Anomandaris
Well-known member
Right now, all threads are in a massive /threads/ URL subdirectory.
This is not good for SEO purposes. Google Search Algorithm takes this into consideration.
If you have a large amount of poor quality posts in /threads/ and you have 5 really high quality posts, the poor quality ones will hurt the rankings of the high quality posts, due to how the algorithm acts upon URL subdirectories.
In addition is clearly dictates to google that all pages in that subdirectory are related. Right now you can have wildly different content in the /threads/ directory because it's used for all sub forums. This doesn't show google the relevancy of the threads in each specific forum section.
If I have a website about animals and I have two forum sections: dogs, and cats
I expect all threads about dogs to be in /dogs/ and all threads about cats to be in /cats/.
So:
The same thing should be applied to the resource manager, galleries, etc...
This is how most modern CMS operate and I think you'll agree that the XF forum is filled with feedback showing XF clients want it to be more like a modern CMS.
I see over the past 2 years a large focus on improving the SEO of XF, and you'll see many suggestions and complaints about SEO related issues, so I think this is something to think about for the future. With Google destroying small publishers with every new google algorithm update, it's imperative that everything is done to keep our forums competitive.
This is not good for SEO purposes. Google Search Algorithm takes this into consideration.
If you have a large amount of poor quality posts in /threads/ and you have 5 really high quality posts, the poor quality ones will hurt the rankings of the high quality posts, due to how the algorithm acts upon URL subdirectories.
In addition is clearly dictates to google that all pages in that subdirectory are related. Right now you can have wildly different content in the /threads/ directory because it's used for all sub forums. This doesn't show google the relevancy of the threads in each specific forum section.
If I have a website about animals and I have two forum sections: dogs, and cats
I expect all threads about dogs to be in /dogs/ and all threads about cats to be in /cats/.
So:
Code:
animals.com/cats/top-5-best-cat-food-brands/
animals.com/dogs/understanding-dog-behavior/
The same thing should be applied to the resource manager, galleries, etc...
This is how most modern CMS operate and I think you'll agree that the XF forum is filled with feedback showing XF clients want it to be more like a modern CMS.
I see over the past 2 years a large focus on improving the SEO of XF, and you'll see many suggestions and complaints about SEO related issues, so I think this is something to think about for the future. With Google destroying small publishers with every new google algorithm update, it's imperative that everything is done to keep our forums competitive.
Upvote
1