Focus on these 5 areas to deliver big results in e-commerce SEO
Need to
improve SEO for your large-scale e-commerce site and don't have the bandwidth
to optimize content on a page-by-page basis? Check out these tips from
columnist Brian Patterson.
When it
comes to e-commerce SEO at scale, many of the traditional tactics used for
on-site optimization simply aren’t feasible. How are you going to write
individually optimized titles/meta descriptions for hundreds of thousands of
products? How are you going to perform keyword research for the millions of
different keyword combinations your products might rank for? Because of the
large scale of many e-commerce sites, traditional SEO tactics may simply be too
time-intensive or tedious to make a top priority.
On top of
the time commitment that would be required for traditional SEO, e-commerce
sites tend to present a unique set of SEO hurdles that need to be addressed. Take
crawl budget, for example. For an average website — anything under a few
thousand URLs — crawl budget isn’t an issue, as these sites will generally be
crawled efficiently.
However,
we’ve worked with e-commerce sites that have millions of URLs. For sites that
large, crawl budget becomes a crucial part of SEO. Having perfectly optimized
pages is much less important than making sure all of your products are being
crawled and indexed by the search engines.
From our
work with e-commerce clients, we’ve identified five areas for e-commerce SEO
that can lead to strong organic traffic and revenue growth:
- Site indexation
- Main menu navigation
- On-page copy for category pages
- Product schema
- URL structure
Let’s dig
into each of these now.
1. Site
indexation
As mentioned
above, crawl budget is a crucial consideration for large e-commerce sites. All
of the on-site optimization in the world won’t help your site if Googlebot and
other crawlers aren’t finding your content in the first place.
There are a
few tactics you can employ to improve your site indexation. One is to review
the number of 5xx server errors your site returns in Google Search Console.
Google Webmaster Trends Analyst Gary Illyes recently wrote a blog post on crawl
budget in which he specifically directs webmasters to pay attention to the
number of server errors in the Crawl Errors report in Search Console. This is
because a large number of server errors or connection timeouts generally
indicates poor site health.
Assuming
your site has few to no server errors, the next item you’ll want to review is
your sitemaps. When working with one client, we successfully got Google to
crawl more of the site, only to discover that the crawl also increased the
number of 404 pages from 10,000 to almost 140,000.
It turned
out that a lot of discontinued products were still being included in sitemaps
on the site, even though the pages were removed, which meant that Google was
continuing to waste valuable crawl budget on products that were no longer in
stock. Ensure that your sitemaps are dynamically updated to reflect the arrival
of new products and the discontinuation of old products.
Finally,
review your product parameters. Almost every e-commerce site will have product
parameters that allow site visitors to narrow, sort or otherwise refine their
product searches. Here’s a sample URL for an Amazon product:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004JX7OPI/ref=s9_acsd_ps_hd_bw_b12OYj_c_x_2_w?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=merchandised-search-3&pf_rd_r=9X15NCBY1DGQD8JT4AEM&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=3a5dd557-ba6c-504c-b670-c4055647d760&pf_rd_i=15347401&th=
Everything
in bold after the “?” is just a parameter that Amazon uses to help users find
that specific roll of paper towels. Luckily, Google Search Console (and Bing
Webmaster Tools) gives you the ability to instruct Googlebot to not crawl
specific parameters. If you have duplicate category pages that are
distinguished only by certain sorting options, URL Parameters in Search Console
is a great way to conserve crawl budget for the rest of your site.
2. Main menu navigation
Though main
menu navigation is important for internal linking and SEO in general, it takes
on a renewed level of urgency for e-commerce sites. The pages identified in
your menu are the ones most likely to be indexed and ranking in search results,
especially since that menu will appear across hundreds of thousands of pages.
The value of internal linking in main menu navigation is amplified for
e-commerce sites.
One way to
capitalize on this menu navigation opportunity is to use secondary navigation
options. Home Depot is a prime example of this. Their “All Departments” menu
only includes their 17 most general product categories. However, when you hover
over each category, it expands to secondary options within that category (and
even tertiary options beyond that). With that menu appearing across every
product and category page on the site, that internal linking value provides a
noticeable ranking boost for Home Depot’s menu pages.
3. On-page copy for category pages
Many
webmasters think it’s okay to have product category pages that merely list the
available products and are otherwise devoid of page content. I hate to be the
bearer of bad news, but it’s not. Just listing products on a product category
page provides almost no indication of what that page should rank for in Google.
Crawlers like to see textual HTML content on a page to help understand what
search results the page should appear in.
Let’s look
at an example from a big e-commerce player, lest you think this is an unusual
strategy. Walmart has skillfully applied this approach across their product
category pages, as you can see on their “Food” department page:
Even
something as simple as a two-paragraph description of the category provides
crawlers with indexable content that gives you a much better chance of ranking
in search results. It doesn’t matter if the content is at the top of the page
or the bottom, as long as it’s visible to users and to crawlers.
We like this
strategy because, for most sites, it falls into the realm of possibility. While
writing 150K unique product descriptions would be a monumental task, writing
content for the hundreds of categories that these products fall into can be
done with some planning and hard work.
4. Product schema
While there
are many helpful uses for Schema.org structured data, quite possibly the most
helpful SEO use of structured data is for Product schema. Google puts a lot of
emphasis on product schema, especially for e-commerce sites.
Earlier this
year, Google announced that they’re going to start displaying “similar items”
in Google Image Search to help people find related products to what they’re
searching for. Their advice to optimize for this announcement? Make sure you
have product schema with an image reference.
In addition
to appearing in similar items searches, proper use of Product schema can make
your products stand out in search results. Google will display a variety of
structured data elements from Product schema, including price, star ratings,
availability and more.
You can see
in the example below how Wayfair uses this markup effectively to increase their
product visibility in search results. If possible, dynamically update your Star
Rating field when customers leave new reviews on your products, as this adds
more credibility to your schema and makes it likelier for Google to display
your ratings.
5. URL structure
When it
comes to URL structure, the best solution is to keep your products as close to
the root folder as possible. Although it may feel more logical to have your
products several directories deep (like
www.example.com/products/stuff/things/thing-1), you’re not going to want to
adopt that system.
Longer URLs
mean that searchers don’t see your actual product name until the end of the
URL, which can sometimes be abbreviated or clipped in search results. If you
look at almost all major online retailers, you’ll see that their actual product
listing pages are rarely more than one to two folders away from the root
directory. It’s okay to include longer parameter strings after the product
folder, but make sure that product name is visible in the URL for search
results.
If you want
to take this a step further, add BreadcrumbList schema to your site to
delineate the directory structure of the site. This takes the URLs that appear
in SERP snippets and changes them into a clean, arrow-directed form that is
much more intuitive to users.
See in the
example below how Dick’s and Lids’ breadcrumb URL structure makes their results
so much neater and more eye-catching to users than the result for Nike.
Regardless of whether or not you choose to implement this BreadcrumbList
schema, make sure that the URLs for your products and your product categories
are neat, readable and as close to the root directory as possible.
Final thoughts
By employing
these five tactics, we’ve seen some noticeable SEO progress for our e-commerce
clients. Here’s one client we’ve been working with since October 2016. Over the
course of our engagement with this client, organic traffic is up 22 percent
year over year, and organic revenue is up 27 percent as well:
E-commerce
SEO can have strong effects on your or your client’s online revenue, and the
five tactics outlined above are the best way to get a jump start on that SEO
progress.
This article
was co-authored by my colleague at Go Fish Digital, JR Ridley.
Source: - http://searchengineland.com/5-areas-deliver-big-results-ecommerce-seo-276293
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