Hi, I have tried to find a similar post/thread so apologies if replicating an old idea (someone else must also have thought along these lines).
Its always seemed to me that Google likes folders, as they show a level of organisation... which can obviously help when seeking relevent search results. I used to have an actinic v7 shop that had a whole bunch of 'info' pages in subfolders relating to the topic/products... genuine info not just gateway pages.
I had most of the Google traffic come in that way... I just had to build them in dreamweaver and upload them myself. Considering that Actinic deftly makes its own folders via FTP automatically, it seemed a pity it couldn't manage other folders too.
That experience has always made me wonder if brochure pages could be better organised because if your sites have a lot of supporting information as mine do, long lists of brochure pages in the file tree seems clumsy.
Creating Brochure Sections might help... or at least allowing them to collapse in a 'Brochure' top section like the default 'Online Catalog' for product sections.
Example: a Chocolate shop... with bunch of support/info pages... including a topic like 'history of choclolate' which has several pages...
If one could create a 'Brochure section' that in effect became a subfolder with pages inside it...
myshop.com/acatalog/history_of_chocolate/chocolate_aztecs.html
myshop.com/acatalog/history_of_chocolate/chocolate_bourneville.html
I think it would be easier to manage a lot of content and also provide Google with some highly visible optimisation.
Perhaps we could use Products Sections to do this if an option were added to 'Act as Sub-folder' ...
myshop.com/acatalog/history_of_chocolate/
myshop.com/acatalog/organic_chocolate/
myshop.com/acatalog/chocolate_eggs/
I do realise this may cause some people to have problems where there is a lack of an 'index.html' file, Actinic pages would automaticaly link but I think Search Engines would see a folder with no index file in a poor light.
...I could take care of that myself but I assume that Actinic has to account for people not realising possible problems like this... not sure how we could solve that.
Anyway, thats the idea... been on my mind for a couple of years and I thought I'd better get it out!!
Its always seemed to me that Google likes folders, as they show a level of organisation... which can obviously help when seeking relevent search results. I used to have an actinic v7 shop that had a whole bunch of 'info' pages in subfolders relating to the topic/products... genuine info not just gateway pages.
I had most of the Google traffic come in that way... I just had to build them in dreamweaver and upload them myself. Considering that Actinic deftly makes its own folders via FTP automatically, it seemed a pity it couldn't manage other folders too.
That experience has always made me wonder if brochure pages could be better organised because if your sites have a lot of supporting information as mine do, long lists of brochure pages in the file tree seems clumsy.
Creating Brochure Sections might help... or at least allowing them to collapse in a 'Brochure' top section like the default 'Online Catalog' for product sections.
Example: a Chocolate shop... with bunch of support/info pages... including a topic like 'history of choclolate' which has several pages...
If one could create a 'Brochure section' that in effect became a subfolder with pages inside it...
myshop.com/acatalog/history_of_chocolate/chocolate_aztecs.html
myshop.com/acatalog/history_of_chocolate/chocolate_bourneville.html
I think it would be easier to manage a lot of content and also provide Google with some highly visible optimisation.
Perhaps we could use Products Sections to do this if an option were added to 'Act as Sub-folder' ...
myshop.com/acatalog/history_of_chocolate/
myshop.com/acatalog/organic_chocolate/
myshop.com/acatalog/chocolate_eggs/
I do realise this may cause some people to have problems where there is a lack of an 'index.html' file, Actinic pages would automaticaly link but I think Search Engines would see a folder with no index file in a poor light.
...I could take care of that myself but I assume that Actinic has to account for people not realising possible problems like this... not sure how we could solve that.
Anyway, thats the idea... been on my mind for a couple of years and I thought I'd better get it out!!
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