Text size: A A A

The New URL Best Practice from Google, Yahoo! and MSN

February 2009 marks one of the select times where search engines help you index content yourself.

Earlier this month, Google told us “carpe diem on any duplicate content worries” in a blog over at Google Webmaster Central entitled “Specify Your Canonical”.

Before you go Googling “canonical” like I did, it means “reduced to the simplest and most significant form possible without loss of generality”. In this case, a “canonical” page is a page with the most authority, and the one you prefer to show up first in search results.

If Google tends to pick up several versions of the same page on your site, you can now use the following code on every version of the page to let them know which one is king.

<link rel=”canonical” href=”http://www.example.com/product.php?item=product-1″ />

Other variations of the URL (especially in an online store setting), might be:

http://www.example.com/product.php?item=product1&category=books

http://www.example.com/product.php?item=product1&trackingid=1234&sessionid=5678

By identifying the “canonical” page in the header of all these pages, Google lets you pick which one shows up in search results. According to the article, “Additional URL properties, like PageRank and related signals, are transferred as well.”

Oh, and despite our love affair with Google, we should also mention that Yahoo! and Microsoft are on board with this new structure.

Yoast.com has come up with some plugins/extensions for Wordpress, Drupal, and Magento.

New FREE White Paper: Rapid Conversion Landing Page Optimization Guidelines. ALSO, learn how to optimize every page on your site by downloading our FREE 12 Master Landing Page Templates: Maximizing Internet Marketing Conversion Rates By Using the Right Landing Page Template for the Job white paper.

Speaking of URL best practices…

Every landing page on your site should have a URL that is optimized for search. Your Rapid Conversion Landing Pages (aka Name Squeeze Pages) should especially have keyword-rich URLs and these new canonical link tags will help them show up above any articles you might have on your site with the same keywords.

Search engines tend to index dynamic URLs (the ones with all the ampersands and question marks) at a much slower pace than static URLs. When looking at your page in a search engine, a user is more likely to click a link that has a recognizable URL string, such as one with the title of an article in the URL than one with a question mark followed by some numbers.

Like users, search engines are not only bewildered by your missing keywords, but they also identify session tags and variables as “stop signs”, pull on the reigns and yell “woahhhhh nelly”. Or something to that effect.

For more information on URL best practices for your landing pages (and every page on your site), read these recent tips:

To learn more about RCLPs and the other 11 landing page templates, download our 12 Master Landing Page Templates white paper (Mequoda Daily members must log in first).

Related Posts:

Permalink: http://www.mequoda.com/articles/landing-pages/the-new-url-best-practice-from-google-yahoo-and-msn/

What Next?

  • Read more Landing Page Optimization articles.
  • Get a FREE White Paper and receive updates from us by email.
  • Contact us to come in and host a workshop for your online publishing team.
  • Republish our Landing Page Optimization articles. All of our articles are available for republishing as long as you provide a link back to the original article in the first third of the republished article, and as long as the author name and link to bio remains intact.

Would you like us to inform you when new articles are posted?

One Response to “The New URL Best Practice from Google, Yahoo! and MSN”

  1. DwentendY Says:

    Coool site, greate design!

Leave a Reply