The making of the sitemap |
Traditional site maps are static HTML files that outline the first and second level structures on the website. The original purpose of the site map was to easily find items on the website. Over time sitemaps also became a useful tool to help search engine find content and index all parts of the site you wanted to. Today its recommended that every webmaster have a XML site map which provides easy to read links dump for the spiders to index . A Good Site map must fulfill the following 5 criteria. At best a site map is just a table of contents, at worst its just an index for your site.
Here are some of the best practices to get more juice out of your site maps
5) After creating a sitemap, go back and make sure you check all your links are correct. A broken link on your site map is the last thing you need and is a terrible user experience.All the pages shown on your site map should contain a link back to the sitemap.
6)If you have a very extensive content with huge number of pages,you should try to create a sitemap for each silo.The master sitemap would not contain all the pages of the website, but would lead the search engines and users to the appropriate sitemap just like the rest of your site
The Site map must also
begin with an opening <urlset> tag ( encapsulates the file and references the current protocol standard) and with with a closing urlset tag)
include an entry for each <URL> as a parent XML tag.Parent tag for eachURL entry. The remaining tags are children of this tag)
include a< loc> child entry for each url parent tag.The url must begin with a protocol such as http:// and end with the trailing slash,if your web server requires it.This value must be less than 2048 characters
No comments:
Post a Comment