You've just been handed the job of performing SEO on a large retail website. You look at the pages and pages of items being sold and want to tear out your hair. How do you organize the various brands, categories, and everything else so that you can create title tags, headings, and so forth for every page – without taking forever? This is where concatenation schemas come in.
Let me give credit where it's due. I came across the definition and explanation of how concatenation schemas work when I read Stony deGeyter's article on the subject. He describes it as “default content that changes dynamically based on category, sub-category, and product related information.” I think of it as a template for certain kinds of content, or even a form where all of the empty spaces have multiple choice options. Envisioning a concatenation schema as a Mad Libs page can also work, if youd don't mind that the result after you fill in the blanks probably won't be funny.
The clearest way to explain how concatenation schemas work is to start building one. First, think about all of the areas on your website that programmers will populate with text. Focus specifically on the areas that will matter for SEO purposes. According to deGeyter, these areas can include, but are not limited to, the Title tag, Meta description, headings, ALT text, and body content. If your site runs to many pages, you will want to speed up the process of populating at least some of these areas.
Take a look at what your website sells, and see how it breaks things down. Look at your site's navigation to see how customers find their way around the site. Maybe it's category ? subcategory ? product; if so, those are your three variables. Perhaps it's brand ? category ? style ? product; in that case, you have four variables with which you'll need to work. Try to keep things simple.
So how does this translate into a concatenation schema? Well, for argument's sake, let's say you run a website that sells yarns and thread for knitting, crochet, and related crafts. Your variables might include the weight of the yarn, its fiber content, and the company that makes it. So your title tag concatenation schema might look like this:
[Weight][Fiber] | Assorted colors of [Fiber] [Weight] yarns from [Company].
To put this in practice, you just fill in the blanks.
Worsted weight acrylic | Assorted colors of acrylic worsted weight yarns from Red Heart.
If your site goes into more detail, you can plan your schema to include more details.
[Company] [Brand] | Try out [brand] [weight] [fiber] from [Company] in a rainbow of colors!
Bernat Cottentot | Try out Cottentot medium weight 100% cotton yarn from Bernat in a rainbow of colors!
You can even go with something shorter and load the variables a little further from the front, if there's another term to which you wish to give a little more prominence:
Knitting yarns in [weight] [fiber] from [company] in [number] colors.
Knitting yarns in rug weight wool from Lion Brand in 30 colors.
Please note that I'm not saying anything about the SEO value of any of the particular concatenation schemas above. I'm not even saying that any of these are the best formats for your title tags. I'm just showing them to you as examples of how you might build your concatenation schemas for your title tags. How you actually build them will depend on the product you sell and what you're trying to accomplish, among other factors.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for Contacting