Hi, I'm buidling a new site for someone and was wondering which site hierarchy and file naming system to go with that would help search engine rankings. In our business, the file names seem to have a huge impact on the rankings. A lot of our competitior's don't use sub-folders for inner pages (*i.e. all of their site pages/html files are in the parent /root directory.)..but many of them use our top keywords in their actual html file names example: www.yoursite.com/keyword1-keyword2.html I wanted to do something like .../keyword1-keyword2/keyword1-keyword2-keyword-3.html using keyword named sub-folders because this is a huge e-commerce site and it would be a nightmare to admin with all the files in the root directory. Any opinions or advice on which naming shceme to use would be greatly appreciated. PS - I did an experiment a month or 2 back where we added a new line of products for a client to their e-commerce site. I created a keyword specific named sub-folder and then used the exact same keyword specifics for the html file name..so it ended up looking like this..>>> www.oursite.com/keyword1-keyword2/keyword1-keyword2-keyword3.html Within 2 months at the most we are top 10 in both Google and Yahoo for that particular keyword.
I went for the KW Folder option, more because of admin benefits than the small ranking benefit it might have. In the G whitepapers it also mentions they have the ability to devalue pages in folders far from the root, reasoning that they are less important. Whether they actually do this or not, I don't know but it shows that it could work against you as well as benefit.
I say go with the keyworded folders, but not to get too carried away. The competitor who has locked in the #1 position over the last few months has even gone to a similar naming as the cloaked pages did, but with just duplicated pages with no redirects. These new pages seem to work well for them in yahoo, but I still haven't moved our page to #1 on google (I want the #1 spot back!!!)
Our In House CMS throws everything in the root (All static), but seems to produce some nice results. Saying that, I have had some sites do well using the folder option too. I don't think it will make a massive difference really.