kristina Weis of AboutUs.org. Have a question? Follow her on twitter.

About

Tony is a blogger, SEO Marketer and Internet Entrepreneur. He writes articles on various topics. He is the site admin at JUGOMoney & JUGOtechblog

8 comments

  1. Justin Westwood

    Thanks for the post, I have learnt one more thing!

  2. Emma Richadson

    Some really excellent information, Glad I detected this.

  3. That saves me. Thnaks for being so sensible!

  4. I just noticed that this article I wrote has been republished here without giving me any credit or links. That doesn’t feel good. Here’s the original article, written by Kristina Weis: http://www.aboutus.org/Learn/Improve-Your-URLs-for-Better-SEO Contact me at kristina@aboutus.org to resolve this.

  5. It’s weird to find out how many different websites the internet has on this subject! It is awesome to know I stumbled upon the one that offers a little practical information if this should come up for me another time

  6. You are so interesting! I don’t suppose I’ve truly read through a single thing like that before.
    So wonderful to discover somebody with a few original thoughts on this topic.
    Seriously.. thanks for starting this up.
    This site is something that’s needed on the internet, someone with some originality!

  7. Howdy! Someone in my Facebook group shared this site with us so I came to take a look.
    I’m definitely enjoying the information.
    I’m book-marking and will be tweeting this to my followers!
    Outstanding blog and wonderful design.

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