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BruceClay – 5 Times When SEO Siloing Can Make or Break Your Search Engine Rankings

If you were to compare your website to a TV show, would it be like “Hoarders”?

It’s more common than you may think for websites to have hundreds — even thousands — of pages of content without much structure. All of them may be connected but in a disorganized way. After a while, chaos sets in.

This creates a bad experience for users and a difficult environment for search engines to understand what you are about. Your “clear hierarchy” looks more like a bowl of spaghetti. And that can result in missed opportunities to rank.

Luckily, there is a way to organize your website. SEO siloing is an SEO strategy that organizes website content by grouping related webpages together into hierarchical categories. These categories support target keywords (search terms) and elevate the expertise of a website.

We always recommend siloing as a best practice because we know it works. But I understand that it may not always be feasible. There are some situations, though, when you should always SEO silo your content for the best results.

Make a site with a clear hierarchy aligned by words users would type and with pages containing a reasonable number of text links that point to the important parts of your site.

–Summary, Google Webmaster Guidelines

What Is SEO Siloing?

SEO siloing is a way to organize your website content based on the way people search for your site’s topics. Its goal is to make a site relevant for a search query so that it has a better chance of ranking.

Say you own a power tools website. On it, you sell cordless power tools, electric power tools and gas-powered tools.

A proper siloing strategy would organize your website content (and navigation) into categories that support the products you sell, based on how people search. (Consequently, those are the keywords you are targeting as well.)

See the illustration below as a visual. Each type of power tool category would have a landing page. Underneath each landing page would be a subpage for each tool type within that category. Links between landing pages and their own subpages, but not with subpages in other categories, clarify the relationships for search engine spiders crawling your website.

That’s it! Of course, that’s a highly simplified overview of this SEO strategy. And you can learn more by viewing our SEO siloing guide.

Now let’s look at five scenarios when siloing is critical.

Situation 1: When You Want to Target “Money” Words

If you want to target any search queries that would lead to a sale, you need to silo your site to show lots of support for that money keyword.

Siloing supports your target keywords by providing a library of information that is well organized from the landing pages to their subpages, and vice versa.

The results:

All of those factors help a site to rank better in the search engine results pages for target keywords.

And, of course, this all ties into Google’s view on “Your Money or Your Life” (YMYL) topics. YMYL topics are discussed in Google’s Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines (SQEG) as those topics that “could potentially impact a person’s future happiness, health, financial stability, or safety.”

Because you are targeting queries that will potentially result in a purchase of goods or services, and especially for purchases that can be made online, you want to be sure your website is demonstrating expertise, authoritativeness and trustworthiness (E-A-T).

For YMYL pages, E-A-T is a critical factor in Google’s evaluation of your website. Luckily, siloing is a great way to demonstrate E-A-T.

Learn more with the Complete Guide to the Fundamentals of Google’s E-A-T.

Situation 2: SEO Silo When You Cannot Break Into Page 1

A clear website hierarchy has always influenced search engine rankings. A major factor is the ability of a website to offer the “whole” answer for searchers.

Not only should a webpage be a complete answer to a search query, but also it should be a part of a website that provides more easy-to-find information related to that topic.

Essentially, you want a person to be able to find the information they need or complete an action with ease. Siloing does that.

Google has always recommended an organized website. Two quotes from its SEO Starter Guide come to mind.

Quote 1: Google’s advice about how to structure a site:

Make it as easy as possible for users to go from general content to the more specific content they want on your site. Add navigation pages when it makes sense and effectively work these into your internal link structure. Make sure all of the pages on your site are reachable through links, and that they don’t require an internal “search” functionality to be found. Link to related pages, where appropriate, to allow users to discover similar content.

Quote 2: Google says it looks at the whole website to determine if it’s relevant for a single query:

The navigation of a website is important in helping visitors quickly find the content they want. It can also help search engines understand what content the webmaster thinks is important. Although Google’s search results are provided at a page level, Google also likes to have a sense of what role a page plays in the bigger picture of the site.

See this case study on how siloing helped a website go from no rankings to Page 1.

Situation 3: When You Have Lots of Unrelated Content

If you own a website with hundreds or thousands of disorganized webpages, you’re not going to achieve the “relevance” you need to rank. Remember: organizing content helps your site to be a relevant authority on a topic.

Unrelated content can come in different forms. You might have a website that talks about too many things at once. Or you have not honed in on your main theme. This is confusing to Google (and visitors). If you talk about everything all at once you appear to not be about anything.

Another form of unrelated content is having a bunch of webpages that aren’t connected in any meaningful way. In other words, no categories, no internal links, no organization whatsoever.

In both instances, Google is not going to be able to easily make the connection itself on what your site is about. A search engine can only decipher meaning when the subjects are clear and distinct.

Situation 4: SEO Silo When You Have Way Too Many Links on Every Page

Google discovers new webpages by following links. And, search engines consider links within a website to be a strong signal of subject relevance.

So if Page A links not just to Page B (another relevant topic) but also to Page C, Page D and all the way down to Page Z, you are seriously diluting PageRank and relevance. Siloing helps to focus your links so that you link only like topics together, and do it strategically.

Link to related pages, where appropriate, to allow users to discover similar content.

–Google, Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Starter Guide

Random links between silos weaken the theme. No subpage within a silo should link to a subpage in another silo. The following diagram shows appropriate and inappropriate internal linking for a siloed website.

Situation 5: SEO Silo When Rankings Have Hit a Wall and You Need a Final Push

Oftentimes, restructuring your site is the missing link to push your rankings further up on the search results page.

So much of what makes a quality website is content and user experience (I call this post-click SEO). Organized content that provides the “whole” answer to visitors creates a good experience and elevates the website’s expertise.

This, in turn, keeps your visitors on your site longer. And, when a person doesn’t bounce back to the search results to find another answer, that is a signal to Google that the content is relevant.

And with Google’s RankBrain AI at work, this type of engagement could be a factor in how your site ranks in the future. In other words, if you get a lot of people bouncing back to the search results to look for another answer, Google will likely take note.

Learn more about RankBrain with The Real Impact of RankBrain on Web Traffic.

Closing Thoughts

SEO siloing is not all there is to ranking. But without it, the on-page relevancy battle is lost. Having an organized website is not only good for Google and your visitors but also good for your rankings, traffic and business.

Fixing your website’s silo strategy is one of our specialties. For a free quote, please contact us today.

Bruce Clay is founder and president of Bruce Clay, Inc., a global digital marketing firm providing search engine optimization, pay-per-click, social media marketing, SEO-friendly web architecture, and SEO tools and education. Connect with him on LinkedIn and other social networks from Bruce’s author page.
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