Practical eCommerce

ACH Direct

Manage Subscriptions · Subscribe Now · F.A.Q.'s

HOME · Saturday, May 17, 2008

Search Engine Optimization

SEO: Breadcrumb Trail Boosts Rankings

Improved navigation helps search engines, customers

By: Stephan Spencer
Comments: 2

Breadcrumb navigation is wonderful for usability and for SEO. This text-based navigation shows where in the site hierarchy the currently viewed web page is located and your location within the site, while providing shortcuts to instantly jump higher up the site hierarchy. A product page for a table lamp may have the breadcrumb navigation of “Home > Home Furnishings > Lighting > Table Lamps.”

If the breadcrumb contains text links with relevant keywords in the anchor text, that is a significant SEO benefit. Take the “phone systems” link in the figure below. The search engines treat that single link as a “vote” for the phone systems category page. More than that, the anchor text (“phone systems”) provides the search engines with an important, contextual clue as to the topic of the linked page. That equates to improved rankings.

Contrast that with the use of throwaway phrases like “click here” or “more info” in the anchor text. Such words provide no clues as to the topic of the linked page, for the search engines or your users, because all you’re telling them is that the page to which you are linking is all about “click here.”

One throwaway phrase that’s used almost universally within breadcrumbs is “home.” Try revising that link to something more keyword-rich –– like the “home” link in TriTech’s breadcrumb for example –– to a more search-optimal version of the anchor text with words like “computing” or “IT” or “technology” along with perhaps “store” or “products.”

You should also consider the amplifying effect of breadcrumb navigation. A link in the breadcrumb will be “voted for” more times if that linked page is higher up in the site hierarchy and if there are more pages underneath that page in the hierarchy. A supercategory page receives more internal links than a subcategory page. A category page covering hundreds of products will receive more internal links than one with only a dozen products in the category.

Some sites take the visitor’s clickpath into account when building the breadcrumb, rather than relying totally on the absolute site hierarchy. This can have implications on the site’s search engine friendliness. How? Well, the user’s breadcrumb trail needs to be passed in some way, and it’s often put in the URL rather than a cookie. If in the URL, it will create multiple copies of near-duplicate pages for the search engines, resulting in PageRank dilution.

Several potential workarounds include dropping this breadcrumb trail from the URLs of internal links selectively for searchengine spiders through user-agent detection. Another workaround is to append the parameter containing the breadcrumb trail to the end of the URL using JavaScript. An example of this technique is REI’s “shop by brand” pages, which append a parameter upon clicking on any of the brand links. Either approach will minimize duplication and aggregate PageRank, but neither eliminates the potential for websites deep-linking to you with the breadcrumb trail parameter included (via copy-and-paste of the URL displayed in their browser’s location bar).

Make a “breadcrumb” of sorts for the checkout, too. This gives shoppers a bird’s-eye view of the order process and an indication of how much farther they have to go. Ideally, this feature will allow shoppers to use this nav to jump back to previous steps in the order process, e.g. to change billing or shipping information already supplied. A “breadcrumb” for ordering might look like this: “Cart Contents > Shipping Address > Payment > Confirmation > Finished.” In the nav, you could display all the steps and gray out those steps that aren’t yet completed. Granted, this isn’t for SEO purposes but for usability.

AdvertisementInfopia

If all this seems too hard for you (or for your IT folks), there’s still a way to reap some SEO benefit by what I call the “poor man’s breadcrumb.” On every page of your online catalog, link to the category that the page falls under with keyword-rich anchor text. This approach worked well for www.guild.com who, at the time, was too swamped with other work to implement breadcrumb navigation.

Having learned probably more than you ever wanted to know about breadcrumb navigation, let’s summarize: incorporate breadcrumbs into your online catalog and your checkout, try to make the anchor text keyword-rich and don’t take a spider’s clickpath into account in your breadcrumb.

Blinklist | Del.icio.us | Furl | Ma.gnolia | Newsvine | Spurl | Reddit | Technorati

Published on Thursday, August 31, 2006

Comments:

This is an excellent article :D And a great website! So glad i found it.

