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Reiling115

: All articles with infinite scroll, or one per page for usability and SEO? Imagine a hypothetical website with all user generated content of single page articles. Here are some ways to structuring

@Reiling115

Posted in: #Articles #Seo #SiteStructure #UserEngagement #UserGeneratedContent

Imagine a hypothetical website with all user generated content of single page articles. Here are some ways to structuring such a website:


Putting up more than one article in one page and creating an infinite scroll or a pager. The fact that the articles may not be on the same topic makes this a less search engine friendly way.
Giving a unique page to each article and putting up a list of links/titles in the front page with or without a teaser and a thumbnail. This might make the home page look unprofessional.
Keeping the front page clean, without direct links to internal pages.


Which method would be a search engine friendly and user friendly way to do this? How about combining 1 and 2, as in blog.codinghorror.com? Is there an advantage to it?

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@Eichhorn148

Infinite scroll is not SEO friendly. Google and other search engines will have trouble indexing the content that is not loaded into the page when it is first fetched.

To get referrals from search engines to specific articles, you need have a page for each article. Search engines won't recommend specific articles from your site to their users if their only option is to send that user to your home page. Users might have to scroll down a long way to actually find that content if there is no deep link for each article.

Once you have a page per article, you need a list of articles on your site so that they can all be found.

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@Bryan171

For your site architecture, you can take inspiration from famous newspapers websites. In general,
articles on these websites are categorized by theme (all economics articles in the same category, all
sport articles in the same category, etc.). If your site has many articles, you can also create
subcategories like for example football, tennis, golf, etc. in your sport category.

However, if articles are created by users, think about checking the category (or subcategory) before
publishing to be sure all articles will be well categorized.

The idea is to think like a visitor. Imagine you visit a news site and you want to be enquired
on sport in general, you naturally go to sport category to read the news and if you're a fan of golf,
you can directly go to golf subcategory.

Therefore, a good architecture for your site will be:


a homepage with a list of all new articles (for example 15 non categorized articles - it's not a problem for SEO) and no infinite scroll
each article can be presented with a teaser and a thumbnail with a link to the article page
a navigation menu like this:


economics
sport

football
tennis
golf

politics
etc.



That way, your site is user friendly and thus search engines friendly.

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