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Know before you invest too much time or money.
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Are you a motivated individual, looking to challenge yourself and make a positive impact on the business world? Take a look at our vacancies.
In this blog, we explain how you can create SEO-friendly URLs, including how to structure them, best practices and other things to consider.
When it comes to URLs, it should come as no surprise that the easier they are for humans to read, the easier they are for search engines to read, too.
Readability has always been a big SEO factor – but now more so than ever as voice searches become more prominent and search engines try to deliver more accurate results.
But it’s not just about how a URL reads – it’s also about how it looks.
People have a tendency to avoid URLs that look like: www.example.com/folder1/abc123/javascript16
because they give no indication of what the page’s content is and look suspicious.
And if users are avoiding them, you can bet search engines are, too.
Ultimately, any URL should provide humans and crawlers with a clear idea of what the destination page is about. Before clicking on the link, anyone (and anything) should know what the link points to.
In this blog, we are going to provide a few best practice tips on how to structure URLs so they are easy for searchers and search engines to understand.
URLs (and SEO-friendly URLs) are comprised of the following elements:
This refers to http and https://
This is normally automatically set up by your content management system (CMS) and is based on whether your site has an SSL certificate installed to ensure pages load securely.
Google now considers SSL a ranking factor, so if you don’t have SSL it's worth acquiring.
SSL is also included as standard on websites built in HubSpot.
What is a subdomain?
A subdomain is used to organise separate sections of your website. In the simplest terms, subdomains are added in front of the root domain and separated by a full stop.
For example:
www.microsoft.com
and
blog.microsoft.com
are both subdomains of the root domain: microsoft.com.
Subdomains are also sometimes used to separate content by language or region.
Whether your content is hosted on your root domain, (or www.) or a subdomain will depend on your current CMS and/or server. For example, if your blog is in HubSpot but your main web pages are in WordPress, your blog will need to be hosted on a subdomain (you can find more info on how to set up HubSpot here).
If you are setting up a new subdomain, make sure it is as short as possible and clearly conveys the type of content being hosted (blog. content. or language/region. are common subdomains).
The name of your company needs to be included in your URL.
If you’re just starting out, here are a few things to consider:
These follow the end of the domain name. For instance,
website.co.uk/topic/content.
The debate still rages over whether having your blog on a subdomain is worse for SEO compared to hosting in a subfolder. In our experience, we’ve seen better results for subfolders, so we prioritise that in our recommendations to clients.
This part of the URL is the page itself.
For example, www.website.co.uk/topic/content/how-to-write-blogs – the ‘how to write blogs’ part of the URL is the page.
If you were to read a URL out loud, this is the part at the end after the final “dot”.
TLDs can be used to show users which country your company operates in. But in recent years a whole host of industry-specific TLDs have also been made available.
Some TLDs are more exclusive than others. For instance, .ac.uk is reserved only for verified UK universities that have passed an application process.
Furthermore, because they are considered a trusted resource, content hosted on or linked to from these TLDs receives a little SEO boost.
Anchor tags determine where on the page the reader lands when they click on the link. Use these only when you are sharing a link and want users to jump to a specific part of the page.
Now that you know how URLs are structured – what can you do to improve yours and make them SEO-friendly?
Well, keeping your URLs as simple, relevant and enticing will enable readers and crawlers to understand them and click on them (which is a requirement to ranking well).
Here are some other things to do to create SEO-friendly URLs:
Generally – we would advise that you do not change historic URLs. This is because any benefit gained by shortening the URL is usually negated by the reduction in page authority caused by redirecting the old page to the new one.
However, if changing your URLs is part of a wider site restructure – or if an analysis has been done to show that the old content is underperforming and not generating much organic traffic from search engines – then it’s certainly worth considering.
As well as updating your URLs in this instance, you should also think about:
In order to be found online, it’s important that you not only build your website for your prospects but also search engines… and SEO-friendly URLs are just the start.
At Huble Digital we have an in-depth understanding of SEO and best practices. We can help you to construct a website that is optimised for your target keyword terms, responsive on all devices, fast and easy to navigate.
As well as optimising your website, we’ll also go back and refresh old content that’s not performing as well as it should or could do. The reporting will be managed on your behalf and we’ll tease out the most important information.
This might all sound simple but it is, in fact, an ongoing process and requires a knowledge of how people engage with and move through your website – all of which we can work out.
If you want to optimise your website, we can help. Just click here for a no-obligation consultation to find out more about our services.
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