Posted by: Joe
Thursday, February 15, 2007

Stephan:

A most excellent article, dude. We're right smack in the middle of planning a redesign of our site and this overview of bread-crumbing came at the right time. Thank you!

Posted by: david boyne StopSignsAndMore.com
Friday, May 18, 2007

↑ Back to Top

Leave a comment:

Please enter the following security code exactly as it appears.


Comments are stripped of HTML code upon submission. All comments are submitted for approval prior to being published. Please allow up to 24 hours for the approval process to take place. Practical eCommerce reserves the right to remove any comment at any time for any reason.

 


Related Articles

Articles at Practical eCommerce related to SEO: Breadcrumb Trail Boosts Rankings:

Related Podcasts

Podcasts at Practical eCommerce related to SEO: Breadcrumb Trail Boosts Rankings:

RSS 2.0 Feeds

Atom 1.0 Feeds

Technorati Tags

Ecommerce Articles

Browse All Articles
Browse our complete archive of ecommerce articles.
Accounting, Management & Legal
Ecommerce articles related to managing a small business including ecommerce accounting, business strategy and legal considerations.
Conversion & Usability
Online business articles about converting web site visitors into customers and how to gauge and improve your business website's usability.
Development & Programming
Articles to help designers, developers and programmers create successful, search engine friendly ecommerce websites and improve existing ones.
Hosting, Infrastructure & Software
Articles for ecommerce businesses about ecommerce web hosting, business infrastructure, business strategy and helpful ecommerce & small business software.
Interviews & Profiles
Interviews with prominent ecommerce business personalities and profiles of successful online businesses.
Inventory & Shipping
Ecommerce articles about inventory management, ecommerce order fulfillment and product shipping considerations.
Marketing & Revenue Growth
Articles relating to online marketing, email marketing and using the Internet to growing your business.
Search Engine Optimization
Search engine optimization articles for ecommerce business owners, strategists, marketers and developers.
Shopping Carts & Online Payments
Articles covering ecommerce shopping cart platforms and options for choosing an online payment gateway.
Training & Education
Tutorials and articles providing training and education for ecommerce business owners and developers of ecommerce websites.

Search Articles

Ecommerce Community

Ecommerce Blogs
Read our blogs about ecommerce topics written by industry professionals.
Community Forum
Connect with other ecommerce professionals to trade advice and answers in our community forum.
Podcasts
Check out our ecommerce podcasts covering topics ranging from interviews to tutorials.
RSS Content Feeds
Subscribe to our RSS feeds and have fresh ecommerce content delivered to you.

Ecommerce Resources

Free Email Newsletter
Sign up for Ecommerce Notes, our free email newsletter for ecommerce business owners and developers.
Ecommerce Directory
Browse our directory of ecommerce products and services, or submit your own listing in our directory.
Ecommerce Glossary
Familiarize yourself with terminology or submit terms to help others with our Ecommerce Glossary.
Events Calendar
Find out about upcoming ecommerce events or invite other ecommerce professionals by posting your own event.
Press Releases
Browse ecommerce related press releases and post your own press release for distribution.
Ecommerce Store & Back Issues
Pick up back issues of Practical eCommerce magazine along with other merchandise from Practical Ecommerce

About Practical eCommerce

Frequently Asked Questions
Look at frequently asked questions regarded using our website, subscribing to our magazine and more.
Advertising Information
Information about advertising in Practical eCommerce magazine, on our website, or in our email newsletters.
Editorial Sharing
Learn about options for sharing our content with your visitors, customers or employees.
About Us
Learn more about Practical Ecommerce magazine and meet our staff.
Contact Us
Contact Practical Ecommerce at any time for more information. We'd love to hear from you.
AdvertisementClearCartEndiciaStone Edge Technologies

Copyright 2007 Confluence Distribution, Inc. and Practical eCommerce.
All Rights Reserved.

Privacy PolicyConditions of UseContact Us