Glossary

URL Structure

How your page URLs are organised and formatted. Clean, descriptive URLs (e.g., /services/seo) are better for users and search engines than messy ones (e.g., /page?id=42&ref=3).

Why It Matters

URLs are a minor ranking signal, but their impact goes beyond direct SEO. Clean URLs improve user experience, make analytics easier to read, and create better-looking links when shared. A URL like /blog/technical-seo-guide tells everyone - users, search engines, and link builders - exactly what the page is about.

Good URL structure also reflects good site architecture. A logical hierarchy (domain.com/category/subcategory/page) helps search engines understand the relationship between pages and reinforces your site's topical organisation.

In Practice

Keep URLs short, descriptive, and keyword-relevant. Use hyphens to separate words. Avoid parameters, session IDs, and unnecessary numbers. Lower case only.

Reflect your site hierarchy in your URL structure. /services/seo/ is better than /seo/ if SEO is a subcategory of services. But don't go too deep - domain.com/a/b/c/d/e/page is excessive.

Once a URL is established and indexed, don't change it without a 301 redirect. URL changes without redirects create broken links and lose any authority the old URL had accumulated.

Common Mistakes

Using auto-generated URLs with IDs and parameters. Changing URL structures without implementing redirects. Creating URLs that are too long or deeply nested. Using underscores instead of hyphens (Google treats them differently).

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